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| 24/10/04 | The Anti-Empire Report, No. 14 by William Blum |
The CIA should wear a ski mask when they use this excuse Time Magazine reported that the Bush administration had a plan to use the CIA to funnel money to candidates it favored in the forthcoming Iraqi elections. The rationale given was that Iran was probably bankrolling its own preferred candidate.{1} Whether Iran has actually been engaged in such I do not know, but what is certain is that it is irrelevant to American policy. The United States has been trying to fix elections in every corner of the world for more than half a century without any other foreign power being in the picture at all. This argument in the case of Iraq is reminiscent of the Cold War period in Western Europe, when the CIA was covertly financing many political parties, media, labor unions, student groups, women's organizations, etc. When this secret support began to be disclosed in the 1960s, supporters of the CIA would typically defend the Agency's sundry activities in Europe on the grounds that the Russians were the first to be so engaged there and had to be countered. But it should be bornein mind that all the different types of enterprises and institutions supported by the CIA in Western Europe were supported by the Agency all over the Third World for decades on a routine basis without a Russian counterpart in sight. The Fear factor But hardly a thought is expressed about the question of “Why would terrorists want to disrupt the American elections?” George W. would answer that it's because terrorists hate and envy democracy. (Thank you George, now take your pill.) The Department of Homeland Security has raised the analogy with Spain, where last March terrorists bombed several trains, killing many people, just days before a national election. But that was to influence the vote, to turn the Spanish public away from the government which was a strong supporter of the US war in Iraq, and the bombings did indeed result in the opposition party, which was very much against the war, taking power. But in the United States there's no such opposition party with even a remote chance of winning the election. The Democratic candidate expresses 100 percent support of the war. So who would benefit from a terrorist attack on the elections, or the threat of same, the fear factor? Bush's lead in the polls, we've been told repeatedly, comes mainly from people who think he's better with national security issues. Flu vaccine shortage More of what many of you don't want to hear Democrats Anonymous A reader, Barbara West, writes: “For years I have had the idea of outlining a 12-step program called Democrats Anonymous, for those who know they should abandon that dead-end, but just can't bring themselves to, even when their political lives have become unmanageable. The concept is yours if you can make something of it.” I in turn make the same offer to any other reader. “Foreign fighters” in Iraq Brainwashed commies revisited Imagine that in the 1980s Russian leaders had used identical logic and language about how their war against the Afghanistan insurgents was going for them. The American media would have had a field day of snide remarks about those poor brainwashed, Orwellian commies. And now, to add to the historical/hysterical record here is the Washington-approved, unelected Iraqi prime minister and former CIA asset, Ayad Allawi, declaring last month that although the insurgency is “still raging”, it's a good sign — a sign that “it's not getting stronger, it's getting more desperate.”{7} Who's missing? Memo to George W and John Ashcroft It should be further noted that Article VI, Section II, of the United States Constitution states: “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” Hitler comparisons Given that, here's Hitler on his plans to attack Poland with the pretext of German soldiers in Polish uniforms attacking Germany: “Whether the world believes it doesn't mean a damn to me. The world believes only in success.”{8} Like on many other occasions, the man was very insightful. If the US invasion and occupation of Iraq had gone just the way the Bush administration predicted, with no resistance from the Iraqi people, the operation would have been applauded almost universally despite the multiple lies, the flagrant violations of international law, and the death and destruction from the initial bombing campaign. And as an additional memo to Bush and Ashcroft, here's another of Adolf's thoughts: “Secular schools can never be tolerated because such schools have no religious instruction, and a general moral instruction without a religious foundation is built on air; consequently, all character training and religion must be derived from faith … we need believing people.”{9} A look back at the Cold War This is classic coldwarspeak, a good example of the rationalizations put forth by US officials for numerous American interventions throughout the world during the Cold War. The following should be noted: US covert actions into virtually all the important aspects of Bolivian life is said to “foster democratic solutions”. But even if one were to accept the odd premise that the United States was a legitimate participant in Bolivia's democratic process, the masses of Bolivians could not begin to match the CIA input into that process in terms of money, media control, bribery of government officials high and low, or alliances with the police and armed forces. “To encourage a stable government favorably inclined toward the United States” is virtually a redundancy inasmuch as the United States has long tended to equate “stability” with being “pro-American”; conversely, the tendency has been to view governments not in love with US foreign policy as “unstable”, and in need of regime change. “Communists, leftists, and pro-Castroites”, an unknowing person might conclude, are not Bolivians with a right to work in the country's government. Nor, apparently, do communists and “ultra-leftists” have a right to important positions in non-government organizations. (Ironically, this is a tacit admission that communists are not the furthest left on the political spectrum, an idea that most Americans, even today, would find surprising.) The new FRUS volume also notes that “When he took office in November 1963 President Johnson inherited a longstanding U.S. Government policy of providing financial support for Bolivian political leaders.” Thus, the United States helped to determine who ran the society, and how it was to be run, and they called that “democracy”. And remember, the above document represents what CIA personnel were telling each other and, presumably, other government officials. Is it any wonder that what such people actually tell the American people can be such crap? The words of Enoch Powell, the former conservative gadfly in Parliament, apply to Americans as well as to his English colleagues: “There is a factor in human affairs more dangerous and destructive than the nuclear weapon. It is the factor of humbug. Particularly is that factor to be dreaded where the English are dealing with other nations, because the English are the world's past masters in the art of humbug, having developed it over centuries as a device for regulating their own internal affairs with the minimum of friction and the maximum of self-congratulation. The trouble begins when others, and even they themselves, fall into the trap of taking the humbug seriously.” The conspiracy to trivialize conspiracy theories I quote this as an example of how the mainstream media deals with “conspiracy theories”. When the incident in question first occurs, the “official” government explanation crowds the headlines and ignores the alternative explanations; the latter are confined to the alternative media, except when the mainstream media, for whatever reason, is obliged to make note of an alternative explanation; then it is dismissed without serious consideration, if not openly ridiculed. After a few years of this, in the minds of the vast majority of people the official explanation is all that exists. Then, when the mainstream media is obliged to make reference to an alternative explanation, it usually refers to it as having been “discredited”, or, as in this obituary, lacking evidence. In the case of Pan Am 103, what the reader is not informed of is that no evidence has materialized in support of the official theory, that a Libyan government agent planted the bomb. There is, in fact, much more evidence in support of the DEA role (but primarily that of Iran) than of the Libyan role.{11} “Conspiracy” researcher and author Jonathan Vankin has observed: “Journalists like to think of themselves as a skeptical lot. This is a flawed self-image. The thickest pack of American journalists are all too credulous when dealing with government officials, technical experts, and other official sources. They save their vaunted 'skepticism' for ideas that feel unfamiliar to them. Conspiracy theories are treated with the most rigorous skepticism. Conspiracy theories should be approached skeptically. But there's no fairness. Skepticism should apply equally to official and unofficial information.”{12} NOTES William Blum is the author of: Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website. To add yourself to this mailing list simply send an email to bblum6@aol.com with “add” in the subject line. Any part of this report may be copied without permission. I'd appreciate it if the website were mentioned. |
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