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The modus operandi of a coverup
9/11 hearings ignore political, historical issues behind terrorist
attacks
By the Editorial Board
25 March 2004
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The public hearings conducted Tuesday and Wednesday by the National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States made clear
that the bipartisan panel is engaged in a cover-up of the fundamental
questions surrounding the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
In the course of two days of hearings, televised by various
cable news channels, leading figures in the current Bush administration
and the preceding Clinton administration gave testimony and answered
questions. These included the current secretary of state, Colin
Powell, and his Democratic predecessor, Madeleine Albright; Bushs
secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy secretary,
Paul Wolfowitz, and Clinton Pentagon head William Cohen; Clintons
national security adviser Samuel Berger (Bushs national
security adviser Condoleezza Rice refused to appear); and Richard
Clarke, the top White House counter-terrorism adviser to both
Clinton and Bush, who resigned on the eve of the Iraq war and
has published a book denouncing Bush for ignoring the Al Qaeda
threat before 9/11 and then using the terrorist attacks as a pretext
for invading the Persian Gulf country.
In his testimony on Wednesday, Clarke reiterated his charges
against the Bush administration, declaring at one point: By
invading Iraq, the president of the United States has greatly
undermined the war on terrorism. The Bush White House responded
with a barrage of attacks aimed at discrediting the former aide.
Notwithstanding the heated controversy surrounding Clarkes
appearance, the entire line of questioning from both the Democratic
and Republican members of the commission showed that the basic
premises of their investigation exclude any examination of the
political and historical roots of the attacks that took the lives
of some 3,000 innocent civilians.
Not one panel member broached the issue of US foreign policy
in Afghanistan and the Middle East, and its role in fostering
the growth of Islamic fundamentalist terrorist groups such as
Al Qaeda. Nor was there any probing of the economic and geo-strategic
interests that underlie the policy of succeeding US administrations
toward Central Asia and the Persian Gulf. The word oil
went virtually unuttered in the course of hours and hours of testimony.
Instead, the framework for the hearings was the assumption
that 9/11 was the result of a failure of intelligence,
or diplomacy, or military policyor a combination of all
three. From this narrow and disingenuous starting point, the thrust
of both the witnesses testimony and the questioning by the
panel followed: namely, that the proper response to the threat
of terrorist attacks is to remove all remaining restrictions on
US spying and covert operations abroad, including assassinations,
intensify government spying within the United States, and apply
the Bush doctrine of preventive war on an even more massive and
bloody scale in the future.
The gist of the criticisms made of both the Clinton and Bush
administrationsincluding those made by Clarkewas that
they were too timid and squeamish in the pre-9/11 period, and
too bogged down by considerations of US and international law.
They should have used military force and covert violence sooner,
more often and on a larger scale.
The most rabid of the panel members was former Democratic senator
and current president of the New School University in New York,
Bob Kerrey, who, as a Navy Seal in the Vietnam War, led a death
squad attack on a village in which the six enlisted men under
his command killed 21 women, children and elderly men. In one
revealing exchange, he berated Albright for failing to use military
force to eliminate Osama bin Laden in the 1990s. She replied:
You, senator, I know, were the only person that I know of
who suggested declaring war. You were, you know, in retrospectyou
were probably right.
The 9/11 commission, whose formation President Bush initially
opposed and only reluctantly authorized in November of 2002, has
good reason to exclude any consideration of the historical and
political origins of Al Qaeda, because an examination of this
history reveals that the attacks of September 11, and the growth
of Islamist terrorism more generally, are the outcome of US interventions
in Central Asia going back to the late 1970s.
The Democratic Carter administration, responding to a decline
in the global economic position of American capitalism and a deep
economic and political crisis at home, inaugurated a shift in
the Cold War policy against the Soviet Union from containment
to roll back. In 1979 Carter authorized a policy devised
by his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, to destabilize
the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul by covertly providing funds and
arms to Islamic fundamentalist mujaheddin guerrillas in Afghanistan.
The aim was to draw the Soviet Union into a protracted and debilitating
war in Afghanistan against anti-communist proxy forces who made
their appeal on the basis of religious fanaticism.
Following the Soviet invasion, US backing for the mujaheddin
was stepped up by the new Republican administration of Ronald
Reagan. The US encouraged and helped organize the recruitment
of Islamist fighters from other parts of the Middle East and beyond
to join the anti-Soviet crusade in Afghanistan. Prominent among
then was the multi-millionaire scion of the Saudi bin Laden family,
Osama bin Laden. Thus, successive American administrations created
the conditions for the eventual formation of Al Qaeda, which,
under bin Laden and other former US assets, turned against Washington,
in what is known in intelligence circles as a an example of blowback.
The US intervention in Afghanistan was an unmitigated disaster
for the Afghani people. The country disintegrated into civil war,
fought by rival warlords at the cost of hundreds of thousands
of lives and the devastation of the countrys social infrastructure.
The US maintained, and continues to maintain, relations with many
of the reactionary forces it sponsored as part of its Cold War
offensive against the USSR.
The intervention in Afghanistan is only one part of a more
general policy that has fostered the growth of Islamist terrorism.
The US has for decades propped up some of the most despotic regimes
in the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia and the other Persian
Gulf sheikdoms, in order to secure US access to and exploitation
of the regions oil resources. It has simultaneously incited
the hatred and desperation of millions of Arabs through its military,
financial and political support for Israel, and its defense of
Israels ruthless policy of repressing and dispossessing
the Palestinian people.
With the decline and fall of the Soviet Unionfor which
Washington had assiduously workedthe US political establishment
embarked on a new and even more violent phase in its predatory
foreign policy. Feeling itself freed from the limitations imposed
by the Cold War standoff between the two superpowers,
Washington turned to an openly colonialist policy.
Beginning with the first Persian Gulf War in 1991, the US adopted
a policy of using its military supremacy over all rivals to crush
the resistance of the oppressed masses in the Middle East and
secure complete US domination of the regions oil resources.
This was considered essential to Americas new policy of
preventing the emergence of any challengerincluding its
nominal allies in Europe and Asiato US global hegemony.
Whatever the tactical differences between the Democrats and
Republicans, this quest for global domination became the consensus
strategy of the American ruling elite and both of its parties.
Hence the escalation of US military operations under Clintoninvolving
military strikes and interventions in Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia,
Afghanistan, Sudan and Kosovo. With the coming to power of the
Bush administration, this basic orientation assumed a new and
even more explosive form. It has already dragged the American
people, on the basis of outright lies, into a military quagmire
in Iraq whose consequences for the Iraqi and American people alike
are incalculable.
The 9/11 commissions failure to consider the historical
and political context of September 11 goes hand in hand with its
refusal to seriously examine the staggering and unexplained anomalies
that surround both the preceding period and the events of that
day.
One cannot credibly explain as a mere intelligence failure
the apparent lack of response from the Bush administration to
explicit warnings given to the White House in the summer of 2001
of a catastrophic Al Qaeda attack involving hijacked airliners.
Nor can one on this basis explain the ability of known Al Qaeda
operativesand future 9/11 hijackersto enter and leave
the US and go about their business within the US, including taking
flying lessons, with impunity. Similarly, mere incompetence cannot
account for the astonishing delay in the deployment of aircraft
to intercept the hijacked planes on the day of the attacks.
However, given the long-standing connections between Islamic
fundamentalist terrorists and US intelligence agencies, and the
by now well documented pre-9/11 plans of the war cabal in the
Bush administration to invade and occupy Iraq, there is a highly
plausible explanation. A number of the witnesses at this weeks
hearings, both Democratic and Republican, voiced a recurrent theme
that points to the solution to the anomalies of September 11.
When challenged by panel members on their failure to take stronger
military action against Al Qaeda prior to the attacks on New York
and Washington, Albright, Berger and some of their Republican
counterparts replied that the political conditions for taking
such action did not exist. American and international public opinion,
they insisted, would have overwhelmingly opposed it.
Here they alluded to the decisive political significance of
the events of September 11. Policy makers in both the Clinton
and the Bush administrations wanted to unleash military force
against either Afghanistan or Iraq, or both. They were acutely
aware of being held back by the lack of popular support for such
an undertaking. September 11 at a single stroke created the conditionsthe
casus bellifor the implementation of long-standing
schemes for military aggression and conquest.
The public statements of ex-Bush administration officials such
as former Treasury Secretary Paul ONeill and Richard Clarke
have confirmed that leading figures, including Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz
and Bush himself, immediately seized on the tragedy of 9/11 to
set in motion their plans for the invasion of Iraq. They were
utterly unfazed by the judgment of the entire US intelligence
establishment that Saddam Hussein had nothing to do either with
the hijack-bombings or Al Qaeda.
For the Bush administration, the invasion of Afghanistan was,
from the first, only a way station on the road to Baghdad. The
war on terror was conjured up to serve as the overarching
justification for a sharp turn in both foreign and domestic policytoward
outright colonialism abroad and an unprecedented attack on democratic
rights and the social conditions of working people at home.
Within the context of the preceding history and the political
exploitation of September 11, the mysteries of that day find their
most plausible explanation in a deliberate decision by elements
within the US government and military-intelligence apparatus to
allow a terrorist attack to take place, and block any effort to
prevent it. It is possible, even likely, that those who gave their
tacit assent to a terrorist action did not anticipate an atrocity
on the scale of 9/11. They may have believed they were facilitating
a traditional hijacking, for example, rather than
the most deadly suicide bombing in history. But there are ample
grounds for concluding that the events of September 11 involved
a high degree of complicity by agencies of the US government.
One thing is beyond disputeand this critical fact cannot
and will not be even remotely touched on by the 9/11 commissionthe
tragic loss of life on that day and the wars and social reaction
that have followed are the outcome of the predatory policies of
a series of US governments. What is the fundamental character
of these policies? They are imperialist, conducted in the interests
not of the American people, but rather to advance the global economic,
military and political interests of the US financial oligarchy.
It is US imperialism, and the governments and parties that
serve it, that constitute the greatest threat to the peace, safety
and well-being of the American people and the population of the
entire planet. This threat can be ended only through the international
revolutionary mobilization of the working people and oppressed
masses against imperialism and for the democratic and egalitarian
principles of socialism.
See Also:
Former terrorism aide charges Bush manufactured
case for Iraq war
[23 March 2004]
SEP candidate Bill Van Auken on Bush's
war anniversary speech: "Threadbare lies in defense of a
criminal war"
[20 March 2004]
Washington Post defends
Bush, Iraq war against Paul O'Neill's exposures
[16 January 2004]
Former cabinet member: Bush
pushed war with Iraq long before 9/11
[13 January 2004]
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