Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
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The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
In a Sound-bite Society, Reality no Longer Matters
by William Blum
Last month, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told assembled world leaders at the United Nations that the time had come to take action against Iran.
"None disagrees," she said, "that Iran denies the Holocaust and speaks openly of its desire to wipe a member state - mine - off the map. And none disagrees that, in violation of Security Council resolutions, it is actively pursuing the means to achieve this end. Too many see the danger but walk idly by - hoping that someone else will take care of it. ... It is time for the United Nations, and the states of the world, to live up to their promise of never again. To say enough is enough, to act now and to defend their basic values."[1]
Read this or George W. Bush will be president the rest of your life
The Anti-Empire Report
November 6, 2007
by William Blum
www.killinghope.org
Yet, later the same month, we are informed by Haaretz, (frequently described as "the New York Times of Israel"), that the same
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni had said a few months earlier, in a series
of closed discussions, that in her opinion "Iranian nuclear weapons do
not pose an existential threat to Israel."
Haaretz
reported that "Livni also criticized the exaggerated use that [Israeli]
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is making of the issue of the Iranian bomb,
claiming that he is attempting to rally the public around him by
playing on its most basic fears."[2]
What are we to make of such a self-contradiction, such perfect hypocrisy?
And
here is Fareed Zakaria, editor of Newsweek International:
"The one time
we seriously negotiated with Tehran was in the closing days of the war
in Afghanistan, in order to create a new political order in the
country. Bush's representative to the Bonn conference, James Dobbins,
says that 'the Iranians were very professional, straightforward,
reliable and helpful. They were also critical to our success. They
persuaded the Northern Alliance [Afghan foes of the Taliban] to make
the final concessions that we asked for.' Dobbins says the Iranians
made overtures to have better relations with the United States through
him and others in 2001 and later, but got no reply. Even after the Axis
of Evil speech, he recalls, they offered to cooperate in Afghanistan.
Dobbins took the proposal to a principals meeting in Washington only to
have it met with dead silence. The then Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, he says, 'looked down and rustled his papers.' No reply was
ever sent back to the Iranians. Why bother? They're mad."[3]
Dobbins
has further written: "The original version of the Bonn agreement ...
neglected to mention either democracy or the war on terrorism. It was
the Iranian representative who spotted these omissions and successfully
urged that the newly emerging Afghan government be required to commit
to both."[4]
"... Only weeks after Hamid Karzai was sworn in as interim
leader in Afghanistan, President Bush listed Iran among the 'axis of
evil' -- surprising payback for Tehran's help in Bonn. A year later,
shortly after the invasion of Iraq, all bilateral contacts with Tehran
were suspended. Since then, confrontation over Iran's nuclear program
has intensified."[5]
Shortly after the US invasion of Iraq in
2003, Iran made another approach to Washington, via the Swiss
ambassador who sent a fax to the State Department. The Washington Post
described it as "a proposal from Iran for a broad dialogue with the
United States, and the fax suggested everything was on the table --
including full cooperation on nuclear programs, acceptance of Israel
and the termination of Iranian support for Palestinian militant
groups."
The Bush administration "belittled the initiative. Instead,
they formally complained to the Swiss ambassador who had sent the fax."
Richard Haass, head of policy planning at the State Department at the
time and now president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said the
Iranian approach was swiftly rejected because in the administration
"the bias was toward a policy of regime change."[6]
So there
we have it. The Israelis know it, the Americans know it. Iran is not
any kind of military threat. Before the invasion of Iraq I posed the
question in this report: What possible reason would Saddam Hussein have
for attacking the United States or Israel other than an irresistible
desire for mass national suicide? He had no reason, and neither do the
Iranians.
Of the many lies surrounding the invasion of Iraq, the
biggest one of all is that if, in fact, Saddam Hussein had those
weapons of mass destruction the invasion would have been justified.
The
United States and Israel have long strived to dominate the Middle East,
viewing Iraq and Iran as the most powerful barriers to that ambition.
Iraq is now a basket case. Iran awaits basketization. And, eventually
perhaps, the omnipresent American military bases, closing the base-gap
between Iraq and Afghanistan in Washington's encirclement of China, and
the better to monitor the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf and Caspian
Sea areas.
There was a time when I presumed that the sole
purpose of United States hostile policy toward Iran was to keep the
Iranians from acquiring nuclear weapons, which would deprive the US and
Israel of their mideast monopoly and ultimate tool of intimidation. But
now it appears that destroying Iran's military capability, nuclear and
otherwise, smashing it to the point of being useless defensively or
offensively, is the Bush administration's objective, perhaps along with
the hope of some form of regime change. The Empire leaves as little to
chance as possible.
Cuba and Original Sin
Since the
early days of the Cuban Revolution assorted anti-communists and
capitalist true-believers around the world have been relentless in
publicizing the failures, real and alleged, of life in Cuba; each
perceived shortcoming is attributed to the perceived shortcomings of
socialism -- It's simply a system that can't work, we are told, given
the nature of human beings, particularly in this modern, competitive,
globalized, consumer-oriented world.
In response to many of
these criticisms, defenders of Cuban society have regularly pointed out
how the numerous draconian sanctions imposed by the United States since
1960 are largely responsible for most of the problems pointed out by
the critics. The critics, in turn, say that this is just an excuse, one
given by Cuban apologists for every failure of their socialist system.
However, it would be very difficult for the critics to prove their
point. The United States would have to drop all sanctions and then we'd
have to wait long enough for Cuban society to recover what it's lost
and demonstrate what its system can do when not under constant attack
by the most powerful nation in the world.
The sanctions (which
Cuba calls an economic blockade), designed to create discontent toward
the government, have been expanding under the Bush administration, both
in number and in vindictiveness. Washington has adopted sharper
reprisals against those who do business with Cuba or establish
relations with the country based on cultural or tourist exchanges;
e.g., the US Treasury has frozen the accounts in the United States of
the Netherlands Caribbean Bank because it has an office in Cuba, and
banned US firms and individuals from having any dealings with the Dutch
bank.
The US Treasury Department fined the Alliance of
Baptists $34,000, charging that certain of its members and parishioners
of other churches had engaged in tourism during a visit to Cuba for
religious purposes; i.e., they had spent money there. (As George W.
once said: "U.S. law forbids Americans to travel to Cuba for
pleasure."[7])
American courts and government agencies have
helped US companies expropriate the famous Cuban cigar brand name
'Cohiba' and the well-known rum "Havana Club".
The Bush
administration sent a note to American Internet service providers
telling them not to deal with six specified countries, including
Cuba.[8] This is one of several actions by Washington over the years to
restrict Internet availability in Cuba; yet Cuba's critics claim that
problems with the Internet in Cuba are due to government suppression.
Cubans
in the United States are limited to how much money they can send to
their families in Cuba, a limit Washington imposes only on Cubans
and on no other nationals. Not even during the worst moments of the
Cold War was there a general limit to the amount of money that people
in the US could send to relatives living in the Soviet satellites in
Eastern Europe.
In 1999, Cuba filed a suit against the United
States for $181.1 billion in compensation for economic losses and loss
of life during the first forty years of this aggression. The suit held
Washington responsible for the death of 3,478 Cubans and the wounding
and disabling of 2,099 others. In the eight years since, these figures
have of course all increased. The sanctions, in numerous ways large and
small, makes acquiring many kinds of products and services from around
the world much more difficult and expensive, often impossible;
frequently, they are things indispensable to Cuban medicine,
transportation or industry; or they mean that Americans and Cubans
can't attend professional conferences in each other's country.
The
above is but a small sample of the excruciating pain inflicted by the
United States upon the body, soul and economy of the Cuban people.
For
years American political leaders and media were fond of labeling Cuba
an "international pariah". We don't hear much of that any more. Perhaps
one reason is the annual vote at the United Nations on a General
Assembly resolution to end the US embargo against Cuba. This is how the
vote has gone:
Cuba's
sin, which the United States of America can not forgive, is to have
created a society that can serve as a successful example of an
alternative to the capitalist model, and, moreover, to have done so
under the very nose of the United States. And despite all the hardships
imposed on it by Washington, Cuba has indeed inspired countless peoples
and governments all over the world.
Long-time writer about
Cuba, Karen Lee Wald, has observed: "The United States has more pens,
pencils, candy, aspirin, etc. than most Cubans have. They, on the other
hand, have better access to health services, education, sports,
culture, childcare, services for the elderly, pride and dignity than
most of us have within reach."
In a 1996 address to the
General Assembly, Cuban Vice-President Carlos Lage stated: "Each day in
the world 200 million children sleep in the streets. Not one of them is
Cuban."
On April 6, 1960, L.D. Mallory, a US State Department
senior official, wrote in an internal memorandum: "The majority of
Cubans support Castro ... the only foreseeable means of alienating
internal support is through disenchantment and disaffection based on
economic dissatisfaction and hardship. ... every possible means should
be undertaken promptly to weaken the economic life of Cuba." Mallory
proposed "a line of action that makes the greatest inroads in denying
money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to
bring about hunger, desperation and the overthrow of the government."
Later that year, the Eisenhower administration instituted the
embargo.[9]
Hugo the demon dictator strikes again
The
latest evidence that Hugo Chavez is a dictator, we are told, is that
he's pushing for a constitutional amendment to remove term limits from
the presidency. It's the most contentious provision in his new reform
package which has recently been approved by the Venezuelan congress and
awaits a public referendum on December 2. The lawmakers traveled
nationwide to discuss the proposals with community groups at more than
9,000 public events[10], rather odd behavior for a dictatorship, as is
another of the reforms -- setting a maximum six-hour workday so workers
would have sufficient time for "personal development."
The
American media and the opposition in Venezuela make it sound as if
Chavez is going to be guaranteed office for as long as he wants. What
they fail to emphasize, if they mention it at all, is that there's
nothing at all automatic about the process -- Chavez will have to be
elected each time. Neither are we enlightened that it's not unusual for
a nation to not have a term limit for its highest office. France,
Germany, and the United Kingdom, if not all of Europe and much of the
rest of the world, do not have such a limit. The United States did not
have a term limit on the office of the president during the nation's
first 162 years, until the ratification of the 22nd Amendment in 1951.
Were all American presidents prior to that time dictators?
Is
it of any significance, I wonder, that the two countries of the Western
Hemisphere whose governments the United States would most like to
overthrow -- Venezuela and Cuba -- have the greatest national obsession
with baseball outside of the United States?
Reason Number 3,467 for having doubts about our God-given free-enterprise system
I
recently bought my first cellphone and took it with me to Burlington,
Vermont, only to discover that it didn't work there. It seems that
AT&T/Cingular doesn't have cellphone towers in that area. But other
phone companies do have towers there and their subscribers' phones
work. Is that not a really clever system?
To have a single
national telephone system with all towers available for use by everyone
would presumably upset libertarians and others who worship at the
shrine of competition.. So instead we're given another charming "market
solution", and the beauty of competition is preserved. Why stop there?
Just imagine the advantages in being able to call around to find out
which fire station will give you the best rate should your house
suddenly go up in flames.
An unwelcome guest at the table of respectable opinion
In
the September edition of this report I presented a review of New York
Times reporter Tim Weiner's new book "Legacy of Ashes: The History of
the CIA". It was rather critical of the book, particularly as to what
has been left out about CIA operations and the effect upon foreign
peoples of these operations.
The net result of these numerous omissions
is to paint a picture of US foreign policy that significantly downplays
the actions most destructive to the peace, prosperity, and happiness of
the world. It's an old story -- the media decide which issues to cover
in the first place; they then decide how many sides there are to an
issue; and then they decide what type of coverage is "balanced". The
major ideological problem of the American media is that they do not
believe that they have any ideology.
But I wondered if I was
not being somewhat unfair to Weiner in one or more cases; perhaps he
had a good reason for some of his omissions; perhaps in the 700 pages,
including 155 pages of small-type notes, I had missed something I
thought had been omitted. I decided to send a copy of the review to
him, hopefully to get his reaction, and wrote to the Times asking for
his email address. I got back an email from Weiner himself which read,
in full:
"Dear Mr. Blum: I read your review several days ago. And I've read all your books. best wishes, tw"
No
challenges to anything I said; no corrections. I'd be surprised if he's
done more than skim a few pages of any of my books. His letter is his
way of saying:
"I really don't want to hear from you again. Our worlds
are not designed for mingling. Our truths are not the same, and neither
my publisher nor the New York Times pays me to disseminate yours."
NOTES
[1] Haaretz.com (Israeli newspaper), October 1, 2007
[2] Haaretz.com, October 25, 2007; print edition October 26
[3] Newsweek, October 20, 2007
[4] Washington Post, May 6, 2004
[5] Washington Post, July 22, 2007, p.B7, op-ed by Dobbins
[6] Washington Post, June 18, 2006, p.16
[7] White House press release, October 10, 2003
[8] Press release from the Cuban Mission to the United Nations, October 17, 2007, re this and preceding three paragraphs.
[9] Department of State, "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1958-1960, Volume VI, Cuba" (1991), p.885
[10] Washington Post, October 31, 2007, p.12
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 >
Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website at "essays".
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