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Bush at the UN: a war criminal lectures the world on human
rights
By Bill Van Auken
26 September 2007
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George W. Bush delivered his next to the last annual address
to the United Nations General Assembly Tuesday. Taking the same
podium that he used five years ago to condemn the world body to
irrelevance if it failed to rubber stamp his plans
for a war of aggression against Iraq, Bush cast his regime in
Washington as the worlds greatest champion of human rights
and its most generous and selfless benefactor.
That the assembled UN delegates could sit through and then
politely applaud such a hypocritical harangue from a man who is
without rival as the worlds greatest war criminal is testimony
to the spinelessness and complicity of both the worlds governments
and the United Nations itself.
While Bush made only the barest mention of either Iran or Iraq
in his address, everyone in the hall was well aware that he is
attempting once again to utilize the world bodymuch as his
administration did five years ago in relation to purported Iraqi
weapons of mass destructionto secure a phony
pretext for another war of aggression, this time against Iran.
No doubt Bushs handlers in Washington recognized that
to deliver a belligerent speech demanding action by the UN against
Iran would only recall the lies and intimidation used by the US
administration in 2002-2003 to prepare its war against Iraq.
Since then, an estimated 1 million Iraqis have been killed
and nearly 4 million more turned into refugees as a result of
the unprovoked US invasion with its shock and awe
bombardments and the subsequent occupation that has destroyed
every aspect of Iraqi society.
So instead, Bush came before the assembled delegates in the
most improbable guise, as the apostle of liberty, equality and
the rights of man.
He began his speech by hailing the founding document of the
UN drafted more than six decades ago, the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, asserting that this formal declaration in support
of freedom, justice and peace must guide our work in this
world.
When innocent people are trapped in a life of murder
and fear, the Declaration is not being upheld, he declared.
Who does the American president think he is kidding? Where on
the face of the planet are more men, women and children trapped
in a life of murder and fear than in US-occupied Iraq? The
death toll for Iraqis has been estimated as high as 1,000 a week
due to US military operations, the murderous rampage of mercenaries
who kill with impunity and the sectarian violence unleashed by
the countrys devastation at the hands of Washington.
Bush declared that the UN must work to free people from
tyranny and violence, hunger and disease, illiteracy and ignorance,
and poverty and despair, adding that every member
of the United Nations must join in this mission of liberation.
In the Orwellian language favored by the right-wing ideologues
in the Bush administration, liberation is continuously
invoked as the description for the war to impose semi-colonial
domination by the US over Iraq and its oil wealth. And it is this
mission undertaken by means of an eruption of American
militarism that Bush demands the world body sanction and support.
Bush continued by invoking the first article of the Universal
Declaration, which affirms that all human beings are born
free and equal in dignity and rights. The greatest threat
to this principle, he claimed, comes from terrorists and
extremists. Therefore, he argued, all civilized nations
must join the US in its global war on terrorism.
Bush then moved on to other subjects, a wise move, given that
a more detailed citation of the Universal Declaration would have
sounded like a war crimes indictment against his own administration.
It includes, for example, the injunction that No one
shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, a principle that the Bush White
House has explicitly repudiated, both by renouncing the Geneva
Conventions and subjecting those detained in the US war
on terror to waterboarding, beatings, sensory deprivation,
sexual humiliation and other forms of torture and degrading treatment.
The declaration affirms that No one shall be subjected
to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile, practices that
the Bush administration has carried out with impunity, through
the holding of detainees without charges, not only at the infamous
detention facilities in Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, but
also at secret CIA prisons around the world. It has introduced
extraordinary rendition into the lexicon of foreign
policy, a discreet term for kidnapping people, drugging them and
then sending them in hoods and chains to other countries so that
they can be tortured.
And there is also the clause of the declaration asserting that
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with
his privacy, family, home or correspondence. This is a principle
that the administration has explicitly violated in relation to
the American people, not to mention the rest of the world, through
the massive illegal domestic spying operation organized through
the National Security Agency.
Given his administrations infamous reputation, the worlds
horror over the unfolding debacle in Iraq and the mounting fears
that an even worse catastrophe is about to be unleashed in Iran,
it appeared that those who drafted Bushs speech thought
it was a good time to change the subject.
Why Myanmar?
Thus, a major thrust of his remarksand the issue that
garnered by far the greatest press coveragewas the American
presidents announcement that he is ordering a tightening
of economic sanctions against Myanmar (Burma).
He declared: Americans are outraged by the situation
in Burma, where a military junta has imposed a 19-year reign of
fear. While no doubt the corrupt military regime that rules
the country has carried out brutal repression against its people,
the claim that Americans are outraged by these practices
is belied by the fact that given the virtual failure of either
the administration or the mass media to pay any attention to the
developments there, most Americans know nothing about them.
Bushs new measures were hardly sweeping, amounting to
further restrictions on visas for Myanmar officials and their
families and financial sanctions against the ruling junta and
its backers.
The pretense that the Bush administrations concerns lie
with the aspirations of the people of Myanmar, who have taken
to the streets in recent days in mass demonstrations, is farcical.
The US government has supported and directly installed countless
military dictatorships from Indonesia to Chile, helping them to
carry out far worse atrocities than the Burmese junta in suppressing
their own people.
Rather, under mantle of liberation and democracy,
US imperialism is once again pursuing its own strategic interests,
attempting to bring to power a pro-American government that would
open up the country to exploitation by US capital. Given the Myanmar
governments close economic and political relations with
neighboring China, such an exercise in regime change would significantly
advance Washingtons attempts to challenge Beijing for supremacy
in the region, while steadily working to militarily encircle China.
Also invoked as targets for the American-led mission
of liberation were the governments of Iran, Cuba, Zimbabwe,
Sudan, Belarus, North Korea and Syria, all of which Washington
has presumably found guilty and sentenced to be overthrown.
Continuing with his invocation of the Universal Declaration,
Bush cited a passage affirming that everyone has the right
to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being
of himself and of his family, including food and clothing and
housing and medical care.
He used this clause to engage in a round of shameless and deceptive
self-congratulation, proclaiming US benevolence in the distribution
of food internationally and, in particular, in assistance to the
campaign to combat AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa.
The reality, as the news agency Reuters reported earlier this
month, is that food donations to the worlds hungry
have fallen to their lowest level since 1973. The impending
crisis, which threatens starvation for sections of the worlds
850 million people facing hunger, is driven by the capitalist
market. Food prices have soared, in no small part due to the drive
by the US to promote the production of corn-based ethanol as an
alternative to gasoline.
As for AIDS funding, Bushs presentation of Washingtons
role obscures the fact that the US ranks fifth among donor nations
relative to the size of their national economies. Inadequate funding
for the programsas well as restrictions imposed on the use
of US aid crafted to please the Christian rightmeans that
millions of Africans will be denied any treatment.
Meanwhile, US aid as a whole amounts to a paltry sum compared
to the vast wealth that Wall Street appropriates from the rest
of the world and is utilized largely as a weapon to facilitate
this global looting process. In 1970, international donor nations
signed an agreement that they would assign 0.7 percent of their
national incomes to foreign aid. While no country has come close
to donating this amount, in the US last year aid amounted to just
0.17 percent of gross national income.
Finally, Bush warmed up to his subject, citing the Universal
Declarations assertion of the right to work
and to just and favorable conditions of work as an
argument for free-market capitalism and the tearing down of all
barriers to the exploitation of the worlds economy by the
transnational banks and corporations.
Bush closed his remarks with a demand that the UN reform itself,
again invoking the American people and their supposed
disappointment with the functioning of the world bodys Human
Rights Council. In essence, Bush demanded that the council focus
on denouncing Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea and Iran and halt its
criticism of Israel for killing civilians in Lebanon and suppressing
the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank.
Behind Bushs criticism is the embarrassing reality that
Washington has chosen for the last two years not to seek a seat
on the Human Rights Council for fear that it would fail to get
the necessary votes.
The successive revelations over Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo,
extraordinary renditions and CIA torturenot to mention the
continued use of the death penalty at homemakes the US the
most fitting target for human rights charges. Yet it presumes
to dictate to the world which countries should be investigated
and which should not. Naturally those where Washington is seeking
regime changesuch as Iran, Cuba and Venezuelaare vilified,
while those despotic regimes considered strategic allies of the
USPakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Israel, Washingtons
chief ally in suppressing the Arab massesare declared above
suspicion.
Bushs appearance before the UN General Assembly was an
entirely predictable exercise in imperialist arrogance, rank hypocrisy
and double-talk in service of American big business. In the final
analysis, his speech was probably more significant for what it
omitted than for the American presidents absurd posturing
as a crusader for human rights and universal liberation. Behind
the virtual silence on Iraq and Iran, new and more terrible crimes
are being prepared.
See Also:
Iranian president speaks at Columbia
University amidst media frenzy
[25 September 2007]
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