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Terror alerts set stage for election based on fear
By Bill Van Auken, SEP presidential candidate
3 August 2004
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With the declaration of code orange terror alerts
in New York City, Washington, DC, and Newark, New Jersey, the
Bush administration has set the stage for a national election
in which government-inspired fear will be a principal tool in
a campaign to coerce American voters.
Monday saw the deployment of black-uniformed paramilitary police
armed with assault rifles outside the stock exchange and other
major financial centers in New York and neighboring Newark, as
well as stepped-up security at the headquarters of the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund in Washington. Major arteries
into New York were closed to commercial traffic and trucks subjected
to searches.
Are the warnings of terrorist attacks justified by genuine
intelligence or are they merely a political fabrication by the
Bush administration calculated to terrorize the American public?
It is impossible to say, given that the information that Washington
claims to have unearthed is, as always, kept secret.
US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, claim that
detailed information emerged following the arrest of an Al Qaeda
operative in Pakistan the previous week. According to these officials,
recovered with the captured operative was a treasure trove
of intelligence material.
The nature of this intelligence is itself suspect, however.
According to the unnamed officials, it consists of evidence that
Al Qaeda supporters had cased out the financial centers in New
York, Newark and Washington, but that this surveillance predated
the September 11, 2001, attacks. They admitted that there was
no indication that any terrorist action was imminent.
Given the record of the current administration, no warning
of a terrorist attack can be taken at face value. This administrations
modus operandi has been based on lies, provocations and intimidationfrom
the theft of the 2000 election onwards. Yet both the media and
the administrations ostensible political opponents in the
Democratic Party have treated the unverifiable intelligence claims
as incontrovertible fact.
The one prominent discordant voice was that of former Democratic
presidential candidate Howard Dean, who told CNN that he was concerned
that every time something happens thats not good for President
Bush, he plays this trump card, which is terrorism. He added,
Its just impossible to know how much of this is real
and how much of this is politics, and I suspect theres some
of both.
The comment, which expressed an opinion widely shared on the
streets of New York, Newark and Washington, provoked a storm of
official outrage against the former Vermont governor. Republicans
stopped just short of accusing him of treason, while Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry swiftly disassociated himself
from Deans remarks.
Fellow Democrat and former candidate for the partys presidential
nomination, Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, called Deans
comments outrageous, adding, No one in their
right mind would think the president or the secretary of homeland
security would raise an alert level and scare people for political
reasons.
On the contrary, millions of perfectly sane people throughout
the US know full well that this administration has already manipulated
intelligence and inflated terrorist threats for political reasons.
They have seen government officials seize upon the tragic events
of September 11, 2001, to intimidate political opposition and
justify everything from unprovoked war to tax cuts for the wealthy.
They have watched the unraveling of the multiple false pretexts
given for the long-planned war to conquer Iraq and its oil resources.
Most prominent among these was the lie that the Iraqi regime was
arming terrorists with weapons of mass destruction
for an imminent attack that could be forestalled only by war.
There is ample reason to question the timing and validity of
the latest terror scare. It came on the very eve of a White House
press conference touting the administrations partial adoption
of recommendations made by the 9/11 commission for revamping the
US national intelligence apparatus. Flanked by his senior cabinet
ministers and the acting director of the CIA, Bush used the terror
alert as a backdrop for his proposals, declaring the alert a solemn
reminder of the threat we continue to face, and projecting
a war on terrorism that would continue without foreseeable end.
The circumstances surrounding the capture of the supposed source
of the fresh intelligenceTanzanian-born Ahmed Khalfan Ghailanisuggest
a politically manipulated event. There have been widespread reports
that the Bush administration is using a combination of bribes
and threats to convince the Pakistani regime to stage the capture
of so-called high-value targets, senior figures in
Al Qaeda or the Taliban, to coincide with the Republican National
Convention and the run-up to the November election. Both Al Qaeda
and the Taliban had intimate ties with the Pakistani intelligence
agency, the ISI, which in turn has long functioned as a key partner
of the American CIA.
Pakistani security forces arrested Ghailani on July 25. Yet
the announcement of his arrest was delayed until July 30, just
hours before Kerry was to give his acceptance speech to the Democratic
National Convention.
There is every reason to believe that the Bush administration
is timing its warnings and announcements in the war on terrorism
based on the crassest political considerations. The latest scare,
coming in the immediate aftermath of the Democratic convention
and at the outset of Kerrys national campaign, has the effect
of driving Bushs rival out of the headlines.
Moreover, the warnings in New York serve the purpose of intimidating
the mass protests that are expected in the city when the Republican
National Convention begins at the end of this month, and creating
a climate conducive to repressive action.
Whatever the political calculations, the fact remains that
Bush and Kerry are advancing essentially the same policy in relation
to the war on terror. Both big-business parties are
advocating changes in law and the structure of law enforcement
and intelligence agencies that would lay the institutional foundations
for a police state.
At his White House press conference, Bush publicly adopted
two of the recommendations made by the panel that investigated
the September 11 attacks. The first calls for the naming of a
national intelligence director, who would coordinate the activities
of some 15 separate US civilian and military intelligence agencies.
The second would create a national counter-terrorism center, which
Bush said would constitute the governments knowledge
bank for information about known and suspected terrorists.
Democratic candidate Kerry also called Monday for the creation
of the national intelligence director post, but chided Bush for
not basing the new position in the White House and for not moving
more rapidly to implement the changes.
Bush indicated that he expected bipartisan support for an overhaul
of the National Security Act, the 57-year-old law that created
the CIA and established the general parameters for US intelligence
operations in the wake of the Second World War. The fundamental
change that both parties advocate is the abolition of a statutory
ban prohibiting the CIA and military intelligence from engaging
in domestic spying and law-enforcement activities.
When it was passed in 1947, the National Security Act included
a specific prohibition on the CIA exercising any police,
subpoena, or law enforcement powers or internal security functions.
The language was introduced in the face of widespread warnings
from both Democrats and Republicans, as well as the press, that
the new CIA could become an American Gestapoa
secret spy agency conducting domestic operations against political
dissent.
This is precisely what is now being prepared, with the full
support of Kerry and the Democrats, who continuously criticize
Bush for not moving with sufficient urgency in implementing
this far-reaching escalation of the states repressive powers.
No significant questioning ofmuch less outright opposition
tothis sweeping change has been raised within either party
or by the media. Instead, Democratic and Republican politicians
alike, together with the major news outlets, promote the concept
of a never-ending war on terrorism and urge people to go about
their daily business while ignoring the wholesale attacks on their
civil liberties.
Certainly, a terrorist attack cannot be ruled out. The US war
in Iraq, combined with bipartisan support for Israels ruthless
attacks on the Palestinians in the occupied territories, has generated
immense popular anger throughout the Middle East, some of which
may be channeled into the retrograde politics of terror.
Yet, under the present political conditions in the US, the
Bush administration itself, or elements within the state intelligence
apparatus, would be among the prime suspects in any new terrorist
action. Just as the September 11 attacks provided this administration
with the pretext for initiating its long-planned seizure of Iraq,
so a new terrorist act would be seized upon as the justification
for fresh military adventures abroad and dictatorial actions at
home. Already within the administration there have been discussions
on canceling the 2004 election in the event of such an attack.
In the final analysis, this turn toward police state measures
is bound up with the immense and uninterrupted growth of social
inequality within the US over the past three decades. The gulf
dividing the fabulously wealthy top 1 percent that controls both
major parties and the hundreds of millions of struggling working
people has become so great that a genuinely democratic solution
to any significant social question has become impossible.
The defense of democratic rights and the eradication of the
threat of war and terrorism are possible only through a break
with the two-party system. It requires the independent political
mobilization of working people based upon a socialist and internationalist
program that directly challenges the immense concentration of
private wealth, while seeking to unite the struggles of American
workers with those of working people in the Middle East and internationally.
The Socialist Equality Party is running in the 2004 election
to advance such a program and to lay the foundations for the emergence
of such a mass independent movement.
See Also:
The meaning of the Democratic
convention: Kerry, Edwards vow to continue war and social reaction
[31 July 2004][31 July
Democratic National Convention:
Boston gripped by anti-terror security operation
[27 July 2004]
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