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Terrorism speech in Washington
Bush responds to political crisis with lies and new war threats
By Bill Van Auken
8 October 2005
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President George W. Bushs speech Thursday on the
war on terror constitutes a sobering measure of both his
governments desperate political crisis and the threat that
it will try to extricate itself from this crisis through escalating
militarism.
The speech was a compendium of lies delivered with the aim
of terrorizing the American people and rallying his extreme right-wing
base. In remarks that at times bordered on lunacy, he invoked
the unlikely bogeyman of an Al Qaeda terrorist network poised
to establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain
to Indonesia.
Bush delivered his remarks to the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), the agency created by the Reagan administration in the
1980s to conduct political propaganda and subversion operations
overseas previously carried out covertly by the CIA.
It was to this same audience that the US president proclaimed
nearly two years ago a forward strategy of freedom in the
Middle East. Then he was predicting that the successful
US imposition of democracy in Iraq would lead to a
global democratic revolution that would topple regimes
throughout the region.
In Thursdays address, Bush advanced the reverse of this
domino theory, warning that unless the US military achieves unconditional
victory, the result will be Zarqawi and bin Laden in control
of Iraq, and the spread of radical Islamist regimes internationally.
This latest assertion has no more credibility than the one
advanced in 2003. It is indicative, however, of the growing desperation
within US ruling circles over the debacle in Iraq and of the administrations
decision to rely on fear as its main means of coercing the American
people into submitting to its policies.
As if on cue Thursday, the authorities in New York City issued
a terror alert for the citys subways, only hours after Bushs
speech and just in time for the evening television news and scare
headlines in the next days papers. Almost as soon as the
alert was announced, however, intelligence officials acknowledged
that the threat was of doubtful credibility. Friday
saw Pennsylvania Station shut down because of the discovery of
a suspicious soda bottle.
The aim of such alerts, like Bushs speech itself, is
to instill fear, thereby keeping the public off balance and suppressing
the growth of political opposition and social unrest.
The Bush administration has returned to the mantra of terrorism
that it utilized in paving the way to the invasion of Iraq, when
it claimed that Baghdad was developing weapons of mass destruction
and preparing to hand them over to Al Qaeda terrorists.
It was lying then, and it is lying now, but under changed political
conditions. The New York Times quoted an unnamed White
House official as saying that Bush had given his speech to
remind Americans after a lot of distractions in recent
months, that the country was still under threat and had no choice
but to remain in Iraq...
What are these distractions? Opposition to the
Bush government has never been greater, with polls showing barely
37 percent of the population supporting the administration and
majorities believing that the war in Iraq was a mistake and that
US troops should be withdrawn.
Moreover, the Hurricane Katrina catastrophe has exposed before
millions the profound social crisis and class polarization that
exist in the United States and the breakdown of governmental and
social institutions under the impact of policies designed solely
to advance the accumulation of wealth by the financial elite.
After all of the hysteria over terrorism and homeland
security in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks,
the response to this natural disaster demonstrated that the US
government is even less prepared to deal with a catastrophe than
it was four years ago. It did not take its own terror warnings
seriously, except as a means of politically terrorizing the American
people.
Meanwhile, there are signs of growing disaffection and outright
opposition within the military itself.
Seven more American soldiers were killed in Iraq on the day
that Bush delivered his speech, bringing the US military death
toll to over 1,950. There are over 100 armed attacks daily, and
the country remains in a state of economic and social paralysis.
Many of those knowledgeable about Iraq warn that it is either
on the brink of an ethno-religious civil war, or one has already
begun. The upcoming referendum on a draft constitutiontouted
by Washington as another step toward democracyis emerging
as yet more fuel for this fire.
Bush disputed the obvious fact that the US occupation of Iraq
has fed support for armed resistance and acts of terrorism both
there and throughout the region. US commanders are not so sanguine,
however, and have publicly suggested the need to reduce a US military
presence that is seen by Iraqis as an oppressive occupation.
Bushs invocation of a supposedly ubiquitous terrorist
threat is aimed at quashing such internal dissension and intimidating
popular opposition. The tone of the speech echoed the kind of
red scare hysteria of McCarthyism, though his arguments
made even less sense than those of the fanatical anti-communists
50 years ago.
The speech equated the global war on terror with
the Cold War against the Soviet Union and World War II, likening
Osama bin Laden to Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler. Such assertions
are absurd on their face.
The Soviet Union was a superpower armed with nuclear weapons
and covering one-sixth of the earths surface.
Al Qaeda consists of at most a couple of thousand fanatics.
Osama bin Laden controls no state and his movement has no credible
chance of coming to power anywhere in the worldincluding
Iraq. By toppling that countrys government and destabilizing
its society, Washington has provided Al Qaeda with a new, previously
inaccessible field of operations as well as a source of recruits
drawn from among the masses of Arabs outraged by the US invasion
and occupation.
In prosecuting the war on terror and the struggle
for freedom Bush declares that the enemy extremists
want to end American and Western influence in the broader Middle
East.... Their tactic to meet this goal has been consistent for
a quarter century: They hit us and expect us to run.
Why stop at a quarter century? Wasnt the struggle to
end Western influence in the broader Middle East what
the anti-colonial movement that emerged in the region in the aftermath
of World War II was all about? Were not those the goals and tactics
of the nationalist movements that drove the French out of Algeria
and ejected the British from Egypt?
The US war in Iraq has nothing to do with democracy or terrorism;
it is an attempt to recolonize the region in order to seize control
of its oil resources and establish the strategic hegemony of US
imperialism.
In making his case for the terror war, Bush strung together
a series of disparate movements and presented them as all part
of a global Islamic radical movement that the US military
is supposedly confronting in Iraq.
He claimed that the US is threatened by paramilitary
insurgencies and separatist movements in places like Somalia,
and the Philippines, and Pakistan, and Chechnya, and Kashmir,
and Algeria.
Lumped together are clan warfare in Somalia, a small local
gang in the Philippines, the more than half-century dispute over
Kashmir and an Islamist political movement in Algeria that has
been brutally repressed, at the cost of 150,000 lives. None of
these movementswith widely different social bases and political
objectiveshave been linked to any acts of international
terrorism.
To the extent Islamist fundamentalism has grown, it is largely
with the support of the US government, which provided billions
of dollars in arms and aid to Osama bin Laden and his Mujahedin
allies to overthrow the Soviet-backed government in Afghanistan
in the 1980s.
Washington likewise backed Islamist elements in Indonesia,
where they led anticommunist pogroms that claimed one million
lives in 1965, as well as in Chechnya and Bosnia, where they were
seen as counterbalances to Russian and Serbian influence. Wherever
such movements could be used as instruments in the pursuit of
US strategic aims, they have gotten either overt or covert US
support.
Bushs speech was characterized by his usual messianic
tone, referring to the war on terror as a calling
and declaring, We will confront this mortal danger to all
humanity. This type of language is directed to the administrations
base among the evangelical Christian right and is part and parcel
of an attempt to sell the war in Iraq as some kind of new crusade
against Islam.
The great bulk of humanity, however, sees US imperialism itself
as the greatest danger. After the deaths of over 100,000 Iraqis,
the words that Bush used to describe those the US is supposedly
fighting would widely be accepted as applying to the American
president himself: Throughout history, tyrants and would-be
tyrants have always claimed that murder is justified to serve
their grand vision. And they end up alienating decent people across
the globe.
Among the more ominous and seemingly irrational sections of
Bushs speech was an open threat against Syria and Iran,
which he described as terrorisms allies of convenience.
State sponsors like Syria and Iran have a long history
of collaboration with terrorists and they deserve no patience
from the victims of terror, declared Bush. The United
States makes no distinction between those who commit acts of terror
and those who support and harbor them, because theyre equally
guilty of murder.
This is an open justification for launching military attacks
on both countries. Indeed, it is the same phony pretext used in
the invasion of Iraq two-and-a-half years ago.
The regime in Damascus is secular and has ruthlessly repressed
Syrias Islamic movement. It provided substantial intelligence
assistance to Washington in the wake of September 11, and US intelligence
agencies have sent suspects to be tortured in Syria under Washingtons
so-called extraordinary rendition program.
As for Iran, the government there has established close political
ties with the Shia majority which dominates the Iraqi regime that
the US is supporting. Teheran has backed the elections in Iraq
as well as the draft constitution and is virulently opposed to
the Al Qaeda movement, which has conducted sectarian terrorist
attacks on the Iraqi Shia population.
Why the saber-rattling now against these two regimes? First
of all, it makes clear that the US war in Iraq has nothing to
do with combating terrorism. It is an attempt to impose US neo-colonial
control. Leading elements within the administration and the ruling
establishment have concluded from the deepening debacle in Iraq
that this will prove impossible without widening the war.
Intensified militarism is, in the final analysis, the product
of the deep crisis of American society itself, characterized by
vast social inequality and an increasingly corrupt and parasitic
corporate ruling stratum.
Bushs speech is a warning that this ruling elite is preparing
even greater crimes and bloodshed. His diatribe provoked little
critical analysis either from the Democratic Party or the mass
media, neither of which provide any political expression to the
growing popular opposition to the war and the administrations
domestic policies.
See Also:
Bush seizes on flu threat to press for
martial law power
[7 October 2005]
In the wake of Katrina
and Rita
Bush administration to expand military powers, attack social
programs
[27 September 2005]
Katrina, the Iraq war and
the struggle for socialism
[23 September 2005]
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