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Bell Tolls for Bush's "Freedom Agenda"
WASHINGTON- If George W. Bush's "freedom agenda" is to be his presidential legacy, then his six-year "global war on terror" has been his own worst enemy.
As lawyers in Pakistan are being beaten and arrested by authorities for protesting against the imposition of de facto martial law, Bush has opted to set aside his campaign for democratic reforms in favour of combating terrorism -- an effort with questionable results.
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf effectively placed himself at the head of a military dictatorship on Saturday when he suspended the constitution, disbanded the Supreme Court and declared a state of emergency throughout the country.
Musharraf made the announcement ahead of what was expected to be an unfavourable decision from the high court invalidating his latest election victory because he campaigned in his dual role as president and as head of Pakistan's armed forces.
Protests and anger have continued throughout the week in the South Asian country of 164 million, with the legal establishment especially reeling from the repression.
The U.S. had strong words for Musharraf, calling on him to restore the constitution, but two members of the Bush cabinet signaled that Washington was unlikely to withhold any of the substantial military aid given to Pakistan -- a figure reported at 10 billion dollars.
"We have to be very cognizant of the fact that some of the assistance that has been going to Pakistan is directly related to the counterterrorism mission," said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during her trip to the Middle East this weekend. "I would be very surprised if anyone wants the president to ignore or set aside our concerns about terrorism and protecting the American people."
"We are reviewing all of our assistance programmes," echoed Secretary of Defence Robert Gates in China on Monday, "although we are mindful not to do anything that would undermine ongoing counterterrorism efforts."
The strong reservations of the administration to take decisive steps to punish Musharraf and help end the crisis is Pakistan stand in stark contrast to its declared foreign policy principles -- the so-called freedom agenda.
Initially used as a secondary justification for the invasion of Iraq -- after the since-debunked imminent threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction -- the worldwide promotion of democracy and freedoms pushed by the administration has become ever present in Bush's rhetoric as the best way to quell violent radicalism.
"We will encourage reform in other governments by making clear that success in our relations will require the decent treatment of their own people," Bush said in his 2004 inauguration address. Speaking directly to the downtrodden, he said, "All who live in tyranny and hopelessness can know: The United States will not ignore your oppression, or excuse your oppressors."
But measured by its inaction in Pakistan, critics say that ignoring the oppression and excusing the oppressor is exactly what the administration is doing -- and doing so in defence of the selfsame fight against radical terrorism that the "freedom agenda" is supposed to address.
"We have backed away from the push for democratic reform because people argue that the push for democratic reform encourages radical Islamists," said Georgetown government professor Daniel Brumberg. "The elections in Palestine and the events in Iraq have undermined the freedom agenda."
The continued support of regimes with despotic tendencies despite contradictions with a platform of broad democratic reform is nothing new for the Bush administration.
In announcing a 20-billion-dollar arms agreement package to Saudi Arabia and five other Gulf states in July, Rice said, "We are working with these states to fight back extremism and to give a chance to the forces of moderation and reform."
However, in a meeting on reform in the region last week, Stephen McInerney of the Project on Middle East Democracy called the area "the highest concentration of authoritarian monarchies in the world."
While the details of the deal have not been publicly released, McInerney expressed doubt that any benchmarks for reform would be included. "Most of the opposition to the deal is about Gulf states' support for terrorism, and not about democratic reform," he told IPS.
"The rulers of the Gulf states are not benign rulers. They are absolute dictators," said Ali Alyami of the Centre for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia. "Without international pressure, these rulers have no reason to reform."
President Bush has called the U.S. relationship with Saudi Arabia a "personal friendship", citing the close ally's support for the war on terror.
But the Saudi failure to prosecute any of the terrorism financiers named by the State Department and a lack of evidence that conventional military might can subdue terrorism is indicative of the most troubling problem with the shift in policy.
The strategy of simultaneously pushing the "freedom agenda" and the "war on terror" fails because the latter also has massive shortcomings in dealing with the threat of radical Islam.
"The war on terror has not helped because when you have massive military operations which are totally indiscriminate you tend to victimise entire populations," said Frederic Grare, a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. This can force people into choosing the protection that local Islamists can provide.
Pakistan had presented a unique opportunity in this respect because the country has a viable democratic-minded centre that could have brought Muslim parties into mainstream politics.
"Don't confuse the institutional religious parties -- who do have an ideology that we don't really share -- and the militants," said Grare. "Links may exist, but you can still establish a clear distinction. Eventually, one may be the best defence against the other."
That democratic centre in Pakistan, however, was ignored by the Bush administration in favor of Musharraf because military might was needed to fight armed extremists.
"The basic objective is the war on terror, so they need strong relations with the army and everything else is contingent," said Grare. "Support for democracy was pretty far down the list. There is no abandonment, it's just never been there."
"One consequence of this crisis is that Bush's 'freedom agenda' is finally bankrupt," said Fred Kaplan in his Slate.com column. "He will never again be able to invoke it, even as a rhetorical ploy, without evoking winces or laughter."
© 2007 Inter Press Service
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43 Comments so far
Show AllWho would have thought arresting and beating lawyers could be a bad thing?
Bush has no strategic plan for a presidential legacy. He's making it up as he goes along.
Bush is hoping to be invited into the "Old Dictators Club." There's just one more little thing to do....
I sincerely hope the Pakistani people liberate their country from a puppet dictator propped up by American bayonets. May the Pakistanis throw off the shackles of American governments and corporations!
Of course when Bush says "freedom" he means the freedom of capital, not political freedoms. That has been obvious from the git-go. Bush's handlers are Friedmanites and they argue that political freedoms follow from the freedom of capital, cavalierly ignoring that in China that has not happened and in South America it was the reverse, i.e. the political freedoms were restricted to increase the freedom of capital.
Progressives and others can only stop neoliberalism by spreading the message that freedom of capital and political freedoms are at best unrelated, and more likely are incompatible with each other.
The house of cards is poised to fall.
Pakistan, Iraq, the dollar, the housing crisis, oil aiming at $100 a barrel, inflation, torture, debt.
Death
Debt
Deceit
THAT - is the bush legacy
WE didn't start this fire!
http://home.uchicago.edu/~yli5/Flash/Fire.html
Never thought I'd see the day when I'd be applauding lawyers, but mere applause hardly seems enough for those heroic Pakistani members of the bar. A current article by Liaquat Ali Khan calls on lawyers to unite worldwide:
The time is here for the lawyers of the world to show solidarity with the lawyers in Pakistan who are waging a struggle to challenge the lawlessness of an ugly usurper, a power addict, a man in military uniform determined to undermine a Muslim nation that yearns for democracy.
The lawyers are protesting in the streets of Pakistan because the usurper has suspended the Constitution "in exercise of all powers." The usurper has arrogated to himself the license to "amend the constitution, from time to time, as he deems expedient." When one man can suspend and alter the fundamental constitution of a nation, the abuse of power is unlimited.
The lawyers of Pakistan are putting their lives on the line because the usurper has suspended the basic rights of the people of Pakistan. The constitutional right that no person shall be deprived of life or liberty save in accordance with law has been suspended. This suspension means that the government can imprison or kill anyone in Pakistan with no protection of law.
One cannot help contrasting the reactions, judicial and otherwise, to infringements of basic rights in Pakistan with those in the US.
"Freedom Agenda" appears to mean freedom from having to abide by a constitution, something that Dubya (or at least the puppeteers pulling his strings) wrote the book on.
If Dubya disagrees with my take, it will be just one more example of neocon hypocrisy.
Although Republicans love to quote the Bible, they always ignore scripture that addresses hypocrisy or moneylenders (find me a passage that portrays moneylenders in a positive light).
Bush called Musharraf to see whether he needs any help with any of his propaganda. Bush said he could send John Yoo or David Addington to help explain why it is perfectly constitutional for a president to ignore the constitution.
It's frightening that any Pakistanis are even supporting that.
In this country if bush tried to 'suspend the Constitution' every American supporting him would be a traitor.
Right now every Pakistani supporting Musharraf right now is a traitor to Pakistan.
How can anyone support a government official that does what Musharraf is doing? It's rediculous.
I can't believe there's not a civil war in Pakistan right now.
America is next. Soon bush will do the exact same thing. It'll be interesting to see who the real traitors here are when that happens.
The US has a distinct history of supporting NOT DEMOCRACIES BUT DICTATORSHIPS around the world since World War II. So the continued support of Bush administration to Musharaf in spite of his anti-democratic credentials and actions is not surprising. This is affirmed by the US Deputy Secretary of State, John Negroponte, a war criminal and a mofia don, who told Congress on Wednesday that President Pervez Musharraf is an "indispensable" ally in the US-led war on terrorism. (John Negroponte's credentials are known to the world- his association with Iran-Contra and Al Qaeda).
The administration's public response to the crisis in Pakistan has been mild and measured, out of concern of going too far in rebuking a close anti-terrorism ally. It stands in sharp contrast to how the administration responded when Myanmar's military regime cracked down on pro-democracy protesters in September, for instance.
So whenever Americans or American government lectures about FREEDOM, DEMOCRACY, and TERRORISM, they are in fact talking about BONDAGE TO THE US HEGEMONY, DICTATORSHIP, and DEMOCRACIES THAT ARE CHALLENGING THE US HEGEMONY respectivly. In American language the former represent the latter.
Then the question is: what is the US? Is it a democracy? or a dictatorship?
as usual everything in bushworld is upside down and inside out....i really doubt that musharef is really behind suspending the constitution...bhutto has always been a bloodlusting criminal and a liar..she and bush are alumni of the same training school for illuminatti in dubai.by the way illuminatti has nothing to do with reptiles and lizards...it is the descendants of the ruling families of ancient egypt..who have traced their lineage down thru their generations and have been jockeying to be 9 rulers in control of 9 power countries at the same time....bush and bhutto are two of the 9...
Give it a couple of more days and it will stop being a story ... like Myanmar. Then we can all go back to shopping.
Musharraf isn't fighting terrorism, that is what is so pathetic in this stance the Bush Corp. is taking. There was an article in the NY Times, I believe it was, the other day, saying the "Frontier Corps" the Pakistani force that goes after Al Qeada in the NW region, in their "Safe Haven" (why do terrorists have a 'safe haven' when Bush has repeatedly said "we will hunt down the terrorists wherever they are on Earth"?), is the least funded, worst supplied, most under trained part of Pakistan's military. Over 200 of them were taken hostage recently without firing a shot. Most of the funding we give the Pakistani gov. goes to heavy weapons systems they don't use for counter-terrorism.
[quote]TheLorax November 8th, 2007 2:26 pm -- In this country if bush tried to 'suspend the Constitution' every American supporting him would be a traitor.[/quote]
What exactly does he have to do? If you're waiting for an outright declaration to that effect, you're not likely to get one. He will merely continue to act as if his Commander-in-Chief authority overrides any contitutional provision that he deems inconvenient.
"The time is here for the lawyers of the world to show solidarity with the lawyers in Pakistan who are waging a struggle to challenge the lawlessness of an ugly usurper..."
My brother is a lawyer. The only part of the newspaper he reads is the sports section, so he can make his fantasy football picks. He just bought himself a new BMW. I'm trying to imagine him filled with outrage and solidarity with his brave colleagues in Pakistan, or sorrow for the constitutionally dispossessed people of the world. I'm trying.... trying very hard to imagine it. Sorry, I just can't.
The fact that we still have a Constitution is, for bush, an inconvenient truth, which he is trying to convert into a convenient lie.
With the help of a rubber stamp "Reichstag" Congress, he is succeeding.
We might just as well have gone along with bush's forbears and let the Nazis win. Eliminate the middle man, as it were.
So many accomplishments wiped out in just eight years.
Bush has plans to clean up on the speech circuit. There are many neocons stupid enough to pay to listen to him.
What is that sonavabitch flying back to Texas for? Burning up more aviation gas and polluting the atmosphere. If you can't stay in the White House and work, then resign, you bastard. He is not only the worst president we have had, he will be the worst president forever. How may months of vacation has he taken? How many flights for photo-ops? Impeach him you stupid Congress. That's what we elected you to do. The bell tolls for the USA because of Bush's actions and Congress' inactivity. God preserve us from this idiot who thinks he speaks for Jesus.
[quote]voxclamantis November 8th, 2007 3:42 pm -- My brother is a lawyer. [...] I'm trying to imagine him filled with outrage and solidarity with his brave colleagues in Pakistan, or sorrow for the constitutionally dispossessed people of the world. I'm trying…. trying very hard to imagine it. Sorry, I just can't.[/quote]
Coincidentally, my kid brother is also a member of the bar and I share your difficulty in imagining any such solidarity or concern. The law schools in Pakistan must teach some truly amazing kind of ethics and social responsibility.
Freedom agenda? Don't make me laugh. The US has and continues to support dictators and oligarchies and has no real interest in supporting or creating nations of real freedom. As all our eyes are distractedly turned on the hopeless Middle East, don't forget that Roberts Gates just bent over for Beijing and offered up Asia's vibrant democractic nation of Taiwan as a party favor if China would (pretty please) support US bombing of Iran.
Freedom rings. Yeah, right.
Hmmm, doesn't Pakastan have weapons of mass destruction?
Do they have Nuclear missiles? absolutely.
Are they a mostly Muslims?
Is the present government of Pakistan legitimate? Democratic?
Sounds like a threat to me, maybe we should bomb them before Iran?
TEN BILLION DOLLARS to Pakistan for so-called military aid? Dang! Enough phony aid already. More US funds toward the people/environment! The war machine continually eats up what could be countless trips to the dentist/doctor (as well as a decent education), for millions of unhealthy, dumbed-down Americans.
And this world-class ironic joke from an AP story that appeared today in over a thousand newspapers world-wide:
"You can't be the president and the head of the military at the same time," Bush said, describing a 20-minute telephone call with Musharraf.
I can't imagine the lunacy and black-humor of Bush telling Musharraf that a president can't be the president and claim to be the head of military (CIC) at the same time.
The only proper reply for Musharraf to have given Bush would have been, "Coming from you, numb-nuts --- Are you
**iting me??"
The U.S.A. and George W. Bush have NO MORAL AUTHORITY.
Bush and other US spokespersons are like a bunch of kleptomaniacs and whores preaching on the importance of honesty and celibacy. It couldn't be more ridiculous.
The U.S. oligarchy controls Pakistan's military - they've poured over 10 Billion dollars (of our tax money) into it.
They ARE into freedom. The freedom to do whatever they want. They are truely free men.
Let's see, suspending the constitution, putting your your opposition under house arrest, or jailing them -- and lawyers, intellectuals, etc.
Good to know that Pakistan is an ally in the war on terra. Maybe if they did a little genocide or ethnic cleansing they'd REALLY show themselves to be on the side of freedom.
Bush and the Neo-con fascists in the government are taking a ton of notes on Myanmar, and Pakistans' Marshall Law Police State.
As i've said before, they don't look at novels like 1984, Brave New World, Jennifer Government etc as warnings, or for introspection... Nope, they use these novels as handbook guides for tips on totalitarian rule.
The US hypocrisy on democracy manifests itself by no other than the US ally, Pakistan's Musharraf. The US will be more respected if it first democratizes America.
This article, and the media in general, seems to assume that the "war on terror" is a sincere agenda on the part of the Bush regime and its global partners. Clearly Musharraf (and the president of Georgia, of the ex-USSR, also in a state of emergency) are using terrorism as a pretext to crush legitimate democratic opposition groups. Look what Musharraf did: he put Bhutto and her followers under house arrest claiming that there were going to be terror attacks at the demonstration. The Georgia president also muddled democratic opposition with terrorism. The people there, it seems, had legitimate gripes with the president, and he called their protest a danger to the state.
"Terror" and "terrorism" is the ultimate handy tool for any authoritarian ruler because it is a label that can be slapped on anyone who opposes the regime to throw them in an off-shore prison or brig. It's like "heretic" and "heresy" in the Middle Ages, a handy term to be used against the Pope's enemies, those who chose alternative means of worshiping God (in the Middle Ages, the Crusades against the Muslims ultimately were used within Europe, against the peaceful Cathars, who were nutty enough to have their own ideas about Christianity).
"WE didn't start this fire!"
If with UofChi, you kinda-did (at least, your Prof. Strauss did...with his 'MattDillon/PerryMason'-theory of 'good governance', based on Plato's 'shadow-play'/cave-scenario and Rule-of-Philosopher's/Mythos).
Bush is setting aside democracy in Pakistan "in favour of combating terrorism"? Let's stop with this hackneyed phrase. Bush is not, nor has he ever, attempted to "combat" terrorism. Journalists should get their heads out of their butts and report what is actually happening--Bush & Co, along with right-wing Israeli fascists, are on an anti-Muslim crusade to grab land and resources throughout the Middle East. Israel has been doing it for more than 60 years. Now they have the US firmly behind them. This is racism, pure and simple.
The blind leading the blind again! He is a great one to lead a 'freedom agenda'! Maybe someone should clue him in on what freedom actually is!
We need an uprising in this country. Maybe it wont be far behind. When people turn off Faux News and realize how screwed they are. Maybe then. But then of course American Idol will soon be on. Oh,well revolution next year!
dougrambo, yes, when people turn off Faux News (or as I call it, 'Vichy' News) there should be an uprising.
Keep the faith --- it may not be as long to the "revolution next year" as you think.
The one thing that seems always to grab people's attention and really motivate their actions about the need for a revolution, is the same thing that motivated our founding fathers, namely their own economic security being screwed by an unrepresentative Empire.
And as far as popular economic security going to hell in a hand-basket, the pain is going to start being unbearable for all ------ "Big Time", as Cheney might say.
And as Robert Redford said to Raul Julia in my favorite film, "Havana", about the need to take 'action' against the Bastista fascist regime, "They will not leave by asking NICELY".
Is it just me, or isn't this the most incredibly appallingly contradictory statement ever:
"We have backed away from the push for democratic reform because people argue that the push for democratic reform encourages radical Islamists," said Georgetown government professor Daniel Brumberg. "The elections in Palestine and the events in Iraq have undermined the freedom agenda."
Elections undermine freedom, huh? That makes voters.... terrorists!!! Be careful if you go to the ballot box...
"We need an uprising in this country."
I don't disagree with your sentiment, but I sincerely hope you are wrong. Any uprising in this country will be hideously ugly. You can expect an explosion of fundamentalism, xenophobia, homophobia, racism and probably anti-semitism. The unfortunate fact is that any so-called second revolution in America is likely to look more like the French version than the first of our own.
I guess the $10 Billion is the money that the U.S. promised Turkey for their economic hardships in supporting the sanctions on Saddam after GWI.
Money that was never paid!!!!
But then again, Turkey had a disadvantage - IT REALLY IS A DEMOCRACY!
"The U.S. had strong words for Musharraf, calling on him to restore the constitution..."
Yeah, THAT demand holds water....
NOT!
Even to mention Bush's "freedom agenda" or "democracy agenda" by the MSM is Orwellian double-speak.
The very mention and publication of such terms is the height of 21st century guileful fascist propaganda, and should be denied to the global corporate Empire behind this friggin facade of 'Vichy America'.
To allow the corporatist Empire's 'Vichy' press, and 'Vichy' two-party politicians to even seed such numbing propaganda lies into Americans sight, hearing, and minds is itself the ultimate insult to any concept of democracy.
To allow these words of the Empire's phony president and Goebbelian press to enter one's eyes, ears, and mind without outrage is the equivalent of accepting such assaults on our humanity as hearing, reading, and mentally absorbing the equally dehumanizing lies of 'war is peace', and 'love is hate',
Wake up people. We have already lost our democracy to the global corporate fascist Empire guilefully hiding behind this facade of 'Vichy America' --- but we may be able to recapture it.
However, if we allow our minds to be stolen also, with the insanity of terms like 'freedom agenda' and 'democracy agenda' put forth by this global fascist Empire, then we will have no chance of recapturing anything --- including our humanity.
American Sheeple, just follow the nice goat with the bell. On the other side of the door, you will find paradise and eternal peace! Just follow the goat...follow the goat,,,follow the goat...
"freedom agenda" my ass. To use the word freedom in the same
sentence with George W. Bush is a cruel joke. He thinks
freedom is a small town over in Louisiana.
His "war on terror" is about as honest as a "war on greed" that's run by an insanely greedy billionaire.
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Watch/hear
KUCINICH: Takes House Floor, Moves for Cheney Impeachment
27 min -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJYbgouqlMw