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Bush marks six months since September 11 with war threats
draped in platitudes
By David Walsh
12 March 2002
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The address delivered Monday by George W. Bush to mark the
six-month anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks combined
platitudes and lies. Speaking at a White House ceremony before
a group of dignitaries and the relatives of some 300 victims,
Bush defended the war in Afghanistan as a just and vital
cause and promised further US military interventions.
There were suggestions in the media leading up to the speech
that Bush might indicate the countriesaside from those where
American forces are already operatingthat his administration
intended to target next in its open-ended war on terrorism.
Bush would offer a more detailed outline of the administrations
plans to stamp out the terrorist network, according to a
wire service story. Media pundits were hoping Bush would spell
out his plans for an attack on Iraq.
As it turned out, the speech was largely a non-event. The staple
of US government propagandathat it is the standard-bearer
of civilization, opposing forces of unspeakable evilformed
the core of Bushs 20-minute address. We face an enemy
of ruthless ambition, unconstrained by law or morality,
he declared.
As is so often the case with American politicians, the claims
made about their enemies are far more applicable to their own
activities. There is no force in the world today more widely hated
for its ruthless ambition, unconstrained by law or morality
than the US government.
Washington has dispatched troops to Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Yemen
and the Philippines in the past six months alone. It has increased
its role in Colombia, threatened North Korea, Iran and Iraq, and
embarked on a course aimed at establishing world domination. More
and more, the US is seen as a dangerous and arrogant bully by
much of the worlds population.
In his speech Bush claimed, Part of the cause was to
liberate the Afghan people from terrorist occupation, and we did
so. Leaving aside the fact of tacit US support for the Taliban
when it came to power in 1996 and Washingtons long-standing
relations with Islamic fundamentalismthe CIA in the 1980s
actively recruited Muslims from around the world to come to Afghanistan
and join the US-backed force fighting Soviet troops and the pro-Moscow
regime in Kabulthe notion that the Afghan people have been
in any sense liberated by the ongoing war is obscene.
As the New York Times noted in late December, The
United States-led military campaign that began on Oct. 7 has succeeded
in eradicating most of the Taliban and Al Qaeda from Afghanistan,
but it has returned to power nearly all of the same warlords who
had misruled the country in the days before the Taliban.
This is one of many similar accounts appearing in the international
media.
In his speech, Bush ominously announced the second stage
of the war on terror, a worldwide campaign in which the
US encourages and expects governments everywhere to help
remove the terrorist parasites that threaten their own countries
and [the] peace of the world. Why these unnamed countries
would have to be encouraged by an external power,
the US, to deal with serious threats to their own stability is
something of a mystery. In any event, Bush praised the regimes
in the Philippines, Georgia and Yemen for inviting US forces.
He continued: Every nation in our coalition must take
seriously the growing threat of terror on a catastrophic scaleterror
armed with biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons.... Here is
what we already know: some states that sponsor terror are seeking
or already possess weapons of mass destruction; terrorist groups
are hungry for these weapons, and would use them without a hint
of conscience. And we know that these weapons, in the hands of
terrorists, would unleash blackmail and chaos and chaos. These
facts cannot be denied, and must be confronted.
What facts? Bush has not mentioned a single fact, or even named
a single country. He has simply uttered a series of vague and
unsubstantiated allegations, on the basis of which the US arrogates
to itself the right to go to war.
Here are some real facts: the American government is waging
a brutal war in Central Asia in the course of which it has dropped
every kind of bomb short of tactical nuclear weapons. As everyone
in the world knows, the Pentagon is the greatest researcher, developer
and user of weapons of mass destruction.
The US is the only country, for example, that is known to have
produced weapons-grade anthrax in the past quarter-century. Washingtons
targeting of seven nations for nuclear attack, including countries
that do not possess the atomic bomb, has been revealed only in
the past few days. The US, of course, remains the only nation
to have used atomic weapons, wiping out the Japanese cities of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Bush continued: Men with no respect for life must never
be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.... We
fight for lawful change against chaotic violence, for human choice
against coercion and cruelty, and for the dignity and goodness
of every life.
Unfortunately for the people of the world, a man with no
respect for life already controls a good many of the ultimate
instruments of death. During his five-year governorship
of Texas (1995-2000), George W. Bush presided over the execution
of 152 death-row prisoners. Since occupying the White House he
has continued the killing spree, only on a larger terrain: Central
Asia.
According to the BBC, the state-operated information agency
of Washingtons closest ally, the butchery in Afghanistan
has already claimed the lives of 3,600 civilians, a larger number
than those killed in the September 11 attacks. One has to assume,
considering the source, that this is an underestimation. So much
for the dignity and goodness of every life.
As for the fight for lawful change against chaotic violence,
such a comment coming from a US official ought to provoke howls
of laughter. Any history of American policy since the end of the
nineteenth century would have to devote a great deal of attention
to the countless efforts by Washington to remove or subvert governments
it considered unfriendly, from intervention against the Russian
Revolution in 1918 to innumerable operations in Latin America
and the Caribbean, to the ongoing attempt to oust Saddam Hussein
in Iraq.
There is no major power that violates international law with
such flagrancy as the US. During the 1980s the CIA mined Sandino
harbor in Nicaragua; when the International Court of Justice in
The Hague found against the US, the Reagan administration simply
ignored it. Washington is currently flouting the Geneva Convention
in its treatment of Afghan War prisoners; it is preparing to violate
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which prohibits the use
of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear powers.
Bush, the chief official of the most bellicose regime seen
since the end of World War II, concluded his remarks on this note:
I see a peaceful world beyond the war on terror, and with
courage and unity, we are building that world together.
Since Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has indicated that the
war on terrorism might go on for decades, and Vice
President Dick Cheney suggested it might last 50 years, Bush must
be endowed with keen vision.
On Monday, Bush pulled back from the axis of evil
rhetoric of his State of the Union address last January. Indeed,
the word evil did not appear once. Nor did he make
a single reference to Iraq or utter any specific threats, although
the implication of his remarks about weapons of mass destruction
was clear enough.
The speech and the ceremony as a whole, rather dispirited and
perfunctory, reflected, despite inflated claims of an 80 percent
approval rating for Bush and 90 percent approval for the war,
the administrations own sense of growing popular concern
and disaffection. Indeed, a poll published Monday in USA Today
noted a drop in support for Bushs long-term war plans,
from 62 percent in November to 52 percent today.
The White House spectacle had, moreover, a large element of
unreality. Everybody knew that the ceremony was little more than
window dressing for the next US military assaultalmost certainly
against Iraq.
In CNNs post-speech coverage, the commentators were quite
frank about the goings-on. White House correspondent Major Garrett
commented on the participation of the ambassadors from Turkey
and South Korea: South Korea is vital to whatever the United
States does as it relates to North Korea, one of the nations mentioned
by the president in his axis of evil. And, of course,
Turkey is crucial to whatever the United States may or may not
do in Iraq.
When asked about the presence of the Nigerian ambassador, retired
General Wesley Clark, now a CNN military analyst, observed: We
have a huge interest in Nigeria. Its a very large country,
and its a very important source of oil.
Asked more generally whether Bush had tipped his hand as
to where we might see the next front in this war going,
Clark replied that Iraq was certainly up on the hit list.
That Bush had nothing of any substance to tell the American
people six months after September 11, except that they should
get ready for more military violence, comes as no surprise. He
cannot report the findings of an investigation into the attack,
for the simple reason that no serious investigation has been conducted.
The very day Bush made his speech at the White House, CNN reported
that the FBI was essentially winding up its inquiries into the
attack, that its US leads have virtually dried up
and its primary mission now is preventing another September
11.
See Also:
US plans widespread use of nuclear weapons
in war
Bush orders Pentagon to target seven nations for attack
[11 March 2002]
Gangsterism in the guise of diplomacy
US flaunts scheme to use weapons inspections as pretext for war
vs. Iraq
[9 March 2002]
US massacre in eastern Afghanistan
[7 March 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
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