|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Where is the Bush administration taking the American people?
By the WSWS Editorial Board
22 September 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
One unmistakable message emerged from the speech delivered
by President George W. Bush to a joint session of Congress on
Thursday night: the United States is being propelled onto a course
of global violence and domestic repression unprecedented in the
nation's history.
In the name of a war against terrorism, the Bush
administration is demandingand being grantedunspecified
and unlimited powers to employ military force all over the world.
The siege-like setting for Bush's speechwith the Capitol
ringed by troops and the sound of military helicopters seeping
into the chamberwas in keeping with the administration's
posture since the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.
The government has gone out of its way, not to reassure the American
people, but rather to create an atmosphere of panic. It is encouraging
a mood of hysteria combined with flag-waving chauvinism in order
to stampede the public into accepting not only the unrestrained
use of American military power, but also a far-reaching attack
on basic democratic rights within the United States itself
Hence the absence of Vice President Cheney and the announcement
that he had been taken to an undisclosed secure venue. The administration
wants the American people to believe that the immense power of
the US military could not guarantee the safety of government leaders
in the Capitol building. If Bush and company really believe this
preposterous idea, then it must be said they have completely lost
their heads. The more likely explanation is that they want to
fortify their incessant claim that America is at war, and accustom
the population to war-time measures and a government that carries
out its major functions behind the backs of the public.
In his speech Bush employed apocalyptic terms to convince the
American people that they must acquiesce in a global war of indefinite
duration., against a host of as yet unnamed enemies, with no limit
on the death and destruction to be meted out to people outside
the US, or the toll in body bags containing the remains of American
soldiers.
Our response, he declared, involves far more
than instant retaliation and isolated strikes. Americans should
not expect one battle, but a lengthy campaign unlike any other
we have ever seen. It would not be a short and decisive
war against a single country, as in Iraq, he continued, or an
air war with no US casualties, as in Yugoslavia. He called his
war for the defeat of the global terror network a
task that does not end. Pointedly refusing to rule
out the use of nuclear weapons, he added, We will direct
every resource at our command.. .and every necessary weapon of
war.
Laying down a rationale to attack any nation deemed now or
in the future to be an obstacle to the global ambitions of the
United States, Bush declared, Every nation in every region
now has a decision to make: Either you are with us, or you are
with the terrorists. Any nation that refuses to obey Washingtons
dictates will be regarded by the United States as a hostile
regime.
At the heart of the scenario presented by Bush was an anomaly
that he made no attempt to explain. On the one hand he described
the enemy as a fringe element of Islamic fundamentalists,
amounting to some thousands of terrorists spread out
among 60 countries. Yet this relative handful of loosely connected
terrorist groups posed a dire and direct threat to America and
the entire civilized world of such dimensions that
only the most massive and sustained use of military force would
suffice to defeat it.
Ultimatums, but no evidence
The immediate purpose of Bushs speech was to take the
country into war against Afghanistan. Bush listed a set of demands
he knew would mean political suicide for the Taliban regime, and
which they could not meet even if they wanted to. He demanded
that the Taliban deliver into American hands all the leaders
of Osama bin Ladens al-Qaida network, that they immediately
close every al-Qaida installation, and that they give the US full
access to terrorist training camps.
In effect, the Bush administration is demanding that the Taliban
regime accede to the transformation of Afghanistan into a military
protectorate of the United States. This ultimatum, Bush declared,
is not open to negotiation or discussion. If the leaders
of the regime do not surrender to US demands, Bush warned, they
will share the terrorists fate, i.e., they will be killed.
There was no formal demand for Osama bin Ladens extradition.
Indeed, there is no convention under international law for what
Bush demanded. Washingtons demands have been formulated
to provide a pretext for a war that had already been decided upon.
Bush charged bin Laden and his Taliban protectors with direct
responsibility for the September 11 atrocities. These are, without
question, reactionary forces who may very well have played a role,
but Bush provided no evidence to back up his indictment. Even
the Wall Street Journal, whose editorial pages have been
clamoring for war not only against Afghanistan, but also against
Iraq, acknowledged in a news article on September 19 that US officials
have been unable to assemble sufficient evidence to prove their
case against bin Laden.
But by 21st-century Western standards of law and international
relations, the Journal wrote, how much actual
evidence do investigators have of Mr. bin Ladens involvement?
The answer so farbased on what can be gleaned from public
statements and US officials willing to discuss the matteris
not enough.
Bush further sought to justify war on Afghanistan by pointing
to the repressive and totalitarian character of the Taliban regime.
But the Taliban regime is the direct product of earlier American
policies, and its dictatorial methods of rule and religious intolerance
are not all that different from the United States closest
allies in the Middle East, such as the oil sheikdoms in Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and other Persian Gulf states.
As the Bush administration embarks upon war, it is giving little
thought to the far-reaching and even incalculable consequences
of its actions. Intervening in the most unstable region in the
world, where a host of great powers vie for control of strategic
resources and geo-political influence amidst the unspeakable poverty
of hundreds of millions of people, the United States is embarked
upon a course of action whose outcome may prove catastrophic for
the entire planet.
It is worthwhile to compare the methods of the Bush administration
to those employed by Kennedy in the Cuban missile crisis. That
was certainly one of the greatest confrontations of the Cold War,
in which the US government faced, from its standpoint, a clear
military threat. At that time the American government went to
the United Nations and presented detailed evidence with documents
and photographs to make its case. It proceeded, moreover, with
a degree of caution that stands in glaring contrast to the actions
of the Bush administration.
Today the US government makes the most sweeping claims, but
presents no evidence, either to the world or to the American public,
to back them up. The historical comparison demonstrates that the
actions of the US government today are determined less by the
magnitude of the threat than by the magnitude of the opportunities
it perceives for turning a disaster into a pretext for implementing
a far-reaching, but unstated, military, political and economic
agenda.
This is confirmed by a New York Times report on a split
within the Bush administration between those, led by Secretary
of State Colin Powell, who want to proceed with a modicum of caution
for fear of destabilizing the Middle East and other vast regions
of the world, and those, led by Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz, who see the September 11 tragedy as a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to overthrow the regime in Iraq and establish a whole
series of puppet governments. The aim of this faction is to implement,
in rapid order, plans long on the drawing boards for tightening
Americas grip on the oil-rich Persian Gulf and Caspian basin
and extending Americas military presence across the Eurasian
continent.
How the US nurtured the Taliban
In his speech, Bush provided no explanation of the political
and historical background to the September 11 disaster. With the
complicity of the media, the administration is seeking to bury
the fact that those whom it has singled out as the perpetrators
of the terrorist atrocity were trained and financed by the United
States. The Islamic fundamentalists excoriated by Bush, including
bin Laden, got their start as CIA assets in Washingtons
covert campaign to oust Soviet-backed regimes in Afghanistan in
the 1980san operation that was carried out while Bush the
elder, formerly the CIA director, held the post of vice president
under Ronald Reagan.
Only a few years ago the US tacitly endorsed the accession
to power of its old Taliban allies. The Taliban thus become the
latest in a long line of one-time American allies who ran afoul
of the US and found themselves being denounced as war lords and
modern-day Hitlers and targeted for destruction, a list that includes
Manuel Noriega of Panama, Farrah Aidid of Somalia, Saddam Hussein
of Iraq and Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia.
The media establishment is well aware of this history. Indeed,
some twenty years ago CBS news anchor Dan Rather traveled to Afghanistan
and posed for the TV cameras in Mujahaddin robes in order to build
support for the Islamic fundamentalist forces.
This history is being suppressed because it demonstrates that
those who are today leading the American people into war, with
all of the disastrous consequences it will entail, are politically
implicated in the tragedy that took the lives of thousands of
Americans in New York and Washington.
The ominous implications for democratic rights of the war drive
were underscored by Bushs announcement of a new Cabinet-level
position, the Office of Homeland Security, to coordinate all domestic
intelligence and security operations.
The operations of the CIA, previously limited by law to external
targets, will now be coordinated under a top-level federal agency
with those of the FBI and other police agencies to wire-tap and
spy on people within the US. This alone constitutes a huge breach
of civil liberties.
But it is only one part of a broader assault on democratic
rights, which includes the indefinite detention of legal aliens,
deportations without judicial review and a vast expansion of the
governments powers to tap phones and intercept electronic
communications.
A one-party state
No section of the political establishment has questioned Bushs
demand for a blank check to wage war abroad and crack down on
civil liberties at home. At the very outset of the military crusade,
both parties have disavowed all expressions of dissent.
The Democratic Party demonstrated its abandonment of any pretext
of opposition by foregoing the traditional response of the minority
party to a presidential address to Congress. Instead the Democratic
Senate majority leader, Thomas Daschle, made a joint appearance
with Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, in which the latter summed
up the state of American politics with the remark, There
is no opposition party.
The media, which universally lauded Bushs address, was
silent on the contradiction between the democratic rhetoric that
filled the Capitol and the de facto establishment of a one-party
state. Nor did the pundits care to point out that Bushs
explanation for the terrorists hostility toward the United
StatesThey hate what they see right here in this chamber:
a democratically elected governmentwas given by a
man who was installed in the White House by anti-democratic and
illegitimate means.
It is both ironic and menacing that the launching of a war
in the name of freedom is accompanied by the disintegration of
the most elementary principles of democracy and the dismantling
of basic constitutional safeguards. Bushs injunction, Either
you are with us, or you are with the terrorists, is not
only a formula for waging war and toppling governments overseas,
it is a rallying cry for a McCarthyite witch-hunt against political
dissent within the US.
The effective collapse of any opposition serves an additional
political function. It means there can be no examination of the
staggering security failures that made the attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon possible.
The atmosphere of fear and panic allows the government to escape
any accounting for what was, at the very least, a case of criminal
negligence, and then turn around and insist that the peoples
security and well-being require that they accept the abrogation
of their democratic rights.
Bushs speech was also significant for what it lacked.
Reflecting the extremely privileged and narrow class interests
he represents, Bush called for a bailout of the airline companies
at taxpayer expense, but had nothing to say to the millions of
workers, small businessmen and retirees whose livelihoods are
threatened by the collapse of the stock market, the plunge in
consumer spending and the mass layoffs that have followed the
September 11 disaster. Neither Bush nor the Democrats are proposing
any serious measures to provide for the families of air industry
employees who are being thrown onto the street in colossal numbers.
Nor are they proposing a safety net for shop owners in New York
who have been wiped out by the destruction of an entire section
of the city. As for small investors and retirees whose life savings
and retirement nest eggs are being gutted, they can expect no
help from Washington.
The terrible loss of life on September 11 was, in the final
analysis, a product of the reckless, irresponsible and reactionary
international policies pursued for decades by American governments
that represent, not the American people, but rather a financial
and corporate elite. Now this same elite is seizing on the tragic
events in New York and Washington to drag the populationwithout
democratic debate or discussion and in an environment characterized
by hysteria and political intimidationinto a war unlike
any other that can only produce new disasters and tragedies,
both abroad and at home.
This article is available as a PDF-formatted
leaflet
See Also:
Anti-Americanism: The "anti-imperialism"
of fools
[22 September 2001]
US Congress set to approve sweeping attacks
on civil liberties
[22 September 2001]
Democratic rights in America: the first
casualty of Bushs anti-terror war
[19 September 2001]
Why the Bush administration wants war
[14 September 2001]
The political roots of the terror attack
on New York and Washington
[13 September 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |