What Do We Stand For?
by Paul Craig Roberts
www.antiwar.com/, February 18,
2008
Americans traditionally thought of their
country as a "city upon a hill," a "light unto
the world." Today only the deluded think that. Polls show
that the rest of the world regards the U.S. and Israel as the
two greatest threats to peace.
This is not surprising. In the words of
Arthur Silber:
"The Bush administration has announced
to the world, and to all Americans, that this is what the United
States now stands for: a vicious determination to dominate the
world, criminal, genocidal wars of aggression, torture, and an
increasingly brutal and brutalizing authoritarian state at home.
That is what we stand for."
Addressing his fellow Americans, Silber
asks the paramount question: "why do you support" these
horrors?
His question goes to the heart of the
matter. Do we Americans have any honor, any humanity, any integrity,
any awareness of the crimes our government is committing in our
name? Do we have a moral conscience?
How can a moral conscience be reconciled
with our continuing to tolerate our government which has invaded
two countries on the basis of lies and deception, destroyed their
civilian infrastructures and murdered hundreds of thousands of
men, women, and children?
The killing and occupation continue even
though we now know that the invasions were based on lies and fabricated
"evidence." The entire world knows this. Yet Americans
continue to act as if the gratuitous invasions, the gratuitous
killing, and the gratuitous destruction are justified. There is
no end of it in sight.
If Americans have any honor, how can they
betray their Founding Fathers, who gave them liberty, by tolerating
a government that claims immunity to law and the Constitution
and is erecting a police state in their midst?
Answers to these questions vary. Some
reply that a fearful and deceived American public seeks safety
from terrorists in government power.
Others answer that a majority of Americans
finally understand the evil that Bush has set loose and tried
to stop him by voting out the Republicans in November 2006 and
putting the Democrats in control of Congress - all to no effect
- and are now demoralized as neither party gives a hoot for public
opinion or has a moral conscience.
The people ask over and over, "What
can we do?"
Very little when the institutions put
in place to protect the people from tyranny fail. In the U.S.,
the institutions have failed across the board.
The freedom and independence of the watchdog
press was destroyed by the media concentration that was permitted
by the Clinton administration and Congress. Americans who rely
on traditional print and TV media simply have no idea what is
afoot.
Political competition failed when the
opposition party became a "me-too" party. The Democrats
even confirmed as attorney general Michael Mukasey, an authoritarian
who refuses to condemn torture and whose rulings as a federal
judge undermined habeas corpus. Such a person is now the highest
law enforcement officer in the United States.
The judicial system failed when federal
judges ruled that "state secrets" and "national
security" are more important than government accountability
and the rule of law.
The separation of powers failed when Congress
acquiesced to the executive branch's claims of primary power and
independence from statutory law and the Constitution.
It failed again when the Democrats refused
to impeach Bush and Cheney, the two greatest criminals in American
political history.
Without the impeachment of Bush and Cheney,
America can never recover. The precedents for unaccountable government
established by the Bush administration are too great, their damage
too lasting. Without impeachment, America will continue to sink
into dictatorship in which criticism of the government and appeals
to the Constitution are criminalized. We are closer to executive
rule than many people know.
Silber reminds us that America once had
leaders, such as Speaker of the House Thomas B. Reed and Sen.
Robert M. LaFollette Sr., who valued the principles upon which
America was based more than they valued their political careers.
Perhaps Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich are of this ilk, but America
has fallen so low that people who stand on principle today are
marginalized. They cannot become speaker of the House or a leader
in the Senate.
Today Congress is almost as superfluous
as the Roman Senate under the caesars. On Feb. 13 the U.S. Senate
barely passed a bill banning torture, and the White House promptly
announced that President Bush would veto it. Torture is now the
American way. The U.S. Senate was only able to muster 51 votes
against torture, an indication that almost a majority of U.S.
senators support torture.
Bush says that his administration does
not torture. So why veto a bill prohibiting torture? Bush seems
proud to present America to the world as a torturer.
After years of lying to Americans and
the rest of the world that Guantanamo prison contained 774 of
"the world's most dangerous terrorists," the Bush regime
is bringing six of its victims to trial. The vast majority of
the 774 detainees have been quietly released. The U.S. government
stole years of life from hundreds of ordinary people who had the
misfortune to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and were
captured by warlords and sold to the stupid Americans as "terrorists."
Needing terrorists to keep the farce going, the U.S. government
dropped leaflets in Afghanistan offering $25,000 a head for "terrorists."
Kidnappings ensued until the U.S. government had purchased enough
"terrorists" to validate the "terrorist threat."
The six that the U.S. is bringing to "trial"
include two child soldiers for the Taliban and a car-pool driver
who allegedly drove bin Laden.
The Taliban did not attack the U.S. The
child soldiers were fighting in an Afghan civil war. The U.S.
attacked the Taliban. How does that make Taliban soldiers terrorists
who should be locked up and abused in Gitmo and brought before
a kangaroo military tribunal? If a terrorist hires a driver or
a taxi, does that make the driver a terrorist? What about the
pilots of the airliners who brought the alleged 9/11 terrorists
to the U.S.? Are they guilty, too?
The Gitmo trials are show trials. Their
only purpose is to create the precedent that the executive branch
can ignore the U.S. court system and try people in the same manner
that innocent people were tried in Stalinist Russia and Gestapo
Germany. If the Bush regime had any real evidence against the
Gitmo detainees, it would have no need for its kangaroo military
tribunal.
If any more proof is needed that Bush
has no case against any of the Gitmo detainees, the following
AP report, Feb. 14, 2008, should suffice: "The Bush administration
asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to limit judges' authority
to scrutinize evidence against detainees at Guantanamo Bay."
The reason Bush doesn't want judges to
see the evidence is that there is no evidence except a few confessions
obtained by torture. In the American system of justice, confession
obtained by torture is self-incrimination and is impermissible
evidence under the U.S. Constitution.
Andy Worthington's book, The Guantanamo
Files, and his online articles make it perfectly clear that the
"dangerous terrorists" claim of the Bush administration
is just another hoax perpetrated on the inattentive American public.
Recently the nonpartisan Center for Public
Integrity issued a report that documents the fact that Bush administration
officials made 935 false statements about Iraq to the American
people in order to deceive them into going along with Bush's invasion.
In recent testimony before Congress, Bush's secretary of state
and former national security adviser, Condi Rice, was asked by
Rep. Robert Wexler about the 56 false statements she made.
Rice replied: "[I] take my integrity
very seriously, and I did not at any time make a statement that
I knew to be false." Rice blamed "the intelligence assessments"
which "were wrong."
Another Rice lie, like those mushroom
clouds that were going to go up over American cities if we didn't
invade Iraq. The weapon inspectors told the Bush administration
that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, as Scott
Ritter has reminded us over and over. Every knowledgeable person
in the country knew there were no weapons. As the leaked Downing
Street memo confirms, the head of British intelligence told the
UK cabinet that the Bush administration had already decided to
invade Iraq and was making up the intelligence to justify the
invasion.
But let's assume that Rice was fooled
by faulty intelligence. If she had any integrity she would have
resigned. In the days when American government officials had integrity,
they would have resigned in shame from such a disastrous war and
terrible destruction based on their mistake. But Condi Rice, like
all the Bush (and Clinton) operatives, is too full of American
self-righteousness and ambition to have any remorse about her
mistake. Condi can still look herself in the mirror despite one
million Iraqis dying from her mistake and several million more
being homeless refugees, just as Clinton's secretary of state,
Madeleine Albright, can still look herself in the mirror despite
sharing responsibility for 500,000 dead Iraqi children.
There is no one in the Bush administration
with enough integrity to resign. It is a government devoid of
truth, morality, decency, and honor. The Bush administration is
a blight upon America and upon the world.
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