March 2014 archive

Rank Hypocrisy

Some Facts About How NSA Stories Are Reported

By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

23 Mar 2014, 6:41 AM EDT

Who created the uber-nationalistic standard that the only valid disclosures are ones involving the rights of Americans? Are we are all supposed to regard non-Americans as irrelevant? Is the NSA’s bulk, suspicionless surveillance of the private communications of hundreds of millions of human beings inherently proper simply because its victims aren’t American citizens? Even more extreme: are American journalists (and whistleblowers like Snowden) supposed to keep the public ignorant of anything and everything the US Government does to people provided those people aren’t blessed with American citizenship? Do you condemn whoever leaked the existence of top secret CIA black sites to Dana Priest on the ground that it didn’t involve violations of the rights of Americans? It makes sense that US government officials view the world this way: their function is to advance the self-perceived interests of the US government, but that’s not the role of actual journalists or whistleblowers.

The public interest from the Huawei story is obvious. It demonstrates that the NSA has been doing exactly that which the US Government has spent years vocally complaining is being done by China. While the US has been telling the world that the Chinese government is spying on them through backdoors in Huawei products, it’s actually the NSA that has been doing that. It also yet again gives the lie to the claim that the NSA does not engage in economic espionage.

It shows massive deceit and hypocrisy by US officials: with their own citizens and to the world. DOJ official Jack Goldsmith, often a government and NSA defender, understood this point perfectly, writing yesterday that “The Huawei revelations are devastating rebuttals to hypocritical U.S. complaints about Chinese penetration of U.S. networks, and also make USG protestations about not stealing intellectual property to help U.S. firms’ competitiveness seem like the self-serving hairsplitting that it is.”

Leak Shows NSA Breached Huawei’s Internal Servers, Grabbed Executive Emails And Source Code

by Tim Cushing, TechDirt

Mon, Mar 24th 2014 3:36am

As Karl Bode pointed out in an earlier story about the US government warning Americans away from Huawei network equipment, many of the Huawei spying allegations can be traced back to its main competitor, Cisco. Marcy Wheeler at emptywheel sees the NSA’s Huawei spying as little more than a way for it to protect some of its main collection points.



If there’s been no evidence uncovered that Huawei equipment is being deployed with Chinese government-friendly backdoors, then the NSA is engaged in self-serving corporate espionage, one that keeps Cisco — and consequently, the NSA — in wide circulation.

Even if you believe this is exactly the sort of thing our intelligence agencies should be doing, it’s hard to ignore the inherent hypocrisy of the government’s words and actions.



While the revelations that the NSA is surveilling a foreign company deemed untrustworthy by government officials are hardly surprising, the whole situation is tainted by the US government’s hardline against Huawei. Many accusations have surfaced over the last decade but have remained unproven, even as the US government has locked Huawei out of domestic contracts and persuaded other countries to seek different vendors. This isn’t passive monitoring being deployed to detect threats. This is an active invasion of a private company’s internal network in order to subvert its hardware and software, all of which will likely benefit its largest competitor, either directly or indirectly. The NSA isn’t Cisco’s personal army, but their mutual goals (widespread Cisco deployment) are so closely aligned, the agency might as well be.

How the NSA Deals with a Threat to Its Backbone Hegemony

By emptywheel

Published March 22, 2014

Now, for what it’s worth, the NYT story feels like a limited hangout – an attempt to pre-empt what Spiegel will say on Monday, and also include a bunch of details on NSA spying on legitimate Chinese targets so the chattering class can talk about how Snowden is a tool of Chinese and Russian spies. (Note, the NYT story relies on interviews with a “half dozen” current and former officials for much of the information on legitimate Chinese targets here, a point noted by approximately none of the people complaining.)

But the articles make it clear that 3 years after they started this targeted program, SHOTGIANT, and at least a year after they gained access to the emails of Huawei’s CEO and Chair, NSA still had no evidence that Huawei is just a tool of the People’s Liberation Army, as the US government had been claiming before and since. Perhaps they’ve found evidence in the interim, but they hadn’t as recently as 2010.

Nevertheless the NSA still managed to steal Huawei’s source code. Not just so it could more easily spy on people who exclusively use Huawei’s networks. But also, it seems clear, in an attempt to prevent Huawei from winning even more business away from Cisco.

I suspect we’ll learn far more on Monday. But for now, we know that even the White House got involved in an operation targeting a company that threatens our hegemony on telecom backbones.

On This Day In History March 24

Cross posted from The Stars Hollow Gazette

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

March 24 is the 83rd day of the year (84th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 282 days remaining until the end of the year.

March 24th is the 365th and last day of the year in many European implementations of the Julian calendar.

On this day in 1989, Exxon Valdez runs aground in Prince William Sound, Alaska.

The worst oil spill in U.S. territory begins when the supertanker Exxon Valdez, owned and operated by the Exxon Corporation, runs aground on a reef in Prince William Sound in southern Alaska. An estimated 11 million gallons of oil eventually spilled into the water. Attempts to contain the massive spill were unsuccessful, and wind and currents spread the oil more than 100 miles from its source, eventually polluting more than 700 miles of coastline. Hundreds of thousands of birds and animals were adversely affected by the environmental disaster.

It was later revealed that Joseph Hazelwood, the captain of the Valdez, was drinking at the time of the accident and allowed an uncertified officer to steer the massive vessel. In March 1990, Hazelwood was convicted of misdemeanor negligence, fined $50,000, and ordered to perform 1,000 hours of community service. In July 1992, an Alaska court overturned Hazelwood’s conviction, citing a federal statute that grants freedom from prosecution to those who report an oil spill.

The Exxon Valdez oil spill occurred in Prince William Sound, Alaska, on March 24, 1989, when the Exxon Valdez, an oil tanker bound for Long Beach, California, struck Prince William Sound‘s Bligh Reef and spilled 260,000 to 750,000 barrels (41,000 to 119,000 m3) of crude oil. It is considered to be one of the most devastating human-caused environmental disasters. As significant as the Valdez spill was-the largest ever in U.S. waters until the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill-it ranks well down on the list of the world’s largest oil spills in terms of volume released. However, Prince William Sound’s remote location, accessible only by helicopter, plane and boat, made government and industry response efforts difficult and severely taxed existing plans for response. The region is a habitat for salmon, sea otters, seals and seabirds. The oil, originally extracted at the Prudhoe Bay oil field, eventually covered 1,300 miles (2,100 km) of coastline, and 11,000 square miles (28,000 km2) of ocean. Then Exxon CEO, Lawrence G. Rawl, shaped the company’s response.

Timeline of events

Exxon Valdez left the Valdez oil terminal in Alaska at 9:12 pm on March 23, 1989, bound for Long Beach, California. The ship was under the control of Shipmaster Joseph Jeffrey Hazelwood. The outbound shipping lane was obstructed with small icebergs (possibly from the nearby Columbia Glacier), so Hazelwood got permission from the Coast Guard to go out through the inbound lane. Following the maneuver and sometime after 11 p.m., Hazelwood left Third Mate Gregory Cousins in charge of the wheel house and Able Seaman Robert Kagan at the helm. Neither man had been given his mandatory six hours off duty before beginning his 12-hour watch. The ship was on autopilot, using the navigation system installed by the company that constructed the ship. The ship struck Bligh Reef at around 12:04 a.m. March 24, 1989.

Beginning three days after the vessel grounded, a storm pushed large quantities of fresh oil on to the rocky shores of many of the beaches in the Knight Island chain. In this photograph, pooled oil is shown stranded in the rocks.

According to official reports, the ship was carrying approximately 55 million US gallons (210,000 m3) of oil, of which about 11 to 32 million US gallons (42,000 to 120,000 m3) were spilled into the Prince William Sound. A figure of 11 million US gallons (42,000 m3) was a commonly accepted estimate of the spill’s volume and has been used by the State of Alaska’s Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and environmental groups such as Greenpeace and the Sierra Club. Some groups, such as Defenders of Wildlife, dispute the official estimates, maintaining that the volume of the spill has been underreported. Alternative calculations, based on an assumption that the sea water rather than oil was drained from the damaged tanks, estimate the total to have been 25 to 32 million US gallons (95,000 to 120,000 m3).

Identified causes

Multiple factors have been identified as contributing to the incident:

   * Exxon Shipping Company failed to supervise the master and provide a rested and sufficient crew for Exxon Valdez. The NTSB found this was wide spread throughout industry, prompting a safety recommendation to Exxon and to the industry.

   * The third mate failed to properly maneuver the vessel, possibly due to fatigue or excessive workload.

   * Exxon Shipping Company failed to properly maintain the Raytheon Collision Avoidance System (RAYCAS) radar, which, if functional, would have indicated to the third mate an impending collision with the Bligh reef by detecting the “radar reflector”, placed on the next rock inland from Bligh Reef for the purpose of keeping boats on course via radar.

In light of the above and other findings, investigative reporter Greg Palast stated in 2008 “Forget the drunken skipper fable. As to Captain Joe Hazelwood, he was below decks, sleeping off his bender. At the helm, the third mate never would have collided with Bligh Reef had he looked at his RAYCAS radar. But the radar was not turned on. In fact, the tanker’s radar was left broken and disabled for more than a year before the disaster, and Exxon management knew it. It was (in Exxon’s view) just too expensive to fix and operate.” Exxon blamed Captain Hazelwood for the grounding of the tanker.

Economic and personal impact

In 1991, following the collapse of the local marine population (particularly clams, herring, and seals) the Chugach Alaska Corporation, an Alaska Native Corporation, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It has since recovered.

According to several studies funded by the state of Alaska, the spill had both short-term and long-term economic effects. These included the loss of recreational sports, fisheries, reduced tourism, and an estimate of what economists call “existence value”, which is the value to the public of a pristine Prince William Sound.

The economy of the city of Cordova, Alaska was adversely affected after the spill damaged stocks of salmon and herring in the area. Several residents, including one former mayor, committed suicide after the spill.

Late Night Karaoke

March Madness 2014: Men’s Round of 32 Day 2

Yesterday’s Results

Seed School Record Seed School Record Score Region
1 * Florida (34 – 2) 9 Pittsburgh (26 – 10) (61 – 45) South
4 * Louisville (31 – 5) 5 Saint Louis (27 – 7) (66 – 51) MidWest
2 * Michigan (27 – 8) 7 Texas (24 – 11) (79 – 65) MidWest
4 * San Diego St. (31 – 4) 12 N. Dakota State (26 – 7) (63 – 44) West
3 Syracuse (28 – 6) 11 * Dayton (25 – 10) (53 – 55) South
2 * Wisconsin (28 – 7) 7 Oregon (24 – 10) (85 – 77) West
4 * Michigan State (28 – 8) 12 Harvard (27 – 5) (80 – 73) East
2 Villanova (29 – 5) 7 * Connecticut (28 – 8) (65 – 77) East

Today’s Games

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
12:15 CBS 2 Kansas (25 – 9) 10 Stanford (22 – 12) South
2:45 CBS 1 Wichita State (35 – 0) 8 Kentucky (25 – 10) MidWest
5:15 CBS 3 Iowa State (27 – 7) 6 N. Carolina (24 – 9) East
6:10 TNT 11 Tennessee (23 – 12) 14 Mercer (27 – 8) MidWest
7:10 TBS 4 UCLA (27 – 8) 12 Stephen Austin (32 – 2) South
7:45 truTV 3 Creighton (27 – 7) 6 Baylor (25 – 11) West
8:40 TNT 1 Virginia (29 – 6) 8 Memphis (24 – 9) East
9:40 TBS 1 Arizona (31 – 4) 8 Gonzaga (29 – 6) West

Friday’s Results below.

On This Day In History March 23

Cross posted from The Stars Hollow Gazette

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

March 23 is the 82nd day of the year (83rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 283 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1775, Patrick Henry voices American opposition to British policy

During a speech before the second Virginia Convention, Patrick Henry responds to the increasingly oppressive British rule over the American colonies by declaring, “I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!” Following the signing of the American Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, Patrick Henry was appointed governor of Virginia by the Continental Congress.

Patrick Henry (May 29, 1736 – June 6, 1799) was an orator and politician who led the movement for independence in Virginia in the 1770s. A Founding Father, he served as the first and sixth post-colonial Governor of Virginia from 1776 to 1779 and subsequently, from 1784 to 1786. Henry led the opposition to the Stamp Act of 1765 and is well remembered for his “Give me Liberty, or give me Death!” speech. Along with Samuel Adams and Thomas Paine, he is remembered as one of the most influential exponents of Republicanism, promoters of the American Revolution and Independence, especially in his denunciations of corruption in government officials and his defense of historic rights. After the Revolution, Henry was a leader of the anti-federalists in Virginia who opposed the United States Constitution, fearing that it endangered the rights of the States, as well as the freedoms of individuals.

American Revolution

Responding to pleas from Massachusetts that the colonies create committees of correspondence to coordinate their reaction to the British, Henry took the lead in Virginia. In March 1773, along with Thomas Jefferson and Richard Henry Lee, Henry led the Virginia House of Burgesses to adopt resolutions providing for a standing committee of correspondents. Each colony set up such committees, and they led to the formation of the First Continental Congress in 1774, to which Henry was elected.

Patrick Henry is best known for the speech he made in the House of Burgesses on March 23, 1775, in Saint John’s Church in Richmond, Virginia. The House was undecided on whether to mobilize for military action against the encroaching British military force, and Henry argued in favor of mobilization. Forty-two years later, Henry’s first biographer, William Wirt, working from oral testimony, attempted to reconstruct what Henry said. According to Wirt, Henry ended his speech with words that have since become immortalized:

“Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, Give me Liberty, or give me Death!”

The crowd, by Wirt’s account, jumped up and shouted “To Arms! To Arms!”. For 160 years Wirt’s account was taken at face value, but in the 1970s historians began to question the authenticity of Wirt’s reconstruction.[8] Historians today observe that Henry was known to have used fear of Indian and slave revolts in promoting military action against the British, and that according to the only written first-hand account of the speech, Henry used some graphic name-calling that failed to appear in Wirt’s heroic rendition.

In August 1775, Henry became colonel of the 1st Virginia Regiment. At the outset of the Revolutionary War, Henry led militia against Royal Governor Lord Dunmore in defense of some disputed gunpowder, an event known as the Gunpowder Incident. During the war he served as the first post-colonial Governor of Virginia and presided over several expeditions against the Cherokee Indians, who were allied with the British.

Henry lived during part of the War at his 10,000-acre Leatherwood Plantation in Henry County, Virginia, where he, his first cousin Ann Winston Carr and her husband Col. George Waller had settled. During the five years Henry lived at Leatherwood, from 1779 to 1784, he owned 75 slaves, and grew tobacco. During this time, he kept in close touch with his friend the explorer Joseph Martin, whom Henry had appointed agent to the Cherokee nation, and with whom Henry sometimes invested in real estate, and for whom the county seat of Henry County was later named.

In early November 1775 Henry and James Madison were elected founding trustees of Hampden-Sydney College, which opened for classes on November 10. He remained a trustee until his death in 1799. Henry was instrumental in achieving passage of the College’s Charter of 1783, an action delayed because of the war. He is probably the author of the Oath of Loyalty to the new Republic included in that charter. Seven of his sons attended the new college.

Six In The Morning

On Sunday

Malaysia flight MH370: Indian Ocean search resumes

 23 March 2014 Last updated at 07:39

  The BBC

More planes have joined an increasingly international search of the south Indian Ocean for missing flight MH370.

Eight planes were sent out on Sunday over a wider search area after China released new images of possible debris.

Australia is leading the search and said it was investigating sightings of a wooden pallet and other items.

Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 disappeared on 8 March en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, with 239 people on board.

Malaysian officials believe the plane was deliberately taken off course.




Sunday’s Headlines:

Global warming to hit Asia hardest, warns new report on climate change

Al-Qai’da aid project shows the way in Afghanistan

More deaths in Venezuela amid pro and anti-Maduro rallies

Côte d’Ivoire hands Laurent Gbagbo ally to ICC

Turkey: Twitter Allows For ‘Character Assassination’

What We Learned This Week

Up substitute host, Krystal Ball and her guests share the big things they learned over the last week.

March Madness 2014: Women’s Round of 64 Day 2

Yesterday’s Results

Seed School Record Seed School Record Score Region
2 * Duke (28 – 6) 15 Winthrop (24 – 9) (87 – 45) MidWest
8 Vanderbilt (18 – 13) 9 * Arizona State (23 – 9) (69 – 61) East
5 * Oklahoma State (24 – 8) 12 Florida Gulf Coast (26 – 8) (61 – 60) East
3 * Kentucky (25 – 8) 14 Wright State (26 – 9) (106 – 60) East
1 * Notre Dame (33 – 0) 16 Robert Morris (21 – 12) (93 – 42) East
7 * DePaul (28 – 6) 10 Oklahoma (18 – 15) (104 – 100) MidWest
4 * Purdue (22 – 8) 13 Akron (23 – 10) (84 – 55) East
6 * Syracuse (23 – 9) 11 Chattanooga (29 – 4) (59 – 53) East
4 * Nebraska (26 – 6) 13 Fresno State (22 – 11) (74 – 55) MidWest
7 Iowa State (20 – 11) 10 * Florida State (21 – 11) (44 – 55) West
7 * California (22 – 9) 10 Fordham (25 – 8) (64 – 63) East
1 * Tennessee (28 – 5) 16 Northwestern (16 – 16) (70 – 46) South
5 N.C. State (25 – 8) 12 * BYU (27 – 6) (72 – 57) MidWest
2 * Stanford (31 – 3) 15 S. Dakota (19 – 14) (81 – 62) West
2 * Baylor (30 – 4) 15 W. Kentucky (24 – 9) (87 – 74) East
8 * St. John’s (23 – 10) 9 USC (22 – 13) (71 – 68) South

Today’s Games

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
12:30 ESPN2 4 Maryland (24 – 6) 13 Army (25 – 7) South
12:30 ESPN2 7 Louisianna State (19 – 12) 10 Georgia Tech (20 – 11) South
12:30 ESPN2 5 Michigan State (22 – 9) 12 Hampton (28 – 4) West
12:30 ESPN2 3 Penn State (22 – 7) 14 Wichita (26 – 6) West
3:00 ESPN 5 Texas (21 – 11) 12 Penn (22 – 6) South
3:00 ESPN 2 W. Virginia (29 – 4) 15 Albany (28 – 4) South
3:00 ESPN 4 N. Carolina (24 – 9) 13 UT Martin (24 – 7) West
3:00 ESPN 6 Dayton (23 – 7) 11 Florida (19 – 12) West
5:30 ESPN 3 Louisville (30 – 4) 14 Idaho (25 – 8) South
5:30 ESPN 8 Georgia (20 – 11) 9 St. Joseph’s (22 – 9) MidWest
5:30 ESPN 6 Gonzaga (24 – 9) 11 James Madison (28 – 5) MidWest
5:30 ESPN 1 S. Carolina (27 – 4) 16 CSU Northridge (18 – 14) West
8:00 ESPN 1 UConn (34 – 0) 16 Prairie View A&M (14 – 17) MidWest
8:00 ESPN2 6 Iowa (26 – 8) 11 Marist (27 – 6) South
8:00 ESPN2 3 Texas A&M (24 – 8) 14 N. Dakota (22 – 9) MidWest
8:00 ESPN2 8 Middle Tennessee (29 – 4) 9 Oregon State (23 – 10) West

March Madness 2014: Men’s Round of 32 Day 1

Yesterday’s Results

Seed School Record Seed School Record Score Region
3 Duke (26 – 9) 14 * Mercer (27 – 8) (71 – 78) MidWest
6 * Baylor (25 – 11) 11 Nebraska (19 – 13) (74 – 60) West
7 New Mexico (27 – 7) 10 * Stanford (22 – 12) (53 – 58) South
1 * Arizona (31 – 4) 16 Weber State (19 – 12) (68 – 59) West
6 UMass (24 – 9) 11 * Tennessee (23 – 12) (67 – 86) MidWest
3 * Creighton (27 – 7) 14 UL-Lafayette (23 – 12) (76 – 66) West
2 * Kansas (25 – 9) 15 E. Kentucky (24 – 10) (80 – 69) South
8 * Gonzaga (29 – 6) 9 Oklahoma State (21 – 13) (85 – 77) West
8 * Memphis (24 – 9) 9 George Washington (24 – 9) (71 – 66) East
1 * Wichita State (35 – 0) 16 Cal Poly (14 – 20) (64 – 37) MidWest
6 * N. Carolina (24 – 9) 11 Providence (23 – 12) (79 – 77) East
5 Virginia Commonwealth (26 – 9) 12 * Stephen Austin (32 – 2) (75 – 77 OT) South
1 * Virginia (29 – 6) 16 Coastal Carolina (21 – 13) (70 – 59) East
8 * Kentucky (25 – 10) 9 Kansas State (20 – 13) (56 – 49) MidWest
3 * Iowa State (27 – 7) 14 N.C. Central (28 – 6) (93 – 75) East
4 * UCLA (27 – 8) 13 Tulsa (21 – 13) (76 – 59) South

Round of 32: Saturday

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
12:15 CBS 1 Florida (33 – 2) 9 Pittsburgh (26 – 9) South
2:45 CBS 4 Louisville (30 – 5) 5 Saint Louis (27 – 6) MidWest
5:15 CBS 2 Michigan (26 – 8) 7 Texas (24 – 10) MidWest
6:10 TNT 4 San Diego St. (30 – 4) 12 N. Dakota State (26 – 6) West
7:10 TBS 3 Syracuse (28 – 5) 11 Dayton (24 – 10) South
7:45 CBS 2 Wisconsin (27 – 7) 7 Oregon (24 – 9) West
8:40 TNT 4 Michigan State (27 – 8) 12 Harvard (27 – 4) East
9:40 TBS 7 Connecticut (27 – 8) 2 Villanova (29 – 4) East

Thursday’s Results Below.

March Madness 2014: Women’s Round of 64 Day 1

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
11:00 ESPN 2 Duke (27 – 6) 15 Winthrop (24 – 8) MidWest
11:00 ESPN2 8 Vanderbilt (18 – 12) 9 Arizona State (22 – 9) East
11:00 ESPN2 5 Oklahoma State (23 – 8) 12 Florida Gulf Coast (26 – 7) East
11:00 ESPN2 3 Kentucky (24 – 8) 14 Wright State (26 – 8) East
1:30 ESPN 1 Notre Dame (32 – 0) 16 Robert Morris (21 – 11) East
1:30 ESPN2 7 DePaul (27 – 6) 10 Oklahoma (18 – 14) MidWest
1:30 ESPN2 4 Purdue (21 – 8) 13 Akron (23 – 9) East
1:30 ESPN2 6 Syracuse (22 – 9) 11 Chattanooga (29 – 3) East
4:00 ESPN2 4 Nebraska (25 – 6) 13 Fresno State (22 – 10) MidWest
4:00 ESPN2 7 Iowa State (20 – 10) 10 Florida State (20 – 11) West
4:00 ESPN2 7 California (21 – 9) 10 Fordham (25 – 7) East
4:00 ESPN2 1 Tennessee (27 – 5) 16 Northwestern (16 – 15) South
6:30 ESPN2 5 N.C. State (25 – 7) 12 BYU (26 – 6) MidWest
6:30 ESPN2 2 Stanford (30 – 3) 15 S. Dakota (19 – 13) West
6:30 ESPN2 2 Baylor (29 – 4) 15 W. Kentucky (24 – 8) East
6:30 ESPN2 8 St. John’s (22 – 10) 9 USC (22 – 12) South

On This Day In History March 22

Cross posted from The Stars Hollow Gazette

This is your morning Open Thread. Pour your favorite beverage and review the past and comment on the future.

Find the past “On This Day in History” here.

March 22 is the 81st day of the year (82nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 284 days remaining until the end of the year.

On this day in 1784, the Emerald Buddha is moved with great ceremony to its current place in Wat Phra Kaew, Thailand.

The Emerald Buddha is the palladium of the Kingdom of Thailand, a figurine of the sitting Buddha, made of green jadeite (rather than emerald), clothed in gold, and about 45 cm tall. It is kept in the Temple of the Emerald Buddha (Wat Phra Kaew) on the grounds of the Grand Palace in Bangkok.

According to the legend, the Emerald Buddha was created in India in 43 BC by Nagasena in the city of Pataliputra (today’s Patna). The legends state that after remaining in Pataliputra for three hundred years, it was taken to Sri Lanka to save it from a civil war. In 457, King Anuruth of Burma sent a mission to Ceylon to ask for Buddhist scriptures and the Emerald Buddha, in order to support Buddhism in his country. These requests were granted, but the ship lost its way in a storm during the return voyage and landed in Cambodia. When the Thais captured Angkor Wat in 1432 (following the ravage of the bubonic plague), the Emerald Buddha was taken to Ayutthaya, Kamphaeng Phet, Laos and finally Chiang Rai, where the ruler of the city hid it. Cambodian historians recorded capture of the Buddha statue in their famous Preah Ko Preah Keo legend. However, some art historians describe the Emerald Buddha as belonging to the Chiang Saen Style of the 15th Century AD, which would mean it is actually of Lannathai origin.

Historical sources indicate that the statue surfaced in northern Thailand in the Lannathai kingdom in 1434. One account of its discovery tells that lightning struck a pagoda in a temple in Chiang Rai, after which, something became visible beneath the stucco. The Buddha was dug out, and the people believed the figurine to be made of emerald, hence its name. King Sam Fang Kaen of Lannathai wanted it in his capital, Chiang Mai, but the elephant carrying it insisted, on three separate occasions, on going instead to Lampang. This was taken as a divine sign and the Emerald Buddha stayed in Lampang until 1468, when it was finally moved to Chiang Mai, where it was kept at Wat Chedi Luang.

The Emerald Buddha remained in Chiang Mai until 1552, when it was taken to Luang Prabang, then the capital of the Lao kingdom of Lan Xang. Some years earlier, the crown prince of Lan Xang, Setthathirath, had been invited to occupy the vacant throne of Lannathai. However, Prince Setthathirath also became king of Lan Xang when his father, Photisarath, died. He returned home, taking the revered Buddha figure with him. In 1564, King Setthathirath moved it to his new capital at Vientiane.

In 1779, the Thai General Chao Phraya Chakri put down an insurrection, captured Vientiane and returned the Emerald Buddha to Siam, taking it with him to Thonburi. After he became King Rama I of Thailand, he moved the Emerald Buddha with great ceremony to its current home in Wat Phra Kaew on March 22, 1784. It is now kept in the main building of the temple, the Ubosoth.

Late Night Karaoke

Load more