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Government by provocation: Bush administration escalates terror
warnings
By the Editorial Board
24 May 2002
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The series of statements over the past several days from the
Bush administration, warning of terrorist attacks that could take
the lives of thousands, if not millions of Americans, constitutes
a huge political provocation. One after another, top officials
declared that new attacks, involving biological, chemical or nuclear
weapons, were inevitable, and the government was powerless to
prevent them.
The message was unmistakable: every person residing in the
United States had to accept the prospect that at any moment he
or she might be blown up or poisoned. The population as a whole
was destined to endure more traumas like the destruction of the
World Trade Center, and even worse catastrophes.
These wild predictionsall of which were issued without
any substantiationwere not the misstatements of loose
cannons within the government. They came from the highest
levels in an orchestrated succession of warnings. The first was
issued Sunday, May 19 by Vice President Richard Cheney, who declared
that another terrorist attack on a US target, likely even bloodier
than the September 11 hijack-bombings, was almost certain.
Cheney, who appeared on several network television interview programs,
added that attacks by suicide bombers in public places, like those
in Israel, were a real possibility.
He was followed Monday by FBI Director Robert Mueller, in a
speech to district attorneys near Washington. Mueller said suicide
bombings on the Israeli-Palestinian model were inevitable
in the United States. There will be another terrorist attack,
Mueller said, adding, We will not be able to stop it. Its
something we all live with.
The next warning came on Tuesday from Bushs top domestic
official for anti-terrorism planning, Director of Homeland Security
Tom Ridge. The former Pennsylvania governor said that further
terrorist attacks on Americans were not a question of if,
but a question of when.
Secretary of State Colin Powell sounded the same theme in releasing
the State Departments annual report on terrorism Tuesday.
He told a press conference that terrorists are trying every
way they can to get their hands on weapons of mass destruction,
whether radiological, chemical, biological or nuclear.
The most apocalyptic statements came Tuesday from Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who told a congressional committee
to expect a terrorist attack on the United States using weapons
of mass destruction, including nuclear materials. He said that
Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya and North Korea were developing nuclear,
biological and chemical weapons and would supply them to terrorist
organizations.
Im just facing the facts, Rumsfeld said.
Thats the world we live in.
Rumsfelds language heightened the bizarre impression
left by his testimony. Speaking of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda,
he declared, They jerk us around, try to jerk us around,
and test us. As if to underscore the terrifying implications
of his words, he added, We are going to be living in a period
of limited or no warning because of the asymmetrical advantages
of the attacker as opposed to the defender.
Compounding the effect of the warnings from Bush administration
officials was an FBI alert that New York City landmarks, including
the Brooklyn Bridge and the Statue of Liberty, had been targeted
for terrorist attack. The FBI admitted that its warning was based
on vague and uncorroborated threats, but it was sufficient to
impel city authorities to implement extraordinary measures not
seen since the immediate aftermath of September 11. The Brooklyn
Bridge was closed down for periods on Tuesday and Wednesday, and
systematic vehicle searches were conducted at major bridge and
tunnel entrances throughout the city on both days. The FBI also
warned of potential attacks on New York apartment buildings.
Whatever the underlying motives, the intended effect of the
governments statements and actions is to engender a mood
of general fear and panic. Such methods brand those in power as
reckless and dangerous political provocateurs.
It is no accident that the governments dire predictions
come in the midst of revelations that call into question the official
story of September 11: that the Bush administration and the US
intelligence apparatus had no forewarnings of the attacks, and
could not have taken action to prevent them. The unraveling of
the edifice of lies and evasions surrounding the events of last
September threatens to undermine the legitimacy of all of the
sweeping measures taken by the government since then.
Just as the destruction of the World Trade Center was seized
on to stampede a shocked and disoriented public into accepting
a drastic shift in US policy, in accordance with plans for war
abroad and repression at home already drawn up by the Bush administration,
so now the government seeks to create a public mood of anxiety
and confusion to preempt growing demands for a full investigation
of its previous actions, while justifying new and even more extreme
measures.
If one takes Rumsfeld and company at their word, one is left
with an acknowledgement of the bankruptcy of the American political
establishment and the policy it has pursued for more than a decade.
During the half-century of Cold War confrontation between US imperialism
and the Soviet bloc, when thousands of nuclear-armed missiles
were aimed at the American mainland and vice versa, no high-level
US official ever publicly predicted that a nuclear attack on the
US population was inevitable.
The American ruling elite felt obliged to counter the danger
of such a disaster by developing a wide-ranging political strategy,
including mechanisms such as arms control agreements, diplomatic
exchanges, hot lines, etc. No nuclear bombs were dropped during
this period.
But in the decade-plus since the breakup of the Soviet Union,
the US has increasingly relied on its unchallenged military supremacy
to impose its will on the rest of the world, spurning diplomacy
in favor of bullying, threats and violence. Beginning with the
administration of the elder George Bush, the US has waged three
major warsagainst Iraq, Serbia and Afghanistanand
carried out many smaller-scale military actions around the world.
The turn to militarism has reached a new level of recklessness
and violence under the present Bush administration. The US now
disavows all political methods for preventing conflicts. It refuses
to negotiate with those it considers to be terrorists or rogue
states. It dispatches its military to the most volatile
regions of the world, and refuses to back off even when its armed
interventions inflame global tensions to the breaking pointas
in the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. Instead, it prepares
for new and even more incendiary interventions, most immediately,
against Iraq.
The US has become the single most destabilizing force in the
world. The brutal and predatory character of its policies has
generated ever more intense hostility among broad masses of oppressed
and impoverished people in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and even
within Europe. These policies, which are carried out to defend
the interests of the US corporate elite, not those of the working
class, are ultimately responsible for the social and political
conditions that breed terrorism.
If Rumsfelds claims are truethat after a decade
of wars and despite a new and massive expansion of the US military,
terrorist counterstrikes of catastrophic proportions are unavoidablethen
the net result of the militaristic policies he embodies has been
to doom the American people to death and destruction on a horrific
scale.
It is obvious to all those able to think critically that the
apocalyptic warnings emanating from the government will be used
to justify not only further military adventures overseas, but
also a further crackdown on democratic rights within the US. This
government by provocation is possible only because of the complicity
of the media and the lack of any opposition from the Democratic
Party. It is not backed by a popular mandate of the people. In
fact, the Bush administration feels compelled to resort to desperate
methods precisely because it has been unable to generate a patriotic
war frenzy among broad layers of the population. The vast majority
of working people are far more concerned with the threat to their
jobs and living standards arising from the deepening economic
and social crisis, for which the government has no answers.
The Bush administration must be called to account. It must
be compelled to lay out before the American people the factual
basis for its warnings and threats. Claims of executive privilege
or the requirements of wartime national security are
red herrings. If the people are being told that thousands or even
millions are going to die in terror attacks that cannot be prevented,
then they have a right to know the facts on which these claims
are based. If, moreover, the government is using these doomsday
predictions to arrogate to itself extraordinary powersand
it isthen the people have an absolute right to know the
basis for such measures. It is their lives and their democratic
rights that are at stake.
Beyond the peoples right to know, the Bush administrations
modus operandi of lies and provocation raises an even more basic
question: the future of the people of the US and, indeed, of the
entire world depends on the mobilization of the working class
on the basis of a new political orientation. It is not simply
a matter of removing one government. The worlds people require
a genuinely democratic and progressive perspective. To liberate
mankind from the nightmare of war, tyranny and social degradation
into which it is being dragged by politically and morally bankrupt
ruling elites, the working masses of all countries must be united
around a revolutionary program to reconstruct society on socialist
foundations.
See Also:
Why is the New York Times defending
Bushs September 11 cover-up?
[22 May 2002]
Cover-up and conspiracy: The Bush administration
and September 11
[18 May 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war and defend democratic rights
[19 April 2002]
White House defends nuclear
war plans with sophistries and saber-rattling
[15 March 2002]
US plans widespread use of
nuclear weapons in war
Bush orders Pentagon to target seven nations for attack
[11 March 2002]
The war in Afghanistan and the
crisis of political rule in America
[8 March 2002]
The shadow of dictatorship:
Bush established secret government after September 11
[4 March 2002]
Billions for war and repression:
Bush budget for a garrison state
[6 February 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
Was the US government alerted
to September 11 attack?
[16 January 2002]
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