| Two
articles by seemingly fairly reasonable people,
below. Both published in the UK's Guardian newspaper.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
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The war on paperclips
I
worry that I'm turning into a conspiracy theorist
AL
Kennedy
Wednesday May 11, 2005
The Guardian
OK,
I'm paranoid and depressed. My new government
of troglodytes, murderers and spivs barely elongates
the customary scream I give upon waking. What
troubles me more is our rulers' inevitable recommencement
of the war on terror bollocks.
To begin at what we're told is the beginning,
we have 9/11 - the one in the US, not the earlier
one in Chile when covert US government intervention
killed thousands of innocents and handed the country
to a commerce-friendly, torture-loving, far-right
junta. Now if 9/11/2001 is so important, why is
it so hard to find out what happened?
The
FBI, as we know, blocked all manner of investigations
into the plot in the run up to its execution,
whether these involved highly specific warnings
from its own agents or from government sources
in Afghanistan, Argentina, Britain, the Cayman
Islands, Egypt, France, Germany, Israel, Italy,
Jordan, Morocco and Russia.
Meanwhile, I worry why the nearest military aircraft
weren't scrambled to intercept any of the hijacked
flights when this is standard procedure and why,
when more distant jets were finally aloft, they
flew at less than half speed, thus failing to
prevent the impacts at the twin towers and then,
it would seem, managing to shoot down Flight 93
when its passengers may already have overcome
its hijackers.
It
would, of course, be easier to know what happened
to Flight 93 if there weren't - according to educated
estimates - three minutes of the cockpit recording
missing. It would, equally, be handy to have access
to the black boxes from the other crashes. Firefighters
at Ground Zero have repeatedly stated that three
of the four possible black boxes there were found
and taken away by government agents.
And
these worries are maybe less important than the
ones about clear links between the Pakistani ISI,
the CIA and the men named as the 9/11 hijackers.
Or the mysterious inability of anyone to capture
Osama bin Laden, who fled from Tora Bora, possibly
being evacuated by helicopter, and then escaped
to Pakistan unhindered.
So
while Chinese paperclips are now made out of vital
9/11 evidence and almost every implicated party
goes free, we and our controlling US interests
continue fearlessly to terrorise countries unconnected
with the attacks, to place permanent military
bases near oil reserves and pipeline routes, to
harass and murder Muslims anywhere we can, and
to foment terrorist resistance at every opportunity.
The UK unmasks non-existent ricin plots and threatens
us with ID cards, but we can't supply our troops
in Iraq with working radios or a legal causus
belli.
But
you'd never want to think that on 9/11/2001 covert
US government intervention killed thousands of
innocents and handed the country, if not the world,
to a commerce-friendly, torture-loving, far-right
junta. That would make you a paranoid, depressed
conspiracy theorist. And, take it from me, that
just wouldn't be comfortable.
===========
FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted
material the use of which has not always been specifically
authorized by the copyright owner. We are making
such material available in our efforts to advance
understanding of criminal justice, political, human
rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social
justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes
a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section
107, the material on this site is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research
and educational purposes. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
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use', you must obtain permission from the copyright
owner.
The
Observer, Sunday 27th October 2002, Review Section,
Pages 1-4
Version below, from: http://9-11congress.netfirms.com/Vidal.html
The Enemy Within
Gore
Vidal is America’s most controversial writer
and a ferocious, often isolated, critic of the
Bush administration. Here, against a backdrop
of spreading unease about America’s response
to the events of 11 September 2001 and their aftermath,
we publish Vidal’s remarkable personal polemic
urging a shocking new interpretation of who was
to blame.
On
24 August, 1814, things looked very dark for freedom's
land. That was the day the British captured Washington
DC and set fire to the Capitol and the White House.
President Madison took refuge in the nearby Virginia
woods where he waited patiently for the notoriously
short attention span of the Brits to kick in,
which it did. They moved on and what might have
been a Day of Utter Darkness turned out to be
something of a bonanza for the DC building trades
and up-market realtors.
One year after 9/11, we still don't know by whom
we were struck that infamous Tuesday, or for what
true purpose. But it is fairly plain to many civil-libertarians
that 9/11 put paid not only to much of our fragile
Bill of Rights but also to our once-envied system
of government which had taken a mortal blow the
previous year when the Supreme Court did a little
dance in 5/4 time and replaced a popularly elected
president with the oil and gas Cheney/Bush junta.
Meanwhile, our more and more unaccountable government
is pursuing all sorts of games around the world
that we the spear carriers (formerly the people)
will never learn of. Even so, we have been getting
some answers to the question: why weren't we warned
in advance of 9/11? Apparently, we were, repeatedly;
for the better part of a year, we were told there
would be unfriendly visitors to our skies some
time in September 2001, but the government neither
informed nor protected us despite Mayday warnings
from Presidents Putin and Mubarak, from Mossad
and even from elements of our own FBI. A joint
panel of congressional intelligence committees
reported (19 September 2002, New York Times) that
as early as 1996, Pakistani terrorist Abdul Hakim
Murad confessed to federal agents that he was
'learning to fly in order to crash a plane into
CIA HQ'.
Only CIA director George Tenet seemed to take
the various threats seriously. In December 1998,
he wrote to his deputies that 'we are at war'
with Osama bin Laden. So impressed was the FBI
by his warnings that by 20 September 2001, 'the
FBI still had only one analyst assigned full time
to al-Qaeda'.
From a briefing prepared for Bush at the beginning
of July 2001: 'We believe that OBL [Osama bin
Laden] will launch a significant terrorist attack
against US and/or Israeli interests in the coming
weeks. The attack will be spectacular and designed
to inflict mass casualties against US facilities
or interests. Attack preparations have been made.
Attack will occur with little or no warning.'
And so it came to pass; yet Condoleezza Rice,
the National Security Advisor, says she never
suspected that this meant anything more than the
kidnapping of planes.
Happily, somewhere over the Beltway, there is
Europe - recently declared anti-Semitic by the
US media because most of Europe wants no war with
Iraq and the junta does, for reasons we may now
begin to understand thanks to European and Asian
investigators with their relatively free media.
On the subject 'How and Why America was Attacked
on 11 September, 2001', the best, most balanced
report, thus far, is by Nafeez Mossadeq Ahmed
... Yes, yes, I know he is one of Them. But they
often know things that we don't - particularly
about what we are up to. A political scientist,
Ahmed is executive director of the Institute for
Policy Research and Development 'a think-tank
dedicated to the promotion of human rights, justice
and peace' in Brighton. His book, 'The War on
Freedom', has just been published in the US by
a small but reputable publisher.
Ashmed provides a background for our ongoing war
against Afghanistan, a view that in no way coincides
with what the administration has told us. He has
drawn on many sources, most tellingly on American
whistleblowers who are beginning to come forth
and hear witness - like those FBI agents who warned
their supervisors that al-Qaeda was planning a
kamikaze strike against New York and Washington
only to be told that if they went public with
these warnings they would suffer under the National
Security Act. Several of these agents have engaged
David P. Schippers, chief investigative counsel
for the US House Judiciary Committee, to represent
them in court. The majestic Schippers managed
the successful impeachment of President Clinton
in the House of Representatives. He may, if the
Iraqi war should go wrong, be obliged to perform
the same high service for Bush, who allowed the
American people to go unwarned about an imminent
attack upon two of our cities as pre-emption of
a planned military strike by the US against the
Taliban.
The Guardian (26 September 2001) reported that
in July 2001, a group of interested parties met
in a Berlin hotel to listen to a former State
Department official, Lee Coldren, as he passed
on a message from the Bush administration that
'the United States was so disgusted with the Taliban
that they might be considering some military action
... the chilling quality of this private warning
was that it came - according to one of those present,
the Pakistani diplomat Niaz Naik - accompanied
by specific details of how Bush would succeed
...' Four days earlier, the Guardian had reported
that 'Osama bin Laden and the Taliban received
threats of possible American military action against
them two months before the terrorist assaults
on New York and Washington ... [which] raises
the possibility that bin Laden was launching a
pre-emptive strike in response to what he saw
as US threats.' A replay of the 'day of infamy'
in the Pacific 62 years earlier?
Why
the US needed a Eurasian adventure
On
9 September 2001, Bush was presented with a draft
of a national security presidential directive
outlining a global campaign of military, diplomatic
and intelligence action targeting al-Qaeda, buttressed
by the threat of war. According to NBC News: 'President
Bush was expected to sign detailed plans for a
worldwide war against al-Qaeda ... but did not
have the chance before the terrorist attacks ...
The directive, as described to NBC News, was essentially
the same war plan as the one put into action after
11 September. The administration most likely was
able to respond so quickly ... because it simply
had to pull the plans "off the shelf".'
Finally, BBC News, 18 September 2001: 'Niak Naik,
a former Pakistan foreign secretary, was told
by senior American officials in mid-July that
military action against Afghanistan would go ahead
by the middle of October. It was Naik's view that
Washington would not drop its war for Afghanistan
even if bin Laden were to be surrendered immediately
by the Taliban.'
Was Afghanistan then turned to rubble in order
to avenge the 3,000 Americans slaughtered by Osama?
Hardly. The administration is convinced that Americans
are so simple-minded that they can deal with no
scenario more complex than the venerable lone,
crazed killer (this time with zombie helpers)
who does evil just for the fun of it 'cause he
hates us, 'cause we're rich 'n free 'n he's not.
Osama was chosen on aesthetic grounds to be the
most frightening logo for our long contemplated
invasion and conquest of Afghanistan, planning
for which had been 'contingency' some years before
9/11 and, again, from 20 December, 2000, when
Clinton's out-going team devised a plan to strike
at al-Qaeda in retaliation for the assault on
the warship Cole. Clinton's National Security
Advisor, Sandy Berger, personally briefed his
successor on the plan but Rice, still very much
in her role as director of Chevron-Texaco, with
special duties regarding Pakistan and Uzbekistan,
now denies any such briefing. A year and a half
later (12 August, 2002), fearless Time magazine
reported this odd memory lapse.
Osama, if it was he and not a nation, simply provided
the necessary shock to put in train a war of conquest.
But conquest of what? What is there in dismal
dry sandy Afghanistan worth conquering? Zbigniew
Brzezinski tells us exactly what in a 1997 Council
on Foreign Relations study called 'The Grand Chessboard:
American Primacy and its Geostrategic Imperatives'.
The Polish-born Brzezinski was the hawkish National
Security Advisor to President Carter. In 'The
Grand Chessboard', Brzezinski gives a little history
lesson. 'Ever since the continents started interacting
politically, some 500 years ago, Eurasia has been
the centre of world power.' Eurasia is all the
territory east of Germany. This means Russia,
the Middle East, China and parts of India. Brzezinski
acknowledges that Russia and China, bordering
oil-rich central Asia, are the two main powers
threatening US hegemony in that area.
He takes it for granted that the US must exert
control over the former Soviet republics of Central
Asia, known to those who love them as 'the Stans':
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikstan and Kyrgyzstan
all 'of importance from the standpoint of security
and historical ambitions to at least three of
their most immediate and most powerful neighbours
- Russia, Turkey and Iran, with China signaling'.
Brzezinski notes how the world's energy consumption
keeps increasing; hence, who controls Caspian
oil/gas will control the world economy. Brzezinski
then, reflexively, goes into the standard American
rationalization for empire;. We want nothing,
ever, for ourselves, only to keep bad people from
getting good things with which to hurt good people.
'It follows that America's primary interest is
to help ensure that no single [other] power comes
to control the geopolitical space and that the
global community has unhindered financial and
economic access to it.'
Brzezinski is quite aware that American leaders
are wonderfully ignorant of history and geography
so he really lays it on, stopping just short of
invoking politically incorrect 'manifest destiny'.
He reminds the Council just how big Eurasia is.
Seventy-five percent of the world's population
is Eurasian. If I have done the sums right, that
means that we've only got control, to date, of
a mere 25 percent of the world's folks. More!
'Eurasia accounts for 60-per cent of the world's
GNP and three-fourths of the world's known energy
resources.'
Brzezinski's master plan for 'our' globe has obviously
been accepted by the Cheney-Bush junta. Corporate
America, long over-excited by Eurasian mineral
wealth, has been aboard from the beginning.
Ahmed sums up: 'Brzezinski clearly envisaged that
the establishment, consolidation and expansion
of US military hegemony over Eurasia through Central
Asia would require the unprecedented, open-ended
militarisation of foreign policy, coupled with
an unprecedented manufacture of domestic support
and consensus on this militarisation campaign.'
Afghanistan is the gateway to all these riches.
Will we fight to seize them? It should never be
forgotten that the American people did not want
to fight in either of the twentieth century's
world wars, but President Wilson maneuvered us
into the First while President Roosevelt maneuvered
the Japanese into striking the first blow at Pearl
Harbor, causing us to enter the Second as the
result of a massive external attack. Brzezinski
understands all this and, in 1997, he is thinking
ahead - as well as backward. 'Moreover, as America
becomes an increasingly multicultural society,
it may find it more difficult to fashion a consensus
on foreign policy issues, except in the circumstance
of a truly massive and widely perceived direct
external threat.' Thus was the symbolic gun produced
that belched black smoke over Manhattan and the
Pentagon.
Since the Iran-Iraq wars, Islam has been demonized
as a Satanic terrorist cult that encourages suicide
attacks - contrary, it should be noted, to the
Islamic religion. Osama has been portrayed, accurately,
it would seem, as an Islamic zealot. In order
to bring this evil-doer to justice ('dead or alive'),
Afghanistan, the object of the exercise was made
safe not only for democracy but for Union Oil
of California whose proposed pipeline from Turkmenistan
to Afghanistan to Pakistan and the Indian Ocean
port of Karachi, had been abandoned under the
Taliban's chaotic regime. Currently, the pipeline
is a go-project thanks to the junta's installation
of a Unocal employee (John J Maresca) as US envoy
to the newly born democracy whose president, Hamid
Karzai, is also, according to Le Monde, a former
employee of a Unocal subsidiary. Conspiracy? Coincidence!
Once Afghanistan looked to be within the fold,
the junta, which had managed to pull off a complex
diplomatic-military caper, - abruptly replaced
Osama, the personification of evil, with Saddam.
This has been hard to explain since there is nothing
to connect Iraq with 9/11. Happily, 'evidence'
is now being invented. But it is uphill work,
not helped by stories in the press about the vast
oil wealth of Iraq which must - for the sake of
the free world - be reassigned to US and European
consortiums.
As Brzezinski foretold, 'a truly massive and widely
perceived direct external threat' made it possible
for the President to dance a war dance before
Congress. 'A long war!' he shouted with glee.
Then he named an incoherent Axis of Evil to be
fought. Although Congress did not give him the
FDR Special - a declaration of war - he did get
permission to go after Osama who may now be skulking
in Iraq.
Bush
and the dog that did not bark
Post-9/11,
the American media were filled with pre-emptory
denunciations of unpatriotic 'conspiracy theorists',
who not only are always with us but are usually
easy for the media to discredit since it is an
article of faith that there are no conspiracies
in American life. Yet, a year or so ago, who would
have thought that most of corporate America had
been conspiring with accountants to cook their
books since - well, at least the bright days of
Reagan and deregulation. Ironically, less than
a year after the massive danger from without,
we were confronted with an even greater enemy
from within: Golden Calf capitalism. Transparency?
One fears that greater transparency will only
reveal armies of maggots at work beneath the skin
of a culture that needs a bit of a lie-down in
order to collect itself before taking its next
giant step which is to conquer Eurasia, a potentially
fatal adventure not only for our frazzled institutions
but for us the presently living.
Complicity. The behavior of President George W.
Bush on 11 September certainly gives rise to all
sorts of not unnatural suspicions. I can think
of no other modern chief of state who would continue
to pose for 'warm' pictures of himself listening
to a young girl telling stories about her pet
goat while hijacked planes were into three buildings.
Constitutionally, Bush is not only chief of state,
he is commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Normally, a commander in such a crisis would go
straight to headquarters and direct operations
while receiving the latest intelligence.
This is what Bush actually did - or did not do
- according to Stan Goff, a retired US Army veteran
who has taught military science and doctrine at
West Point. Goff writes, in 'The So-called Evidence
is a Farce': 'I have no idea why people aren't
asking some very specific questions about the
actions of Bush and company on the day of the
attacks. Four planes get hijacked and deviate
from their flight plan, all the while on FAA radar.'
Goff, incidentally, like the other astonished
military experts, cannot fathom why the government's
automatic 'standard order of procedure in the
event of a hijacking' was not followed. Once a
plane has deviated from its flight-plan, fighter
planes are sent up to find out why. That is law
and does not require presidential approval, which
only needs to be given if there is a decision
to shoot down a plane. Goff spells it out: 'The
planes were hijacked between 7:45 and 8:10am.
Who is notified? This is an event already that
is unprecedented. But the President is not notified
and going to a Florida elementary school to hear
children read.
'By around 8:15am it should be very apparent that
something is terribly wrong. The President is
glad-handling teachers. By 8:45am, when American
Airlines Flight 11 crashes into the North Tower,
Bush is settling in with children for his photo
op. Four planes have obviously been hijacked simultaneously
and one has just dived into the twin towers, and
still no one notifies the nominal Commander-in-Chief.
'No one has apparently scrambled [sent aloft]
Air Force interceptors either. At 9:03, Flight
175 crashes into the South Tower. At 9:05 Andrew
Card, the Chief of Staff whispers to Bush [who]
"briefly turns somber" according to
reporters. Does he cancel the school visit and
convene an emergency meeting? No. He resumes listening
to second-graders ... and continues the banality
even as American Airlines Flight 77 conducts an
unscheduled point turn over Ohio and heads in
the direction of Washington DC.
'Has he instructed Card to scramble the Air Force?
No. An excruciating 25 minutes later, he finally
deigns to give a public statement telling the
United States what they have already figured out
- that there's been an attack on the World Trade
Centre. There's a hijacked plane bee-lining to
Washington, but has the Air Force been scrambled
to defend anything yet? No.
'At 9:35, this plane conducts another turn, 360
[degrees] over the Pentagon, all the while being
tracked by radar, and the Pentagon is not evacuated,
and there are still no fast-movers from the Air
Force in the sky over Alexandria and DC. Now the
real kicker: a pilot they want us to believe was
trained at a Florida puddle-jumper school for
Piper Cubs and Cessnas, conducts a well-controlled
downward spiral descending the last 7,000 feet
in two-and-a-half minutes, brings the plane in
so low and flat that it clips the electrical wires
across the street from the Pentagon, and flies
it with pinpoint accuracy into the side of the
building at 460 knots.
'When the theory about learning to fly this well
at the puddle-jumper school began to lose ground,
it was added that they received further training
on a flight simulator. This is like saying you
prepared your teenager for her first drive on
the freeway at rush hour by buying her a video
driving game ... There is a story being constructed
about these events.'
There is indeed, and the more it is added to the
darker it becomes. The nonchalance of General
Richard B. Myers, acting Joint Chief of Staff,
is as puzzling as the President's campaigning-as-usual
act. Myers was at the Capitol chatting with Senator
Max Cleland. A sergeant, writing later in the
AFPS (American Forces Press Service) describes
Myers at the Capitol. 'While in an outer office,
he said, he saw a television report that a plane
had hit the World Trade Centre. "They thought
it was a small plane or something like that,"
Myers said. So the two men went ahead with the
office call.'
Whatever Myers and Cleland had to say to each
other (more funds for the military?) must have
been riveting because, during their chat, the
AFPS reports, 'the second tower was hit by another
jet. "Nobody informed us of that," Myers
said. "But when we came out, that was obvious.
Then, right at that time, somebody said the Pentagon
had been hit."' Finally, somebody 'thrust
a cellphone in Myers' hand' and, as if by magic,
the commanding general of Norad - our Airspace
Command - was on the line just as the hijackers
mission had been successfully completed except
for the failed one in Pennsylvania. In later testimony
to the Senate Armed Forces Committee, Myers said
he thinks that, as of his cellphone talk with
Norad, 'the decision was at that point to start
launching aircraft'. It was 9:40am. One hour and
20 minutes after air controllers knew that Flight
11 had been hijacked; 50 minutes after the North
Tower was struck.
This statement would have been quite enough in
our old serious army/air force to launch a number
of courts martial with an impeachment or two thrown
in. First, Myers claims to be uninformed until
the third strike. But the Pentagon had been overseeing
the hijacked planes from at least the moment of
the strike at the first tower: yet not until the
third strike, at the Pentagon, was the decision
made to get the fighter planes up. Finally, this
one is the dog that did not bark. By law, the
fighters should have been up at around 8:15. If
they had, all the hijacked planes might have been
diverted or shot down. I don't think that Goff
is being unduly picky when he wonders who and
what kept the Air Force from following its normal
procedure instead of waiting an hour and 20 minutes
until the damage was done and only then launching
the fighters. Obviously, somebody had ordered
the Air Force to make no move to intercept those
hijackings until ... what?
On 21 January 2002, the Canadian media analyst
Barry Zwicker summed up on CBC-TV: 'That morning
no interceptors responded in a timely fashion
to the highest alert situation. This includes
the Andrews squadrons which ... are 12 miles from
the White House ... Whatever the explanation for
the huge failure, there have been no reports,
to my knowledge, of reprimands. This further weakens
the "Incompetence Theory". Incompetence
usually earns reprimands. This causes me to ask
whether there were "stand down" orders.'??
On 29 August 2002, the BBC reports that on 9/11
there were 'only four fighters on ready status
in the north-eastern US'. Conspiracy? Coincidence?
Error?
It is interesting how often in our history, when
disaster strikes, incompetence is considered a
better alibi than ... well, yes, there are worse
things. After Pearl Harbor, Congress moved to
find out why Hawaii's two military commanders,
General Short and Admiral Kimmel, had not anticipated
the Japanese attack. But President Roosevelt pre-empted
that investigation with one of his own. Short
and Kimmel were broken for incompetence. The 'truth'
is still obscure to this day.
The
media's weapons of mass distraction
But
Pearl Harbor has been much studied. 11 September,
it is plain, is never going to be investigated
if Bush has anything to say about it. In January
2002, CNN reported that 'Bush personally asked
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle to limit the
Congressional investigation into the events of
11 September ... The request was made at a private
meeting with Congressional leaders ... Sources
said Bush initiated the conversation ... He asked
that only the House and Senate intelligence committees
look into the potential breakdowns among federal
agencies that could have allowed the terrorist
attacks to occur, rather than a broader inquiry
.. Tuesday's discussion followed a rare call from
Vice President Dick Cheney last Friday to make
the same request ...'
The excuse given, according to Daschle, was that
'resources and personnel would be taken' away
from the war on terrorism in the event of a wider
inquiry. So for reasons that we must never know,
those 'breakdowns' are to be the goat. That they
were more likely to be not break - but 'stand-downs'
is not for us to pry. Certainly the one-hour 20
minute failure to put fighter planes in the air
could not have been due to a breakdown throughout
the entire Air Force along the East Coast. Mandatory
standard operational procedure had been told to
cease and desist.
Meanwhile, the media were assigned their familiar
task of inciting public opinion against bin Laden,
still not the proven mastermind. These media blitzes
often resemble the magicians classic gesture of
distraction: as you watch the rippling bright
colours of his silk handkerchief in one hand,
he is planting the rabbit in your pocket with
the other. We were quickly assured that Osama's
enormous family with its enormous wealth had broken
with him, as had the royal family of his native
Saudi Arabia. The CIA swore, hand on heart, that
Osama had not worked for them in the war against
the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Finally,
the rumour that Bush family had in any way profited
by its long involvement with the bin Laden family
was - what else? - simply partisan bad taste.
But Bush Jr's involvement goes back at least to
1979 when his first failed attempt to become a
player in the big Texas oil league brought him
together with one James Bath of Houston, a family
friend, who have Bush Jr. $50,000 for a 5 per
cent stake in Bush's firm Arbusto Energy. At this
time, according to Wayne Madsen ('In These Times'
- Institute for Public Affairs No. 25), Bath was
'the sole US business representative for Salem
bin Laden, head of the family and a brother (one
of 17) to Osama bin Laden... In a statement issued
shortly after the 11 September attacks, the White
House vehemently denied the connection, insisting
that Bath invested his own money, not Salem bin
Laden's, in Arbusto. In conflicting statements,
Bush at first denied ever knowing Bath, then acknowledged
his stake in Arbusto and that he was aware Bath
represented Saudi interests ... after several
reincarnations, Arbusto emerged in 1986 as Harken
Energy Corporation.'
Behind the Junior Bush is the senior Bush, gainfully
employed by the Carlyle Group which has ownership
in at least 164 companies worldwide, inspiring
admiration in that staunch friend to the wealthy,
the Wall Street Journal, which noted, as early
as 27 September 2001, 'If the US boosts defence
spending in its quest to stop Osama bin Laden's
alleged terrorist activities, there may be one
unexpected beneficiary: bin Laden's family ...
is an investor in a fund established by Carlyle
Group, a well-connected Washington merchant bank
specialising in buyouts of defence and aerospace
companies ... Osama is one of more than 50 children
of Mohammed bin Laden, who built the family's
$5 billion business.'
But Bush pere et fils, in pursuit of wealth and
office, are beyond shame or, one cannot help but
think, good sense. There is a suggestion that
they are blocking investigation of the bin Laden
connection with terrorism. Agent France Press
reported on 4 November 2001: 'FBI agents probing
relatives of Saudi-born terror suspect Osama ...
were told to back off soon after George W. Bush
became president ...' According to BBC TV's Newsnight
(6 Nov 2001), '... just days after the hijackers
took off from Boston aiming for the Twin Towers,
a special charter flight out of the same airport
whisked 11 members of Osama's family off to Saudi
Arabia. That did not concern the White House,
whose official line is that the bin Ladens are
above suspicion.' 'Above the Law' (Green Press,
14 February 2002) sums up: 'We had what looked
like the biggest failure of the intelligence community
since Pearl Harbor but what we are learning now
is it wasn't a failure, it was a directive.' True?
False? Bush Jr will be under oath during the impeachment
interrogation. Will we hear 'What is a directive?
What is is?'
Although the US had, for some years, fingered
Osama as a mastermind terrorist, no serious attempt
had been made pre-9/11 to 'bring him to justice
dead or alive, innocent or guilty', as Texan law
of the jungle requires. Clinton's plan to act
was given to Condeleezza Rice by Sandy Berger,
you will recall, but she says she does not.
As far back as March 1996 when Osama was in Sudan,
Major General Elfatih Erwa, Sudanese Minister
for Defence, offered to extradite him. According
to the Washington Post (3 October 2001), 'Erwa
said he would happily keep close watch on bin
Laden for the United States. But if that would
not suffice, the government was prepared to place
him in custody and hand him over ... [US officials]
said, "just ask him to leave the country.
Just don't let him go to Somalia", where
he had once been given credit for the successful
al-Qaeda attack on American forces that in '93
that killed 18 Rangers.' Erwa said in an interview,
'We said he will go to Afghanistan, and they [US
officials] said, "Let him."'
In 1996 Sudan expelled Osama and 3,000 of his
associates. Two years later the Clinton administration,
in the great American tradition of never having
to say thank you for Sudan's offer to hand over
Osama, proceeded to missile-attack Sudan's al-Shifa
pharmaceutical factory on the grounds that Sudan
was harboring bin Laden terrorists who were making
chemical and biological weapons when the factory
was simply making vaccines for the UN.
Four years later, John O'Neill, a much admired
FBI agent, complained in the Irish Times a month
before the attacks, 'The US State Department -
and behind it the oil lobby who make up President
Bush's entourage - blocked attempts to prove bin
Laden's guilt. The US ambassador to Yemen forbade
O'Neill (and his FBI team) ... from entering Yemen
in August 2001. O'Neill resigned in frustration
and took on a new job as head of security at the
World Trade Centre. He died in the 11 September
attack.' Obviously, Osama has enjoyed bipartisan
American support since his enlistment in the CIA's
war to drive the Soviets out of Afghanistan. But
by 9/11 there was no Soviet occupation of Afghanistan,
indeed there was no Soviet Union.
A
world made safe for peace and pipelines
I
watched Bush and Cheney on CNN when the Axis of
Evil speech was given and the 'long war' proclaimed.
Iraq, Iran and North Korea were fingered as enemies
to be clobbered because they might or might not
be harbouring terrorists who might or might not
destroy us in the night. So we must strike first
whenever it pleases us. Thus, we declared 'war
on terrorism' - an abstract noun which cannot
be a war at all as you need a country for that.
Of course, there was innocent Afghanistan, which
was levelled from a great height, but then what's
collateral damage - like an entire country - when
you're targeting the personification of all evil
according to Time and the NY Times and the networks?
As it proved, the conquest of Afghanistan had
nothing to do with Osama. He was simply a pretext
for replacing the Taliban with a relatively stable
government that would allow Union Oil of California
to lay its pipeline for the profit of, among others,
the Cheney-Bush junta.
Background? All right. The headquarters of Unocal
are, as might be expected, in Texas. In December
1997, Taliban representatives were invited to
Sugarland, Texas. At that time, Unocal had already
begun training Afghan men in pipeline construction,
with US government approval. BBC News, (4 December
1997): 'A spokesman for the company Unocal said
the Taliban were expected to spend several days
at the company's [Texas] headquarters ... a BBC
regional correspondent says the proposal to build
a pipeline across Afghanistan is part of an international
scramble to profit from developing the rich energy
resources of the Caspian Sea.' The Inter Press
Service (IPS) reported: 'some Western businesses
are warming up to the Taliban despite the movement's
institutionalisation of terror, massacres, abductions
and impoverishment.' CNN (6 October 1996): 'The
United States wants good ties [with the Taliban]
but can't openly seek them while women are being
oppressed.'
The Taliban, rather better organised than rumoured,
hired for PR one Leila Helms, a niece of Richard
Helms, former director of the CIA. In October
1996, the Frankfurter Rundschau reported that
Unocal 'has been given the go-ahead from the new
holders of power in Kabul to build a pipeline
from Turkmenistan via Afghanistan to Pakistan
..' This was a real coup for Unocal as well as
other candidates for pipelines, including Condoleezza's
old employer Chevron. Although the Taliban was
already notorious for its imaginative crimes against
the human race, the Wall Street Journal, scenting
big bucks, fearlessly announced: 'Like them or
not, the Taliban are the players most capable
of achieving peace in Afghanistan at this moment
in history.' The NY Times (26 May 1997) leapt
aboard the pipeline juggernaut. 'The Clinton administration
has taken the view that a Taliban victory would
act as counterweight to Iran ... and would offer
the possibility of new trade routes that could
weaken Russian and Iranian influence in the region.'
But by 1999, it was clear that the Taliban could
not provide the security we would need to protect
our fragile pipelines. The arrival of Osama as
warrior for Allah on the scene refocused, as it
were, the bidding. New alliances were now being
made. The Bush administration soon buys the idea
of an invasion of Afghanistan, Frederick Starr,
head of the Central Asia Institute at Johns Hopkins
University, wrote in the Washington Post (19 December
2000): 'The US has quietly begun to align itself
with those in the Russian government calling for
military action against Afghanistan and has toyed
with the idea of a new raid to wipe out bin Laden.'
Although with much fanfare we went forth to wreak
our vengeance on the crazed sadistic religious
zealot who slaughtered 3,000 American citizens,
once that 'war' was under way, Osama was dropped
as irrelevant and so we are back to the Unocal
pipeline, now a go-project. In the light of what
we know today, it is unlikely that the junta was
ever going to capture Osama alive: he has tales
to tell. One of Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's
best numbers now is: 'Where is he? Somewhere?
Here? There? Somewhere? Who knows?' And we get
his best twinkle. He must also be delighted -
and amazed - that the media have bought the absurd
story that Osama, if alive, would still be in
Afghanistan, underground, waiting to be flushed
out instead of in a comfortable mansion in Osama-loving
Jakarta, 2,000 miles to the East and easily accessible
by Flying Carpet One.
Many commentators of a certain age have noted
how Hitlerian our junta sounds as it threatens
first one country for harbouring terrorists and
then another. It is true that Hitler liked to
pretend to be the injured - or threatened - party
before he struck. But he had many great predecessors
not least Imperial Rome. Stephen Gowan's War in
Afghanistan: A $28 Billion Racket quotes Joseph
Schumpeter who, 'in 1919, described ancient Rome
in a way that sounds eerily like the United States
in 2001: "There was no corner of the known
world where some interest was not alleged to be
in danger or under actual attack. If the interests
were not Roman, they were those of Rome's allies;
and if Rome had no allies, the allies would be
invented ... The fight was always invested with
an aura of legality. Rome was always being attacked
by evil-minded neighbours."' We have only
outdone the Romans in turning metaphors such as
the war on terrorism, or poverty, or Aids into
actual wars on targets we appear, often, to pick
at random in order to maintain turbulence in foreign
lands.
As of 1 August 2002, trial balloons were going
up all over Washington DC to get world opinion
used to the idea that 'Bush of Afghanistan' had
gained a title as mighty as his father's 'Bush
of the Persian Gulf' and Junior was now eager
to add Iraq-Babylon to his diadem. These various
balloons fell upon Europe and the Arab world like
so many lead weights. But something new has been
added since the classic Roman Hitlerian mantra,
'they are threatening us, we must attack first'.
Now everything is more of less out in the open.
The International Herald Tribune wrote in August
2002: 'The leaks began in earnest on 5 July, when
the New York Times described a tentative Pentagon
plan that it said called for an invasion by a
US force of up to 250,000 that would attack Iraq
from the north, south and west. On 10 July, the
Times said that Jordan might be used as a base
for the invasion. The Washington Post reported,
28 July, that "many senior US military officers
contend that Saddam Hussein poses no immediate
threat ..."' And the status quo should be
maintained. Incidentally, this is the sort of
debate that the founding fathers intended the
Congress, not military bureaucrats, to conduct
in the name of we the people. But that sort of
debate has, for a long time, been denied us.
One refreshing note is now being struck in a fashion
unthinkable in imperial Rome: the cheerful admission
that we habitually resort to provocation. The
Tribune continues: 'Donald Rumsfeld has threatened
to jail any one found to have been behind the
leaks. But a retired army general, Fred Woerner,
tends to see a method behind the leaks. "We
may already be executing a plan," he said
recently. "Are we involved in a preliminary
psychological dimension of causing Iraq to do
something to justify a US attack or make concessions?
Somebody knows.' That is plain.
Elsewhere in this interesting edition of the Herald
Tribune wise William Pfaff writes: 'A second Washington
debate is whether to make an unprovoked attack
on Iran to destroy a nuclear power reactor being
built with Russian assistance, under inspection
by the International Atomic Energy Agency, within
the terms of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty
of which Iran is a signatory ... No other government
would support such an action, other than Israel's
(which) would do so not because it expected to
be attacked by Iran but because it, not unjustifiably,
opposes any nuclear capacity in the hands of any
Islamic government.'
Suspect
states and the tom-toms of revenge
'Of
all the enemies to public liberty, war is, perhaps,
the most to be dreaded because it compromises
and develops the germ of every other. As the parent
of armies, war encourages debts and taxes, the
known instruments for bringing the many under
the domination of the few. In war, too, the discretionary
power of the executive is extended ... and all
the means of seducing the minds, are added to
those of subduing the force, of the people ...'
Thus, James Madison warned us at the dawn of our
republic.
Post 9/11, thanks to the 'domination of the few',
Congress and the media are silent while the executive,
through propaganda and skewed polls, seduces the
public mind as hitherto unthinkable centers of
power like Homeland Defence (a new Cabinet post
to be placed on top of the Defence Department)
are being constructed and 4 per cent of the country
has recently been invited to join Tips, a civilian
spy system to report on anyone who looks suspicious
or ... who objects to what the executive is doing
at home or abroad?
Although every nation knows how - if it has the
means and the will - to protect itself from thugs
of the sort that brought us 9/11, war is not an
option. Wars are for nations not root-less gangs.
You put a price on their heads and hunt them down.
In recent years, Italy has been doing that with
the Sicilian Mafia; and no one has yet suggested
bombing Palermo.
But the Cheney-Bush junta wants a war in order
to dominate Afghanistan, build a pipeline, gain
control of the oil of Eurasia's Stans for their
business associates as well as to do as much damage
to Iraq and Iran on the grounds that one day those
evil countries may carpet our fields of amber
grain with anthrax or something.
The media, never much good a analysis, are more
and more breathless and incoherent. On CNN, even
the stolid Jim Clancy started to hyperventilate
when an Indian academic tried to explain how Iraq
was once our ally and 'friend' in its war against
our Satanic enemy Iran. 'None of that conspiracy
stuff,' snuffed Clancy. Apparently, 'conspiracy
stuff' is now shorthand for unspeakable truth.
As of August, at least among economists, a consensus
was growing that, considering our vast national
debt (we borrow $2 billion a day to keep the government
going) and a tax base seriously reduced by the
junta in order to benefit the 1 per cent who own
most of the national wealth, there is no way that
we could ever find the billions needed to destroy
Iraq in 'a long war' or even a short one, with
most of Europe lined up against us. Germany and
Japan paid for the Gulf War, reluctantly - with
Japan, at the last moment, irritably quarrelling
over the exchange rate at the time of the contract.
Now Germany's Schroder has said no. Japan is mute.
But the tom-toms keep beating revenge; and the
fact that most of the world is opposed to our
war seems only to bring hectic roses to the cheeks
of the Bush administration (Bush Snr of the Carlyle
Group, Bush Jnr formerly of Harken, Cheney, formerly
of Halliburton, Rice, formerly of Chevron, Rumsfeld,
formerly of Occidental). If ever an administration
should recuse itself in matters dealing with energy,
it is the current junta. But this is unlike any
administration in our history. Their hearts are
plainly elsewhere, making money, far from our
mock Roman temples, while we, alas, are left only
with their heads, dreaming of war, preferably
against weak peripheral states.
Mohammed Heikal is a brilliant Egyptian journalist-observer,
and sometime Foreign Minister. On 10 October 2001,
he said to the Guardian: 'Bin Laden does not have
the capabilities for an operation of this magnitude.
When I hear Bush talking about al-Qaeda as if
it were Nazi Germany or the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union, I laugh because I know what
is there. Bin Laden has been under surveillance
for years: every telephone call was monitored
and al-Qaeda has been penetrated by US intelligence,
Pakistani intelligence, Saudi intelligence, Egyptian
intelligence. They could not have kept secret
an operation that required such a degree of organisation
and sophistication.
The former president of Germany's domestic intelligence
service, Eckehardt Werthebach (American Free Press,
4 December 2001) spells it out. The 9/11 attacks
required 'years of planning' while their scale
indicates that they were a product of 'state-organised
actions'. There it is. Perhaps, after all, Bush
Jnr was right to call it a war. But which state
attacked us?
Will the suspects please line up. Saudi Arabia?
'No, no. Why we are paying you $50 million a year
for training the royal bodyguard on our own holy
if arid soil. True the kingdom contains many wealthy
well-educated enemies but ...' Bush Snr and Jnr
exchange a knowing look. Egypt? No way. Dead broke
despite US baksheesh. Syria? No funds. Iran? Too
proud to bother with a parvenu state like the
US. Israel? Sharon is capable of anything. But
he lacks the guts and the grace of the true Kamikaze.
Anyway, Sharon was not in charge when this operation
began with the planting of 'sleepers' around the
US flight schools 5 or 6 years ago. The United
States? Elements of corporate America would undeniably
prosper from a 'massive external attack' that
would make it possible for us to go to war whenever
the President sees fit while suspending civil
liberties. (The 342 pages of the USA Patriot Act
were plainly prepared before 9/11.) Bush Snr and
Jnr are giggling now. Why? Because Clinton was
president back then. As the former president leaves
the line of suspects, he says, more in anger than
in sorrow: 'When we left the White House we had
a plan for an all-out war on al-Qaeda. We turned
it over to this administration and they did nothing.
Why?' Biting his lip, he goes. The Bushes no longer
giggle. Pakistan breaks down: 'I did it! I confess!
I couldn't help myself. Save me. I am an evil-doer!'
Apparently, Pakistan did do it - or some of it.
We must now go back to 1997 when 'the largest
covert operation in the history of the CIA' was
launched in response to the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan. Central Asia specialist Ahmed Rashid
wrote (Foreign Affairs, November-December 1999):
'With the active encouragement of the CIA and
Pakistan's ISI (Inter Services Intelligence) who
wanted to turn the Afghan jihad into a global
war, waged by all Muslim states against the Soviet
Union, some 35,000 Muslim radicals, from 40 Islamic
countries joined Afghanistan's fight between 1982
and '92 ... more than 100,000 foreign Muslim radicals
were directly influenced by the Afghanistan jihad.'
The CIA covertly trained and sponsored these warriors.
In March 1985, President Reagan issued National
Security Decision Directive 166, increasing military
aid while CIA specialists met with the ISI counterparts
near Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Jane's Defence Weekly
(14 September 2001) gives the best overview: 'The
trainers were mainly from Pakistan's ISI agency
who learnt their craft from American Green Beret
commandos and Navy Seals in various US training
establishments.' This explains the reluctance
of the administration to explain why so many unqualified
persons, over so long a time, got visas to visit
our hospitable shores. While in Pakistan, 'mass
training of Afghan [zealots] was subsequently
conducted by the Pakistan army under the supervision
of the elite Special Services ... In 1988, with
US knowledge, bin Laden created al-Qaeda (The
Base); a conglomerate of quasi-independent Islamic
terrorist cells spread across 26 or so countries.
Washington turned a blind eye to al-Qaeda.'
When
Mohamed Atta's plane struck the World Trade Centre's
North Tower, George W. Bush and the child at the
Florida elementary school were discussing her
goat. By coincidence, our word 'tragedy' comes
from the Greek: for 'goat' tragos plus oide for
'song'. 'Goat-song'. It is highly suitable that
this lament, sung in ancient satyr plays, should
have been heard again at the exact moment when
we were struck by fire from heaven, and a tragedy
whose end is nowhere in sight began for us.
©
Gore Vidal
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