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Congressional report condemns government response to Hurricane
Katrina
By Joe Kay
14 February 2006
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A select committee of the US House of Representatives is set
to release a report Wednesday on the US governments handling
of Hurricane Katrina. From drafts leaked to various news publications
this week, it is already clear that the report presents a picture
of an extraordinary lack of preparation and a completely incompetent
response, which contributed to the deaths of over 1,000 people
and the virtual destruction of a major American city.
Advance reports in the Washington Post on Sunday and
the New York Times on Monday indicate that the House committee
focused on the administrations failure to act before or
after the hurricane to prevent mass casualties. It remains
difficult to understand how government could respond so ineffectively
to a disaster that was anticipated for years, and for which specific
dire warnings had been issued for days, the report notes.
This crisis was not only predictable, it was predicted.
Coming from a panel comprised entirely of Republicansthe
Democrats refused to participate on the grounds that a Republican-controlled
investigation would be a whitewashthis statement is all
the more significant. It refutes the claim of the Bush administration
that the devastation wreaked by Hurricane Katrina could not have
been foreseen. The stunning degree of governmental ineptitude
that was displayed to the world in the aftermath of Katrina has
compelled such admissions from a panel chaired by a longtime congressional
Republican leader, Representative Tom Davis of Virginia. At the
same time, as was to be expected, the report does not call for
anyone to be held accountable for the disaster and does not address
any of the fundamental issues.
It had long been known that if a major hurricane struck New
Orleans directly, the levee system protecting the city would likely
fail, the city would be inundated with water, and about 100,000
would be trapped without adequate transportation to leave. However,
the Department of Homeland Security, which includes the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, did nothing to aid city residents
as the storm approached, despite clear warnings from many fronts
that Katrina could be the hurricane that had been feared.
The department, headed by Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff, failed to anticipate the likely consequences of
the storm and procure the buses, boats and aircraft that were
ultimately necessary to evacuate the flooded city prior to Katrinas
landfall, the report states.
Soon after the hurricane hit, the report notes, eyewitness
accounts from FEMA officials in New Orleans stated that the citys
levees had been breached, and this information was reported to
top administration officials on the day of the hurricane. Former
FEMA head Michael Brown testified last week that he personally
told White House officials on the day of the hurricane that its
consequences were catastrophic. However, even after it was clear
that the city would suffer massive flooding, the federal government
did not respond, leaving thousands of residents trapped in their
homes or in the squalid conditions of the Superdome and Convention
Center.
The White House did not substantiate, analyze and act
on the information at its disposal, the report notes. More
than 24 hours after the hurricane hit, Bush said that New Orleans
had dodged a bullet, even as waters continued to rise,
engulfing thousands of homes. Not until the morning of August
31, two days after the hurricane hit, was there a federal order
to evacuate the city.
Local and state officials are also blamed, including Louisiana
Governor Kathleen Blanco and New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, both
Democrats. Local officials did not prepare an evacuation plan
for those who would not be able to escape on their own. Moreover,
the report notes that Nagin and others helped encourage lurid
media reports of rapes and murders, later shown to be unfounded.
These conclusions stand in sharp contrast to the utter absence
of accountability for the disaster. Not only does the report itself
refrain from calling for anyone to be held responsible, but there
have been no moves within the political establishment as a whole
to punish those who, through their inaction, compounded the tragedy
of Hurricane Katrina.
This is a general phenomenon. During the Bush administrations
time in office, there have been at least three catastrophes of
historic proportions that have led to the deaths of thousands
of people: the terrorist attacks of September 11; the invasion
of Iraq on the basis of the false claims of weapons of mass destruction;
and Hurricane Katrina. Even if one were to accept the official
framework within which these events have been placedthat
the invasion of Iraq was intended to safeguard US national security
and not to seize control of the countrys oil fields, and
that September 11 was a failure of intelligence rather
than a deliberate stand-down within sections of the stateall
three episodes have revealed a staggering level of administration
and presidential incompetence.
Mass firings of administration personnel and criminal investigations
should have been a matter of course. However, aside from the resignation
of the Vice Presidents Chief of Staff I. Lewis Libby after
his indictment for perjury and obstruction of justicethe
result of the work of an independent prosecutor that has been
kept strictly separate from any broader investigation of the administrationno
one has been removed from office or otherwise punished. No serious
investigations have been carried out to call people to account.
What is to explain this extraordinary state of affairs? On
the one hand, the government is committed to the proposition that
it can do whatever it wantsspying, illegal detention, torture,
warwithout any restrictions. As a matter of principle, top
officials in the Bush administration and the military consider
themselves to be untouchable, impervious to criticism, beyond
any legal accountability.
This posture demonstrates, not political strength, but enormous
vulnerability. The foundation of US policy at home and abroad
is extremely fragile. Any steps to hold people responsible would
threaten to get quickly out of control. Investigations like the
House report may be necessary at times to provide political cover,
to give the appearance that steps are being taken, but in the
end they are intended to stabilize the teetering house of cards
without addressing any of the basic issues.
In maintaining its position of unaccountability, the administration
has no greater ally than the nominal opposition. As in the other
great catastrophes of Bushs tenure, the Democrats have shown
no interest in seriously attacking the administration for its
handling of Hurricane Katrina. Some Democrats have called for
the resignation of Chertoff, paralleling previous scattered calls
for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld after
the invasion of Iraq developed into an open-ended guerrilla war.
These calls went nowhere and were never followed through. Some
have called for an independent investigation, modeled on the 9/11
Commission, which whitewashed government culpability in the terrorist
attacks.
The Democrats will not put up a serious opposition to administration
stonewalling and whitewashing because they ultimately defend the
same interests and accept and rely on the same lies used to promote
these interests. They uphold the most fundamental lie of the administration,
the war on terror, the claim that the US government
is engaged in a battle to protect the American people against
future attacks. This myth has been used to justify a sharp escalation
of American militarism and an ongoing assault on basic democratic
rights at home.
The House report concedes the obvious contradiction between
the Bush administrations claim to be bending every effort
to prepare for a new disaster on the scale of 9/11, and its actual
performance during Hurricane Katrina. It states, If this
is what happens when we have advance warning, we shudder to imagine
the consequences when we do not. Four and a half years after 9/11,
America is not ready for prime time.
However, what the report does not acknowledge, what it cannot
acknowledge, is that America is not ready for prime time
four years after September 11 for the simple reason that nothing
the government has done during these four years has had anything
to do with protecting the American people from disasters, terrorist
or otherwise.
What Hurricane Katrina really revealed was not simply the incompetence
of political officials. Certainly there was incompetence, including
on the part of the nominal head of government, who was too busy
vacationing in Texas to care much or even follow reports about
what was going on 500 miles away in New Orleans. What the hurricane
revealed were the consequences of decades of neglect of the social
infrastructure, decades in which social programs and the conditions
of broad masses of the population have been sacrificed to enrich
an increasingly isolated and oligarchic elite.
The war on terror has been a cover for accelerating
this policy, for launching military aggression that had long been
planned, for rolling back democratic rights and all constraints
on executive power, for increasing military spending at the expense
of social programs. Hurricane Katrina itself was used as yet another
excuse to cut budget allocations that benefit the poor and hand
out more tax cuts to the rich, while escalating spending on homeland
security and national defensethat is,
the military-police apparatus.
The refusal to hold top officials accountable is ultimately
required to defend this policy, which both parties support.
See Also:
Testimony at Senate hearing
Former FEMA head says White House had early knowledge of Katrinas
devastation
[11 February 2006]
White House stonewalls official
Hurricane Katrina inquiry
[28 January 2006]
Three months after
the Katrina disaster: New Orleans left for dead
[14 December 2005]
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