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The President's Global War of Terror
On Tuesday, meeting with the press in the White House Rose Garden, the President responded to a question about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to Syria this way: "[P]hoto opportunities and/or meetings with President Assad lead the Assad government to believe they're part of the mainstream of the international community, when, in fact, they're a state sponsor of terror." There should, he added to the assembled reporters, be no meetings with state sponsors of terror.
That night, Brian Ross of ABC News reported that, since 2005, the U.S. has "encouraged and advised" Jundullah, a Pakistani tribal "militant group," led by a former Taliban fighter and "drug smuggler," which has been launching guerrilla raids into Baluchi areas of Iran. These incursions involve kidnappings and terror bombings, as well as the murder (recorded on video) of Iranian prisoners. According to Ross, "U.S. officials say the U.S. relationship with Jundullah is arranged so that the U.S. provides no funding to the group, which would require an official presidential order or 'finding' as well as congressional oversight." Given past history, it would be surprising if the group doing the encouraging and advising weren't the Central Intelligence Agency, which has a long, sordid record in the region. (New Yorker investigative journalist Seymour Hersh has been reporting since 2005 on a Bush administration campaign to destabilize the Iranian regime, heighten separatist sentiments in that country, and prepare for a possible full-scale air attack on Iranian nuclear and other facilities.)
The President also spoke of the Iranian capture of British sailors in disputed waters two weeks ago. He claimed that their "seizure… is indefensible by the Iranians." Oddly enough, perhaps as part of secret negotiations over the British sailors, who were dramatically freed by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Wednesday, an Iranian diplomat in Iraq was also mysteriously freed. Eight weeks ago, he had been kidnapped off the streets of Baghdad by uniformed men of unknown provenance. Reporting on his sudden release, Alissa J. Rubin of the New York Times offered this little explanation of the kidnapping: "Although [Iraqi foreign minister, Hoshyar] Zebari was uncertain who kidnapped the man, others familiar with the case said they believe those responsible work for the Iraqi Intelligence Service, which is affiliated with the Central Intelligence Agency." The CIA, of course, has a sordid history in Baghdad as well, including running car-bombing operations in the Iraqi capital back in Saddam Hussein's day.
And don't forget the botched Bush administration attempt to capture two high Iranian security officials and the actual kidnapping of five Iranian diplomats-cum-Revolutionary-Guards in Irbil in Iraqi Kurdistan over two months ago--they disappeared into the black hole of an American prison system in Iraq that now holds perhaps 17,000 Iraqis (as well as those Iranians) and is still growing. As Juan Cole has pointed out, most such acts, and the rhetoric that goes with them, represent so many favors to "an unpopular and isolated Iranian government attempting to rally support and strengthen itself."
In addition, just this week, the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz and other ships in its battle group left San Diego for the Persian Gulf. Two carrier battle groups are already there, promising an almost unprecedented show of strength. As the ship left port, US military officials explained the mission of the carriers in the Gulf this way: They are intended to demonstrate US "resolve to build regional security and bring long-term stability to the region."
And stability in the region, it seems, means promoting instability in Iran by any means possible. So, the President's Global War on Terror also turns out to be the Global War of Terror. Noam Chomsky recently put the matter this way, when thinking of U.S. attitudes toward Iranian influence in Iraq.
"It is useful to ask how we would act if Iran had invaded and occupied Canada and Mexico and was arresting U.S. government representatives there on the grounds that they were resisting the Iranian occupation (called "liberation," of course). Imagine as well that Iran was deploying massive naval forces in the Caribbean and issuing credible threats to launch a wave of attacks against a vast range of sites -- nuclear and otherwise -- in the United States, if the U.S. government did not immediately terminate all its nuclear energy programs (and, naturally, dismantle all its nuclear weapons). Suppose that all of this happened after Iran had overthrown the government of the U.S. and installed a vicious tyrant (as the US did to Iran in 1953), then later supported a Russian invasion of the U.S. that killed millions of people (just as the U.S. supported Saddam Hussein's invasion of Iran in 1980, killing hundreds of thousands of Iranians, a figure comparable to millions of Americans). Would we watch quietly?"
The rule is simple enough on this one-way planet of ours: If they do it, it's "terror," if we do it, it's foreign policy, its America's "strategic interest."
Tom Engelhardt is a fellow at The Nation Institute and editor of TomDispatch.com
© 2007 The Nation
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11 Comments so far
Show AllThe US is the primary sponsor of terrorism worldwide. We have been training and supporting terrorists in Africa, Central and South America, Indonesia, Asia, and the Middle East for decades. The neo-con "War on Terror" is a ludicrous justification for an aggressive agenda of conquest, monopolization of resources, and domestic dictatorial powers.
The chicken hawks in Washington, DC, and in America might think deeply about what they have done in the killing and injuring of thousands of American troops and innocent Iraqi civilians.
The psychology of the chicken hawk is complex, but we would all do well to try to understand it:
"Chicken hawks are real and dangerous"
PopulistAmerica.com
November 26, 2006
http://www.populistamerica.com/chicken_hawks_are_real_and_dangerous
Isn't ironic how the definition of "terrorism" seems to depend on one's perspective. Thirty years ago Israeli aggressors were referred to as "commandos," while Palestinians were referred to as "terrorists." Things are little different today.
The U.S. is clearly engaged in a "war of terror," as I wrote some years ago. See my satirical newspaper at http://home.earthlink.net/~ian_magnussen/ImperialTimes/ and http://dave.eriqat.name/DE_End_of_Civilization.html.
Dave
There has NEVER been an occupying power that has won a conflict with a dedicated people that want their freedom. Which rather puts the question, "Who is the dimwit that thought this mess was a good idea!"
John Freeman
maniarwild...
Excellent documentry! Everyone should watch this piece of history. Let me also add, Reinhard Ghelen, Hitlers right hand man, brought into the US under 'Operation Paperclip' is actually the founding father of the CIA.
Please read the following link:
CIA Admits
Nazi Connection
http://bluecollarpolitics.com/lederman/CIA-923.html
Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
The U.S. should stay out of regime change and trying to influence governments of other countries. Consistently, since the end of WWII, the U.S. has always supported the loser. As I have suggested to some of my clients "you should find another line of work, because you are not a very sucessful criminal". A great video on Google regarding the secret government, by Moyer in 1987 very appropriate for today and this discussion.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8536707153900925247
The U.S. term 'Democracy' is the biggest con-job ever perpetrated. That term is only a media facade, to placate the masses into thinking they really have something. They carry out their nefarious activities behind the cloak of National Security, beyond public scrutiny and it a free and open society. What a joke! The correct term for this government is an Oligarchy of Corporate Sponsored Terrorism, whose savage and brute military machine is sent into action against anyone who stands in the way of their universal interests, chasing the illusion of materialism, without care, leaving a wake of blood and carnage.
Peace Best Wishes and hope
zietgeist: I agree that this is the reality today. If I had the time and the training I would develop the thesis that many of our "founding fathers" were keenly aware of the vast potential of the new continent and desirous to be the very empire that they rebelled against. The arc of history suggests that what we are today may have been inevitable.
Now we are witnessing, after 500 years of foreign interference, the rise of this same desire in South America. While I hope for justice and opportunity for the indigenous peoples there I also wonder if in 50? - 100? years that they may follow along the same arc of history.
There is a common misperception, mostly held by conservatives, that human history is first and last "cyclical" and that we are forever and anon doomed to repeat the same hopes and failures forever. Though human civilization does exhibit such cyclical behaviour, it would be wrong to conclude that this defines its essence.
Vince Lawrence….
Let me preface my previous post with: 1913 was the pivotal year. That was the year Democracy was hijacked and dethroned with Corporations being enthroned. In that year the bulk of all corporate laws were passed, including the sinister Federal Reserve Act, which centralized the power of money into fewer and lesser hands. Today, it is the noose of Usury, the bit in every individual's mouth, which binds them to this power as debt slaves.
Human nature is not at all cyclical; it is simply susceptible to the baser ego, which keeps the inner eye to higher self in a state of blindness.
The founders had the wisdom and understood this fallibility, by their placement of checks and balances. Mankind has proven itself incapable and untrustworthy in the pulling down of spiritual abstractions, concretizing them into religious and political dominions, without perverting those abstractions in the hands of human nature. It is like casting the pearls to the swine. The founders understood this! It is the result of a sleepy public, whose egos, satiated with baubles and trinkets, having dropped their guard, that despotism has free rein today.
Yes, Chaves too is human, but as long as ones wisdom and understanding remain strong, despotic human nature is kept at bey.
Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
zeitgeist: you are of course correct. That is why I said "many" instead of "the" founding fathers. Then, like today, competeing elements were at play.
All of my life I've read the words and deeds of the revolutionaries and the people of the great struggle of our Civil War and thought to myself that here were human beings superior to ourselves. No longer. I now realize that those were ordinary human beings like ourselves compelled to decide and proceed with the counsel of "the angels of our better nature." Saw Ben Kingsly interviewed by Tavis Smiley. Kingsly brought out the fact that Ghandi was a very angry man but learned to channel that anger toward a positive end.
Vince Lawrence….
***Kingsly brought out the fact that Gandhi was a very angry man but learned to channel that anger toward a positive end.***
This weighs in heavily, following the events of 9/11, on how easily an unwary public's rage can be steered onto the rocks by a deceptive Nautonnier who prays on the weaknesses of an errant ideologue at the helm.
Gandhi's inner light stood as a pillar against the machinations of his own ego, the seat of our senses and tethers to the material world. His own personal inner battle and understanding of this is what provoked his anger into the outer public displays. Of course he was shot down by those who do not wish to see their kingdoms in ego-land disturbed or upset.
Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU