The Anti-Empire Report September 11, 2007
The Anti-Empire Report September 11, 2007
The Anti-Empire Report
Read this or George
W. Bush will be president the rest of your life
September 11, 2007
by William Blum
www.killinghope.org
The
world is very weary of all this and wants to laugh
again
Okay, Bush ain't gonna get out of Iraq no
matter what anyone says or does short of a)impeachment, b)a
lobotomy, or c)one of his daughters setting herself afire in
the Oval Office as a war protest. A few days ago, upon
arriving in Australia, "in a chipper mood", he was asked by
the Deputy Prime Minister about his stopover in Iraq. "We're
kicking ass," replied the idiot king.[1] Another epigram for
his tombstone.
And the Democrats ain't gonna end the war. Ninety-nine percent of the American people protesting on the same day ain't gonna do it either, in this democracy. (No, I'm sorry to say that I don't think the Vietnam protesters ended the war. There were nine years of protest -- 1964 to 1973 -- before the US military left Vietnam. It's a stretch to ascribe a cause and effect to that. The United States, after all, had to leave sometime.)
Only those fighting the war can end it. By laying down their arms and refusing to kill anymore, including themselves. Some American soldiers in Iraq have already refused to go on very dangerous combat missions. Iraq Veterans Against the War, last month at their annual meeting, in St. Louis, voted to launch a campaign encouraging American troops to refuse to fight. "Iraq Veterans Against the War decided to make support of war resisters a major part of what we do," said Garrett Rappenhagen, a former U.S. Army sniper who served in Iraq from February 2004 to February 2005.
The veterans group has begun organizing among active duty soldiers on military bases. Veterans have toured the country in busses holding barbeques outside the base gates. They also plan to step up efforts to undermine military recruiting efforts.
Of course it's a very long shot to get large numbers of soldiers into an angry, protesting frame of mind. But consider the period following the end of World War Two. Late 1945 and early 1946 saw what is likely the greatest troop revolt that has ever occurred in a victorious army. Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of American soldiers protested all over the world because they were not being sent home even though the war was over. The GIs didn't realize it at first, but many soon came to understand that the reason they were being transferred from Europe and elsewhere to various places in the Pacific area, instead of being sent back home, was that the United States was concerned about uprisings against colonialism, which, in the minds of Washington foreign-policy officials, was equated with communism and other nasty un-American things. The uprisings were occurring in British colonies, in Dutch colonies, in French colonies, as well as in the American colony of the Philippines. Yes, hard to believe, but the United States was acting like an imperialist power.
In the Philippines there were repeated mass demonstrations by GIs who were not eager to be used against the left-wing Huk guerrillas. The New York Times reported in January 1946 about one of these demonstrations: "'The Philippines are capable of handling their own internal problems,' was the slogan voiced by several speakers. Many extended the same point of view to China."[2]
American marines were sent to China to support the Nationalist government of Chang Kai-shek against the Communists of Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lai. They were sent to the Netherlands Indies (Indonesia) to be of service to the Dutch in their suppression of native nationalists. And American troop ships were used to transport the French military to France's former colony in Vietnam. These and other actions of Washington led to numerous large GI protests in Japan, Guam, Saipan, Korea, India, Germany, England, France, and Andrews Field, Maryland, all concerned with the major slowdown in demobilization and the uses for which the soldiers were being employed. There were hunger strikes and mass mailings to Congress from the soldiers and their huge body of support in the States. In January 1946, Senator Edwin Johnson of Colorado declared "It is distressing and humiliating to all Americans to read in every newspaper in the land accounts of near mutiny in the Army."[3]
On January 13, 1946, 500 GIs in Paris adopted a set of demands called "The Enlisted Man's Magna Charta", calling for radical reforms of the master-slave relationship between officers and enlisted men; also demanding the removal of Secretary of War Robert Patterson. In the Philippines, soldier sentiment against the reduced demobilization crystalized in a meeting of GIs that voted unanimously to ask Secretary Patterson and certain Senators: "What is the Army's position in the Philippines, especially in relation to the reestablishment of the Eighty-sixth Infantry Division on a combat basis?"[4]
By the summer of 1946 there had been a huge demobilization of the armed forces, although there's no way of knowing with any exactness how much of that was due to the GIs' protests.[5]
If this is how American soldiers could be inspired and organized in the wake of "The Good War", imagine what can be done today in the midst of "The God-awful War".
Iraq Veterans Against the War could use your help. Go to: http://www.ivaw.org/
A pullet
surprise for "Legacy of Ashes" by Tim Weiner
In 1971
the New York Times published its edition of the Pentagon
Papers, based on the government documents concerning Vietnam
policy which had been borrowed by Daniel Ellsberg. In its
preface to the book, the Times commented about certain
omissions and distortions in the government's view of
political and historical realities as reflected in the
papers: "Clandestine warfare against North Vietnam, for
example, is not seen ... as violating the Geneva Accords of
1954, which ended the French Indochina War, or as
conflicting with the public policy pronouncements of the
various administrations. Clandestine warfare, because it is
covert, does not exist as far as treaties and public posture
are concerned. Further, secret commitments to other nations
are not sensed as infringing on the treaty-making powers of
the Senate, because they are not publicly acknowledged."[6]
In his new book, "Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA", New York Times reporter Tim Weiner also relies heavily on government documents in deciding what events to include and what not to, and the result is often equally questionable. "This book," Weiner writes, "is on the record -- no anonymous sources, no blind quotations, no hearsay. It is the first history of the CIA compiled entirely from firsthand reporting and primary documents."(p.xvii)
Thus, if US government officials did not put something in writing or if someone did not report their firsthand experience concerning a particular event, to Tim Weiner the event doesn't exist, or at least is not worth recounting. British journalist Stewart Steven has written: "If we believe that contemporary history must be told on the basis of documentary evidence before it becomes credible, then we must also accept that everything will either be written with the government's seal of approval or not be written at all."
As to firsthand reporting, for Weiner it apparently has to be from someone "reputable". Former CIA officer Philip Agee wrote a 1974 book, "Inside the Company: CIA Diary", that provides more detail about CIA covert operations in Latin America than any book ever written. And it was certainly firsthand. But Agee and his revelations are not mentioned at all in Weiner's book. Could it be because Agee, in the process of becoming the Agency's leading dissident, also became a socialist radical and close ally of Cuba?
Former CIA officer John Stockwell also penned a memoir ("In Search of Enemies", 1978), revealing lots of CIA dirty laundry in Africa. He later also became a serious Agency dissident, and the Weiner book ignores him as well.
Also ignored: Joseph Burkholder Smith, another Agency officer, not quite a left-wing dissident like Agee or Stockwell but a heavy critic nonetheless, entitled his memoir "Portrait of a Cold Warrior" (1976), in which he revealed numerous instances of CIA illegality and immorality in the Philippines, Indonesia and elsewhere in Asia.
There's also Cambodian leader Prince Sihanouk, who provided his firsthand account in "My War With The CIA" (1974). Sihanouk is also a non-person in the pages of "Legacy of Ashes".
Even worse, Weiner ignores a veritable mountain of impressive "circumstantial" and other evidence of CIA misdeeds which doesn't meet his stated criteria, which any thorough researcher/writer on the Agency should give serious attention to, certainly at least mention for the record. Among the many CIA transgressions and crimes left out of "Legacy of Ashes", or very significantly played down, are:
* The extensive CIA role in the 1950s provocation and sabotage activities in East Berlin/East Germany which contributed considerably to the communists' decision to build the Berlin Wall is not mentioned, although the wall is discussed.
* The US role in instigating and supporting the coup that overthrew Sihanouk in 1970, which led directly to the rising up of the Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot, and the infamous Cambodian "killing fields". Weiner, without providing any source, writes: "The coup shocked the CIA and the rest of the American government."(p.304) [7] Neither does the book make any mention of the deliberate Washington policy to support Pol Pot in his subsequent war with Vietnam. Pol Pot's name does not appear in the book.
* The criminal actions carried out by Operation Gladio, created by the CIA, NATO, and several European intelligence services beginning in 1949. The operation was responsible for numerous acts of terrorism in Europe, foremost of which was the bombing of the Bologna railway station in 1980, claiming 86 lives. The purpose of the terrorism was to place the blame for these atrocities on the left and thus heighten public concern about a Soviet invasion and keep the left from electoral victory in Italy, France and elsewhere. In Weiner's book this is all down the Orwellian memory hole.
* A discussion of the alleged 1993 assassination attempt against former president George H.W. Bush in Kuwait presents laughable evidence, yet states: "But the CIA eventually concluded that Saddam Hussein had tried to kill President Bush."(p.444) Weiner repeats this, apparently, solely because it appears in a CIA memorandum. That qualifies it as a "primary document". But what does this have to do with, y'know, the actual facts?
* Moreover, the book scarcely scratches the surface concerning the dozens of foreign elections the CIA has seriously interfered in; the large number of assassination attempts, successful or unsuccessful, against foreign political leaders; the widespread planting of phoney stories in the international media, stories that were at times picked up in the American press as a result; manipulation and corruption of foreign labor movements; extensive book and magazine publishing fronts; drug trafficking; and a virtual world atlas of overthrown governments, or attempts at same.
"A Legacy of Ashes" is generally a good read even for someone familiar with the world of the CIA, but it's actually often rather superficial, albeit 700 pages long. Why has so much of importance and interest been omitted from a book which has the subtitle: "The History of the CIA"; not, it must be noted, "A History of the CIA"?
Whatever jaundiced eye
Weiner focuses on the CIA, he still implicitly accepts the
two basic beliefs of the Cold
War: 1)There existed out
there something called The International Communist
Conspiracy, fueled by implacable Soviet expansionism;
2)United States foreign policy meant well. It may have
frequently been bumbling and ineffective, but its intentions
were noble. And still are.
Some sundry shooting from
the lip
Football star Michael Vick has been condemned
for allegedly helping to execute dogs.
But is killing a
dog morally worse than killing a chicken, cow, pig, lamb, or
fish which is done every hour of every day to enable
non-vegans to enjoy the kind of diet they've become
accustomed to? The fact that a dog is much more likely to be
someone's pet doesn't answer the question; it only explains
why that someone is upset over canineicide but cares much
less about the liquidation of the other animals.
Home
run king Barry Bonds is vilified for reputedly using
steroids to build up his strength. He may have an asterisk
put next to his record because this, presumably, gave him an
unfair advantage over other baseball players who are
"clean". But of all the things that athletes put into their
bodies to improve their health, fitness and performance, why
are steroids singled out? Doesn't taking vitamin and mineral
supplements give an athlete an unfair advantage over
athletes who don't take them? Should these supplements be
banned from sport competition? Vitamin and mineral
supplements are not necessarily any more "natural" than
steroids, which in fact are very important in our body
chemistry; among the steroids are the male and female sex
hormones. Why not punish those who follow a "healthy diet"
because of the advantage this may give them?
"Do you
think homosexuality is a choice, or is it biological?" was
the question posed to presidential candidate Bill Richardson
by singer Melissa Etheridge. "It's a choice," replied the
New Mexico governor at the August 9 forum for Democratic
candidates. Etheridge then said to Richardson, "Maybe you
didn't understand the question," and she rephrased it.
Richardson again said he thought it was a choice.[8]
The
next time you hear someone say that homosexuality is a
choice, ask them how old they were when they chose to be
heterosexual. When they admit that they never made such a
conscious choice, thus implying that people don't choose to
be heterosexual, the next question to the person should be:
"So only homosexuals choose to be homosexual? But what comes
first, being homosexual so you can make the choice, or
making the choice and thus becoming homosexual?"
Why is
the Bush administration so unenthusiastic about preventing
global warming? Perhaps this news report provides a
clue.
"The Arctic sea ice will retreat hundreds of miles
farther from the coast of Alaska in the summer, the
scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration concluded. That will open up vast waters for
fishermen and give easier access to new areas for oil and
gas exploration."[9]
We can say that the United States runs the world like the Taliban ran Afghanistan before the US ousted them from power in 2001. Destabilizing actions are taken against Venezuela like punishing a woman caught outside not wearing her burkha. Harsh sanctions are imposed on Iran in the manner of banning music, dancing, and kite-flying in Kabul. Cuba is subverted and hurt in dozens of ways like the religious police whipping a man whose beard is not the right length.
NOTES
[1] Sydney Morning Herald, September 6, 2007[2] New York Times, January 8, 1946, p.3
[3] New York Times, January 11, 1946, p.1
[4] Ibid., p.4
[5] For more information about the soldiers' protests, see: Mary-Alice Waters, "G.I.'s and the Fight
Against War" (New York, 1967), a pamphlet published by "Young Socialist" magazine.[6] "The Pentagon Papers" (NY Times Edition), p. xii-xiii
[7] See William Blum, "Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II", p.137-8
[8] http://santafenewmexican.com/news/66424.html
[9] Washington Post, September 7, 2007, p.6
William Blum is the author of:
Killing
Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War
2
Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only
Superpower
West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War
Memoir
Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American
Empire
Portions of the books can be read, and signed
copies purchased, at
Previous
Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website at "essays".
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