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01.02 Blaming the Victims - The Dominant Media Vilify Hamas 12.30 Shock, Awe and Lies: The Truth Behind the Israeli Attack on Gaza 12.10 We All Failed Gary Webb US Politics, Policy & Culture
01.07 Gaza Voices, American Silence 01.06 The $6 Million Social Worker 01.06 Bush Spins Scandalous Neglect of Vets 01.02 2009 is Starting Off with a Shameful and Criminal Bang 12.27 Two Dangerous Bush-Cheney Myths 12.24 Madoff Scandal Exposes Government Failure 12.22 Cheney's Contempt for the Republic 12.19 Obama's New Appointments 12.18 Obama v. Washington Mythmaking 12.17 The Electoral College Has Got To Go 12.16 A Million McVeighs Now: The American-Made Insurgency in Afghanistan 12.15 Thinking About Illinois 12.14 Obama and US-Russia Tensions 12.12 A Time Machine to Save America 12.11 Will Obama Buy Torture-Lite? 12.10 Workers of America: Wake Up! We All Need a Union! US High Crimes
12.31 America's War On Islam - The "Fort Dix Five" 12.30 Henry Kissinger: Eminence Noire 12.28 The Grinning Skull 12.22 Obama v. Richard Falk on Israel and Occupied Palestine 12.19 White House Lied About Iraqi Yellowcake Buy, But That’s Not the Biggest Scandal 12.18 Judge Declines to Jail 'Ghosts of the Iraq War' 12.18 Prosecuting Bush and Cheney for Torture: No One Can Be Above the Law 12.17 Cluster Bomb Treaty and the World's Unfinished Business 12.17 Abandoned by the World: UN Declares Open Season on Somalia 12.17 Assessing the Bush Legacy: The Measure of the Man and His Administration 12.16 Cheney Admits Detainee-Abuse Role 12.15 The Abduction, Secret Detention, Torture, and Repeated Raping of Aafia Siddiqui 12.12 Torture Trail Seen Starting with Bush 12.11 Atrocity Unlimited: US Seeks to Turn Somalia into Global Free-Fire Zone 12.10 The Persecution of Syed Fahad Hashmi Economics & Business Non/Mis/Malfeasance
01.05 Thinking About the 2008 Numbers 12.29 Thinking About Realities 12.26 Early Suspicions About Bernard Madoff 12.24 The Federal Reserve Abolition Act 12.22 Thinking About Expectations 12.12 Excess Debt and Deflation = Depression International
01.07 The Quartet's Hypocrisy and Failure in Occupied Palestine 01.07 Gazing at Gaza's Destruction: Israelis Sip Pepsi, US Progressives See 'Silver Lining' 01.05 Fallujah by the Sea: Aping America, Israel Unleashes Chemical Weapons in Gaza 01.05 Global Human Rights Groups Protest Slaughter in Gaza 12.30 How Hypocrisy on 'Terrorism' Kills 12.29 Israel's Wanton Aggression On Gaza 12.26 Christmas 2008: Hell in the Holy Land 12.17 Canada's Prince of Darkness Assumes Leadership of the Liberal Party We are a non-profit Internet-only newspaper publication founded in 1973. Your donation is essential to our survival.
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JUST COMMENTARY?Delusionary, Dancing BushMarch 31, 2008—Events of the last week offer a metaphorical glimpse at the delusion pervading President George W. Bush’s White House and other enclaves of Iraq War supporters in Washington.
At the American Enterprise Institute, war-cheerleaders – dressed as academicians – were delivering a panegyric on how peaceful and stable the situation in Iraq had become. The “surge,” they announced, had nipped a civil war in the bud. “The civil war is over,” AEI’s Fred Kagan, co-author of the surge, declared proudly. Brookings twins Michael O’Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack led the cheering section. Meanwhile, back in the southern Iraq city of Basra and elsewhere, full-blown civil war seemed about to explode. And in Baghdad, formerly protected folks were getting killed by mortar and rocket fire in what is customarily referred to as “the highly fortified Green Zone,” which has sequestered U.S. embassy and military officials as well as those of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s government. Two American officials and two Iraqi guards of Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi died in the Green Zone attacks. At ABC in New York, Good Morning America’s Diane Sawyer was trying hard Thursday to understand it all. Shaking her head in disbelief after four straight days of attacks on the Green Zone, she asked how a round “can actually get inside the embassy; how fortified is that?” ABC national security correspondent Jonathan Karl let her down easy, explaining that artillery fire can actually get “over the walls...so it does happen: they do get inside the embassy compound.” A teaching moment. Mortar and artillery fire can actually get “over the walls.” Quick. Someone tell Gen. David Petraeus. But Don’t Bother Bush
No need to drag the president away from the Easter Bunny with such nettlesome detail. Interestingly, it was Sawyer herself who asked Bush, during an interview on Dec. 16, 2003, where he gets his news and how he reacts to criticism. The president’s answer was revealing:
By Thursday of last week, someone did tell the president about Maliki’s big gamble in taking on militias loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr in the Basra area, the stiff resistance Iraqi government forces encountered, and the application of U.S. ground and air support. And someone told the president to take the line that the outbreak of major violence was “a positive moment,” and so that’s what he said. No matter that the upsurge in hostilities threatened to demolish the myth of a “successful surge.” The White House spin machine could be counted on to take care of that. And, for good measure, the shelling of the Green Zone could be blamed on Iran. Indeed, Petraeus was quick to label the projectiles “Iranian-provided, Iranian-made rockets.” Reality? We Make Our Own
It is comfortable to stay in denial, and President George W. Bush basks in it. Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska saw that early on. In June 2005, he told U.S. News & World Report:
Would that someone had the courage to tell Bush of the late William F. Buckley, Jr.’s observations about Iraq in the National Review on Feb. 24, 2006:
A few months later, on June 13, 2006, Bush flew to Baghdad to size up Prime Minister Maliki. The president told American troops gathered in the “heavily fortified Green Zone” that he had come “to look Prime Minister Maliki in the eyes—to determine whether or not he is as dedicated to a free Iraq as you are. I believe he is.” This, of course, was not the first display of the president’s propensity to draw significant impressions from eyeballing foreign leaders. Five years before, Bush had quickly taken the measure of Russia’s Vladimir Putin: “I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy...I was able to get a sense of his soul.” Souls can change, I suppose. But apparently not eyeballs. Maliki’s retinal scan apparently remains valid for at least two years, judging from the president’s automatic endorsement of Maliki’s major gamble last week in the Basra area. Bush has now ordered U.S. ground and air units to support Maliki’s effort. The general objective is to root out Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army units in the area, but the campaign faces formidable obstacles and does not appear to be going well. Doesn’t Make a Lot of Sense? So?...
In the past, Bush has let himself be convinced by Vice President Dick Cheney’s “analysis” that increased enemy attacks were signs of desperation—an indication that the enemy is in its “last throes,” if you will. And it seems clear that Cheney is still, as Col. Larry Wilkerson has put it, “whispering in Bush’s ear.” That is scary. There were abundant signs during Cheney’s recent visit to the Middle East that, among other things, he continues to be receptive to Israeli importuning, as Israeli president Shimon Perez put it on March 23, to deal with what both referred to as “the Iranian threat” before Bush leaves office. Bush and Cheney seem to have given Israeli leaders the impression that the Bush administration has made a commitment to do precisely that. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, who was national security adviser to the president’s father and who was appointed chairman of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board by the son, took the unusual step of going public with a startling remark in October 2004 that should give us all great concern. Just before he was sacked, the usually discreet Scowcroft told the Financial Times that former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon had George W. Bush “mesmerized.” Eyeballing again—this time in Bush’s direction, it appears. And Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, with masterful tutoring from the psychologists in the Israeli Mossad, has shown he can duplicate the spell. Who can forget watching Olmert’s fulsome praise of George W. Bush during his recent visit to Israel and how Bush seemed to turn to putty. Aw shucks, he seemed to be saying; at least the Israelis respect me. And they are “mighty tough fellas.” Attacking Iran
The point is that if Cheney and Olmert both whisper “attack Iran,” the president may give the order with the full expectation that—with Admiral William Fallon out of the way—a malleable secretary of defense and martinet generals and admirals left over from former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s reign will salute smartly and launch a much wider and more dangerous war in the Persian Gulf area. (After all, those rockets hitting the Green Zone are, according to Gen. Petraeus, “Iranian-provided, Iranian-made.”) Why attack Iran? Israeli leaders have insisted publicly that they want this done before Bush and Cheney leave office. And also, well, just because! Because, as Bush is fond of saying, he is commander in chief. And he considers the U.S. armed forces his plaything. And because he can. Never mind the consequences. When has anyone had the courage to hold George W. Bush accountable for consequences? Worse still, Bush’s open-ended rhetorical commitment to defend Israel if attacked could spell big trouble. If Iran were to strike Israel, Bush has said, “We will defend our ally (sic), no ifs, ands, or buts.” That is great rhetoric; trouble is that it surrenders the initiative to the Israelis, who have it within their power to provoke the Iranians. And, Please, No Jimmy Baker
Bush chafes at any thought that those he considers his father’s cronies could rein him in. Bete noire number one is the fella the president calls “Jimmy Baker.” Negotiate with Iran? Draw down troops? George W. Bush will instinctively do the opposite. If Baker says Guantanamo should be shut down (as he did, joining five other former secretaries of state last week), then keep it open. But, most of all, enjoy the last 10 months of “unitary executive” power. That is perhaps most disturbing of all. George W. Bush is tap dancing through it all. And the worse things get, the more jocular he seems to become. Commenting on Bush’s recent manic behavior, Justin Frank, M.D., author of Bush on the Couch, suggests that Bush is “acting like a kid planning to make a real mess as only he knows how—given his comfort with sadism; his lack of shame or conscience; and his propensity to take delight in breaking things.” Trouble is that as he tap dances the next few months away, he is systematically destroying the armed forces of the United States, and there does not seem to be anyone with the courage to try to stop him. Eight months ago, Dr. Frank and Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) collaborated on an article we called “Dangers of a Cornered Bush.” Since the president and his imperial court have 10 more months to act out, the scenarios we explored in that memo are still worth pondering. Let me close with a remark Seymour Hersh made last year, even though it may seem flippant and in no way conveys the enormity of the danger we face in the coming months:
With so much destructive power at the disposal of George W. Bush, we need to be increasingly alert to signs that additional delusionary policies are about to be executed. Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, DC. He was an Army intelligence officer before joining the CIA where he had a 27-year career as an analyst. He is now on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).
This article is republished in the Baltimore Chronicle with permission of the author. Copyright © 2008 The Baltimore News Network. All rights reserved.
Republication or redistribution of Baltimore Chronicle content is expressly prohibited without their prior written consent. Baltimore News Network, Inc., sponsor of this web site, is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed in stories posted on this web site are the authors' own. This story was published on March 31, 2008. |
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