|
Neocons, theocons, Demcons, excons, and future cons
by William Blum
 " The American military has done its job. Look what they
accomplished. They got rid of Saddam Hussein. They gave the Iraqis a
chance for free and fair elections. They gave the Iraqi government the
chance to begin to demonstrate that it understood its responsibilities
to make the hard political decisions necessary to give the people of
Iraq a better future. So the American military has succeeded. It is the
Iraqi government which has failed to make the tough decisions which are
important for their own people."[1]
Who do you think said this on June 20?
a)Rudy Giuliani;
b)Hillary Clinton;
c)George Bush;
d)Mitt Romney;
e)Barack Obama;
The Anti-Empire Report
Read this or George W. Bush will be president the rest of your life.
Right, it was the woman who wants to be president because ...
because she wants to be president ... because she thinks it would be
nice to be president ... no other reason, no burning cause, no
heartfelt desire for basic change in American society or to make a
better world ... she just thinks it would be nice, even great, to be
president. And keep the American Empire in business, its routine
generating of horror and misery being no problem; she wouldn't want to
be known as the president that hastened the decline of the empire.
And
she spoke the above words at the "Take Back America" conference; she
was speaking to liberals, committed liberal Democrats. She didn't have
to cater to them with any flag-waving pro-war rhetoric; they wanted to
hear anti-war rhetoric (and she of course gave them a bit of that as
well out of the other side of her mouth), so we can assume that this is
how she really feels, if indeed the woman feels anything.
Think
of why you are opposed to the war. Is it not largely because of all the
unspeakable suffering brought down upon the heads and souls of the poor
people of Iraq by the American military? Hillary Clinton couldn't care
less about that, literally. She thinks the American military has
"succeeded". Has she ever unequivocally labeled the war "illegal" or
"immoral"? I used to think that Tony Blair was a member of the right
wing or conservative wing of the British Labour Party. I finally
realized one day that that was an incorrect description of his
ideology. Blair is a conservative, a bloody Tory. How he wound up in
the Labour Party is a matter I haven't studied. Hillary Clinton,
however, I've long known is a conservative; going back to at least the
1980s, while the wife of the Arkansas governor, she strongly supported
the death squad torturers known as the Contras, who were the empire's
proxy army in Nicaragua.[2]
Now we hear from America's
venerable conservative magazine, William Buckley's "National Review",
an editorial by Bruce Bartlett, policy adviser to President Ronald
Reagan; treasury official under President George H.W. Bush; a fellow at
two of the leading conservative think-tanks, the Heritage Foundation
and the Cato Institute; you get the picture. Bartlett tells his readers
that it's almost certain that the Democrats will win the White House in
2008. So what to do? Support the most conservative Democrat. He writes:
"To right-wingers willing to look beneath what probably sounds to them
like the same identical views of the Democratic candidates, it is
pretty clear that Hillary Clinton is the most conservative."[3]
We
also hear from America's premier magazine for the corporate wealthy,
"Fortune", whose recent cover features a picture of Clinton and the
headline: "Business Loves Hillary".[4]
Do those in love with
the idea of a woman president care about such things? Have they never
heard of Margaret Thatcher, who tried her best to cripple the UK's
marvelous National Health Service, amongst a hundred other reactionary
policies? Most of Clinton's supporters would love to see the end of the
Iraqi daily horror and so they presumably will also ignore Ted Koppel,
the newsman of impeccable establishment credentials, who reported
recently that he was told by someone who had held a senior position at
the Pentagon and occasionally briefs Hillary Clinton on Gulf area
matters, that she expects US troops to still be in Iraq at the end of
her first term and even at the end of her second term.[5]
The eternal struggle between the good guys and the bad guys
The
United States and its wholly owned subsidiary, NATO, regularly drop
bombs on Afghanistan which kill varying amounts of terrorists (or
"terrorists", also known as civilians, also known as women and
children). They do this rather often, against people utterly
defenseless against aerial attack. In the first half of this year,
US/NATO forces killed more people than the Taliban and others opposed
to the Western occupation did.[6] This was immediately followed by a
reported 133 additional bombing victims in the first week of July.[7]
US/NATO
spokespersons tell us that these unfortunate accidents happen because
the enemy is deliberately putting civilians in harm's way to provoke a
backlash against the foreign forces. We are told at times that the
enemy had located themselves in the same building as the victims, using
them as "human shields".[8] Therefore, it would seem, the enemy somehow
knows in advance that a particular building is about to be bombed and
they rush a bunch of civilians to the spot before the bombs begin to
fall. Or it's a place where civilians normally live and, finding out
that the building is about to be bombed, the enemy rushes a group of
their own people to the place so they can die with the civilians. Or,
what appears to be much more likely, the enemy doesn't know of the
bombing in advance, but then the civilians would have to always be
there; i.e., they live there; they may even be the wives and children
of the enemy. Is there no limit to the evil cleverness and the clever
evilness of this foe?
Western officials also tell us that the
enemy deliberately attacks from civilian areas, even hoping to draw
fire to drive a wedge between average Afghans and international
troops.[9] Presumably the insurgents are attacking nearby Western
military installations or troop concentrations. This raises the
question: Why are the Western forces building installations and/or
concentrating troops near civilian areas, deliberately putting
civilians in harm's way?
US/NATO military leaders argue that
any comparison of casualties caused by Western forces and by the
Taliban is fundamentally unfair because there is a clear moral
distinction to be made between accidental deaths resulting from combat
operations and deliberate killings of innocents by militants. "No
[Western] soldier ever wakes up in the morning with the intention of
harming any Afghan citizen," said Maj. John Thomas, a spokesman for the
NATO-led International Security Assistance Force. "If that does
inadvertently happen, it is deeply, deeply regretted."[10]
Is that not comforting language? Can any right-thinking, sensitive person fail to see who the good guys are?
During
its many bombings from Vietnam to Iraq, Washington has repeatedly told
the world that the resulting civilian deaths were accidental and very
much "regretted". But if you go out and drop powerful bombs over a
populated area, and then learn that there have been a number of
"unintended" casualties, and then the next day drop more bombs and
learn again that there were "unintended" casualties, and then the next
day you bomb again ... at what point do you lose the right to say that
the deaths were "unintended"?
During the US/NATO 78-day
bombing of Serbia in 1999, which killed many civilians, a Belgrade
office building -- which housed political parties, TV and radio
stations, 100 private companies, and more -- was bombed. But before the
missiles were fired into this building, NATO planners spelled out the
risks: "Casualty Estimate 50-100 Government/Party employees. Unintended
Civ Casualty Est: 250 -- Apts in expected blast radius."[11] The
planners were saying that about 250 civilians living in nearby
apartment buildings might be killed in the bombing, in addition to 50
to 100 government and political party employees, likewise innocent of
any crime calling for execution. So what do we have here? We have grown
men telling each other: We'll do A, and we think that B may well be the
result. But even if B does in fact result, we're saying beforehand --
as we'll insist afterward -- that it was unintended.
It was
actually worse than this. As I've detailed elsewhere, the main purpose
of the Serbian bombings -- admitted to by NATO officials -- was to make
life so difficult for the public that support of the government of
Slobodan Milosevic would be undermined.[12] This, in fact, is the
classic definition of "terrorism", as used by the FBI and the United
Nations: The use or threat of violence against a civilian population to
induce the government to change certain policies.
Another
example of how "the enemy" can't be trusted to act as nice as
god-fearing regular Americans ... "Defense officials said they believe
at least 22 -- and possibly as many as 50 -- former Guantánamo
detainees have returned to the battlefield to fight against the United
States and its allies."[13] The Defense Department has at times used
the possibility of this happening as an argument against releasing
detainees or closing Guantánamo.
But is it imaginable, not to
mention likely, that after three, four or five years in the hell on
earth known as Guantánamo, even detainees not disposed to terrorist
violence -- and many of them were picked up for reasons having nothing
to do with terrorist violence -- left with a deep-seated hatred of
their jailors and a desire for revenge?
Don't believe anything until it's been officially denied.
Those
of you who've been reading my musings over the years know that the
bombing of PanAm flight 103 in December 1988 over Lockerbie, Scotland,
which took the lives of 270 people, has been a major interest of mine.
When The Black Book of The American Empire is written someday there
should be a mention of Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, a Libyan who
has spent the last six years in prison charged with the Lockerbie
bombing. I and many others, including a number in establishment legal
positions, have been arguing for years that the evidence against
Megrahi is very thin and unpersuasive. Now a court in Scotland has
agreed and has ordered a new appeal for Megrahi. I and other so-called
"conspiracy theorists" have been vindicated, although Megrahi is not
yet free.
Briefly, the key international political facts are
these: For well over a year after the bombing, the US and the UK
insisted that Iran, Syria, and a Palestinian group had been behind the
bombing, which was widely regarded as an act of revenge for the US
shooting down an Iranian passenger plane over the Persian Gulf in July
1988, killing 290 people. (An act the US calls an accident, but which
came about because of deliberate American intrusion into the Iran-Iraq
war on the side of Iraq.) Then the buildup to the US invasion of Iraq
came along in 1990 (how quickly do nations change from allies to
enemies on the empire's chessboard) and the support of Iran and Syria
was desired for the operation. Suddenly, in October 1990, the US
declared that it was Libya -- the Arab state least supportive of the US
build-up to the Gulf War and the sanctions imposed against Iraq -- that
was behind the bombing after all. Megrahi and another Libyan were
fingered.[14]
The Scottish Court's recent ruling, as logical
and justified as it is, is still a great surprise. When it comes to
anything associated with the War on Terrorism, the UK and the US are
not particularly noted for logic or justice. So what might be the
reason they're doing, or allowing, "the right thing" for a change?
Could it be that Iran will now be charged with being the instigator and
paymaster for the crime and that this will be used to hammer them into
submission concerning nuclear power and weapons? Or justify an American
attack? But then of course the United States would have to explain why
it falsely accused Libya and allowed, and pushed for, an innocent man
to be sent to prison for life. A very interesting dilemma. It would be
great entertainment to hear George W. Bush trying to explain that one.
(Cheney would just refuse to discuss the matter, saying it's
"classified". Or tell the questioner to go fuck himself.) The dilemma
is further heightened by the fact that it was the administration of
George Bush Senior which made the accusation against Libya. His
secretary of defense at the time was a gentleman named Richard B.
Cheney.
A marriage made in heaven
Former White
House counsel Harriet Miers once called George W. Bush the most
brilliant man she has ever known.[15] She's now no longer alone in her
bizarre little padded cell. On June 10, during the president's visit to
Albania -- arguably the most backward country in all of Europe, today
as well as when it was a Soviet satellite -- the joyous townspeople of
Fushe Kruje yelled "Bushie! Bushie!" and Albania's prime minister
gushed over the "greatest and most distinguished guest we have ever had
in all times."
This was reported by Washington Post columnist
Eugene Robinson, and prompted a letter from a reader, which said in
part: "Regarding Eugene Robinson's June 12 op-ed ... It was inevitable
that somebody would sneer at the Albanian reception of President Bush
... [Robinson] patronizingly writing of 'a wonderful reverse-Borat
moment'. ... U.S. support for Albania following the collapse of
communism explains Albanian gratitude to the United States."[16]
Ah
yes, the wonderful collapse of communism and the even more wonderful
birth of democracy, freedom, capitalism, and widespread poverty and
deprivation in the former Soviet dominion. What actually happened is
that the first election in "Free Albania", in March 1991, resulted in
an overwhelming endorsement of the Communists. And what did the United
States then do? Of course, it proceeded to undertake a campaign to
overthrow this very same elected government. The previous year in
neighboring Bulgaria, another former Soviet satellite, the communists
also won the election. And the United States overthrew them as
well.[17] These were the first of the non-violent overthrows of
governments of the former Soviet Union and its satellites directed and
financed by the United States.[18]
"The one duty we owe to history is to rewrite it."
- Oscar Wilde
Some
international stories never come to an end, relegated to the history
books and stamped finis. They keep popping up in the news of the day,
each time igniting controversy and confusion anew. The dropping of
atomic bombs on Japan in World War 2 is a prime example. On June 30,
the Japanese Defense Minister, Fumio Kyuma, declared in a speech: "I
understand that the bombing ended the war, and I think that it couldn't
be helped."[19] Kyuma's remark offended survivors of the bombings in
Japan who believe the use of atomic weapons was excessive, and he soon
had to resign. At the same time, it has undoubtedly pleased many
American nationalists who insist that the United States had no choice
but to use the bomb, and who resent the stigma the world has long
attached to the US for being the first to employ such a dreadful weapon
of mass destruction.
Kyuma was correct about one thing. The
bombings did end the war. But that's only because the United States
wanted the war to end that way, partly so they could see how well the
bomb worked, but principally to put the Soviet Union on notice that
after the war, if the Russkis put up too much resistance to American
imperialistic ambitions, this was a sample of what they could expect.
Kyuma could just as correctly have said: "I understand that if the
United States had accepted Japan's peace overtures the war could have
ended without the use of the atomic bomb." As opposed to the American
nationalists' version of history, this version is well documented and
established.[20]
Correction
The first item of the last
edition of this report included a couple of examples of stereotypical
cold war anti-communist thinking. I did not realize it at the time but
the examples are derived in large part from an excellent book by
Michael Parenti, "The Anti-Communist Impulse", published in 1969, which
should have been credited.
NOTES
[1] Speaking at the
"Take Back America" conference, organized by the Campaign for America's
Future, June 20, 2007, Washington, DC; this excerpt can be heard at
democracynow.org/ - June 21.
[2] Roger Morris, former member of the National Security Council, "Partners in Power" (1996), p.415
[3] National Review Online, May 1, 2007
[4] Fortune magazine, July 9, 2007
[5] National Public Radio, "All Things Considered", June 11, 2007
[6] Los Angeles Times, July 6, 2007
[7] Washington Post, July 8, 2007, p.16
[8] Los Angeles Times, July 6, 2007
[9] Chicago Tribune, July 8, 2007, article by Kim Barker
[10] Los Angeles Times, July 6, 2007
[11] Washington Post, April 22, 1999, p.18
[12] William Blum, Rogue State, p.103-4
[13] Washington Post, June 22, 2007, p.3
[14]
For an account of the case written in 2001, see:
http://members.aol.com/bblum6/panam.htm. For a slightly updated account
written in 2004, see: William Blum, Freeing the World to Death, chapter
10
[15] Copley News Service, October 10, 2005
[16] Washington Post, June 16, 2007, letter from Andrew Apostolou
[17] http://members.aol.com/bblum6/bulgaria.htm
[18] For further discussion of this, see Freeing the World to Death, p.166-71
[19] Associated Press, July 2, 2007
[20] http://members.aol.com/essays6/abomb.htm
William Blum is the author of:
Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2 Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower
West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire
Portions of the books can be read, and signed copies purchased, at www.killinghope.org
|