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The Facts Thwart Rehab of Colin Powell
Watching retired Gen. Colin Powell refer to the parable of the Good Samaritan during Sunday's Memorial Day ceremonies on the Mall in Washington, it struck me that Powell was giving hypocrisy a bad name.
Those familiar with the Good Samaritan story and also with the under-reported behavior of Gen. Powell, comeback kid of the Fawning Corporate Media (FCM), know that the two do not mesh.
Powell's well-documented disregard for those who have borne the brunt of the battle places him in the company of the priest and the Levite - in the Good Samaritan parable - who, seeing the man attacked by robbers on the side of the road, walked right on by.
Sadly, Powell has a long record of placing the wounded and the vulnerable on his list of priorities far below his undying need to get promoted or to promote himself. Powell's rhetoric, of course, would have us believe otherwise.
At the Memorial Day event, Powell hailed our "wounded warriors" from Iraq and Afghanistan as the cameras cut to several severely damaged veterans. Lauding the "love and care" they receive from their families, Powell noted in passing that some 10,000 parents are now full-time care providers for veterans not able to take care of themselves.
It was a moving ceremony, but only if you were able to keep your eye on the grand old flag and stay in denial about thousands of wasted American lives, not to mention tens and tens of thousands wasted Iraqi lives - as well as many thousands more incapacitated for life - and not ask WHY.
"Noble Cause?"
The wounded warriors' former commander in chief, President George W. Bush, argued that the deaths were "worth it." They were casualties suffered in pursuit of a "noble cause."
Some claim that to suggest that those troops killed and wounded were killed and wounded in vain is to dishonor their memory, belittle their sacrifice, and inflict still more pain on their loved ones.
But Bush never could explain what the "noble cause" was, despite months and months of vigils by those camping outside the Bush house in Crawford asking that question. Our hearts certainly go out to the wounded, and to the families of the killed or wounded.
But I think that the surest way to dishonor them all is to avoid examining the real reasons for their loss, and to use lessons learned so that their own sons and daughters will not be sacrificed so glibly.
I lost many good Army colleagues and other friends in Vietnam. Back then, generals and politicians - the military and civilian leaders who promoted Powell and the careerists like him - helped to obscure the real reasons behind that carnage, too. And that was even before the corporate media became quite so fawning.
As the hostilities in Iraq and Afghanistan drag on and the casualties continue to mount, I feel an obligation to do what I can to help spread some truth around - however painful that may be. For truth is not only the best disinfectant, it is the best protection against such misadventures happening again...and again.
It is, I suppose, understandable that only the bravest widows and widowers - and parents like Cindy Sheehan whose son Casey Sheehan was killed in Sadr City on April 4, 2004 - have been able to summon enough courage out of their grief to challenge the vacuous explanations of Bush and people like Powell.
You can see it in microcosm in the Sheehan family. Casey's father, Pat Sheehan, cannot agree that Casey's death was in vain. Pat told me that Casey met an honorable death, since he was sent to rescue comrades pinned down by hostile forces in Sadr City.
No one can be sure what was going through Casey's mind. And only later did it become clear that, rather than "volunteering" for an ill-conceived rescue mission, Casey, a truck mechanic, was ordered onto that open truck by superiors unwilling to risk their own hides. (This is what one of Casey's comrades on the scene later told his mother.)
But let us assume that Casey was nonetheless eager to rescue his comrades. This still begs the question that I asked Pat Sheehan: Why were Casey and his comrades in Iraq in the first place? What was the "noble cause?" Pat's reaction, or lack thereof, almost made me regret having asked him. Remembering it almost makes me want to stop this essay here. Almost.
With ministers, priests and rabbis officiating at funerals and other memorial services for "the fallen" and spinning their own renditions of "Dulce et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori" - "it is sweet and fitting to die for one's country" - small wonder that even those who should know better choose this escape from reality. There is so much pain out there...and if denial helps, well...
It does not help when it comes to charlatans like Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Powell - the latter now trying to re-establish his poster-boy status with an eagerly cooperative FCM.
Aside from those whose TVs are stuck at Fox News and radios at Rush Limbaugh, fewer and fewer Americans now believe the lingering lies. Even funeral directors and preachers tread sparingly with the once-familiar rhetoric - used cynically in Washington to facilitate further careless carnage - that these dead "must not have died in vain."
Isaiah on the Mall
Besides the Good Samaritan parable, Powell quoted from Isaiah about bringing comfort to the people. Surely Isaiah did not mean this to be done with lies on top of lies. Isaiah was no shrinking violet. He got himself killed for speaking out bluntly against lies that in his time justified the oppression of those on the margins.
I imagine this is what Isaiah would say to us now:
"Hear this, Americans. It is time to be not only sad, but also honest. You must summon the courage to handle the truth, which is this: our young warriors and (literally) countless Iraqis died in vain, and there is no excuse for their needless sacrifice. Nothing will bring them back - least of all meretricious rhetoric that is an insult to their memory.
"Their sacrifice was in vain, hear? Our task now is two-fold: (1) Bury the dead with respect and care for the wounded and their families; and (2) ensure that the truth gets out, so that a war built on lies will not soon happen again."
Isaiah, I think, would add that this is also precisely why we owe it to the "fallen" and their families to hold to account those responsible for sending them into battle "on false pretenses," to quote then-Senate Intelligence Committee head, Jay Rockefeller last June.
After a five-year investigation and a bipartisan vote approving the Senate Intelligence Committee report, Rockefeller summed it up:
"In making the case for war, the Administration repeatedly presented intelligence as fact when in reality it was unsubstantiated, contradicted, or even non-existent." As a result, the American people were led to believe that the threat from Iraq was much greater than actually existed."
There is plenty of blame to go around - to be shared by an adolescent president who liked to dress up and call himself a "war president," and openly savored presiding over what he called "the first war of the 21st Century."
Not to mention the power-hungry, sadistic bent of the men he chose to be vice president and secretary of defense and the treachery of CIA seniors George Tenet and John McLaughlin.
The Enabler
But there would have been no war, no dead, no limb-less bodies, no loved ones for whom to recall Isaiah's words of comfort or mention the Good Samaritan, if Colin Powell had a conscience - if he had not chosen to "walk right on by."
Let's face it; neither the Texas Air National Guard's most famous pilot nor the five-times-draft-deferred former vice president had the credibility to lead the country into war - especially one based on a highly dubious threat.
They needed the credibility of someone who had worn the uniform with some distinction - someone who, though never in command of a major Army combat unit, had been good at briefing the media while Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the glorious Gulf War in 1991, which most Americans have been led to believe was virtually casualty-free.
Actually, since we are trying to spread some truth around, this is worth a brief digression.
The Casualty-Lite Gulf War
According to Powell's memoir, My American Journey, before the attack on Iraq Powell was warned by his British counterpart, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Sir David Craig, about the risks involved in bombing Iraq's so-called "weapons of mass destruction" installations. After Powell told him that this was indeed part of the plan, Craig expressed particular worry about release of agents from biological installations: "A bit risky that, eh?"
Powell writes that he told Craig the attendant risk of release was worth it and: "If it heads south, just blame me."
Powell writes he was "less concerned" about chemical exposures. He should have been more concerned, not less. As the hostilities ended, U.S. Army engineers blew up chemical agents at a large Iraqi storage site near Kamasiyah. About 100,000 U.S. troops were downwind.
Many of those troops are now among the 210,000 veterans suffering from nervous and other diseases - and FINALLY now receiving disability payments for what came to be known as Gulf War Syndrome.
Far from his pre-war posture of "just blame me," Powell joined Pentagon and CIA efforts to cover up this tragedy. When reports of the horrible fiasco at Kamasiyah hit the media, he erupted in macho outrage saying that, were he still on active duty, he would "rape and pillage" throughout the government to find those responsible. Of course, Kamasiyah happened during his watch. Typically, the FCM reported his macho remark, and then gave him a pass.
Despite numerous veterans' pleas for support, Powell, in effect, went AWOL on the issue of Gulf War illnesses, never acknowledging that he shared any of the responsibility.
He took no interest and, in effect, made a huge contribution to the unconscionable delay in recognizing Gulf War illnesses for what they are. One out of every four troops deployed to the Gulf in 1991 are now receiving the benefits to which they have long been entitled - no thanks to Gen. Powell.
You didn't know that? Thank the FCM and its persistent romance with Gen. Powell. Sorry for the digression; just had to get that off my chest.
Useful Uniform
Back to the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld quest for someone to sell the attack on Iraq, someone whom the media loved, someone with military credentials who would do what he was told.
Perhaps they had read Powell's memoir, in which he brags about his subservience to the "wisdom" of those up the line. They needed someone who was not too bright but could be eloquent - someone who was so used to taking orders that he would squander his own credibility for his boss, if the boss would just ask.
Not too bright? Apparently, during the three years between when Powell and I, as fledgling infantry officers, had been instructed at Fort Benning on counterinsurgency, the Army's understanding of how to fight it had improved. Either that, or Powell was not able to master the key learnings of the course.
Here is what Powell writes in his memoir about how he bought into his superiors' notion about how to win hearts and minds - what Powell calls "counterinsurgency at the cutting edge":
"However chilling this destruction of homes and crops reads in cold print today, as a young officer I had been conditioned to believe in the wisdom of my superiors, and to obey. I had no qualms about what we were doing. This was counterinsurgency at the cutting edge. Hack down the peasants' crops, thus denying food to the Viet Cong...It all made sense in those days."
"Duty, Honor, Country" is what I remember made sense in those days. That was the watchword for young Army officers in the early Sixties - not supreme faith in the wisdom of superiors and blind obedience. But most of the rest of us did not make it beyond colonel.
Easy Prey
Small wonder that the hapless Powell was easy prey for Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld. They needed him to sell the war to the American people and, they hoped, to the rest of the world.
It is hard to fathom what "wisdom" Powell saw in his superiors' decisions; what is clear is that he lacked the courage to challenge them, whether out of blind faith, a highly exaggerated - and dubiously moral - notion of obedience, a lack of conscience, or simple cowardice.
Tell lies to support the White House decision for war on Iraq? No problem. As was his wont, Powell saluted sharply, even though four days prior to his Feb. 5, 2003 U.N. speech he and his chief of staff, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, had decided that some of the "intelligence" the White House had conjured up to "justify" war was pure "bull---t," according to Wilkerson. Powell ended up using it anyway.
Powell and his handlers were acutely aware that war would be just weeks away after Powell spoke. One small but significant sign of this was what seemed to me the earliest cover-up related to the soon-to-begin attack on Iraq.
It was a literal cover-up, accomplished even before Powell conducted his post-speech press briefing in the customary spot in front of the Security Council wall adorned with a reproduction of Picasso's famous anti-war painting, Guernica.
Prior to the press conference, that wall hanging had been covered up by another fabric. Some PR person had recognized the impropriety of trying to justify a new war of aggression with Guernica as backdrop. As usual with Powell, the speech and press conference went swimmingly, and the gullible or shameless (your choice) FCM was embarrassingly generous with their accolades.
Blame-Shifting
Once it became clear -- by mid-2003 -- that there were no WMD stockpiles or mobile bio-weapons labs or anything else that had been conjured up in the U.N. speech, Powell smoothly shifted the blame to the CIA, and his fans in the FCM transformed Powell into a noble victim, now tragically suffering from a "blot on my record" for no real fault of his own.
Though it is abundantly clear that then-CIA Director George Tenet and his accomplice/deputy John McLaughlin did play a treacherous role, no CIA director has ever made a secretary of state worth his salt do anything - and certainly not help start an unnecessary war.
Besides, it is a safe bet that what was already clear to us Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) was at least equally clear to Powell. On the afternoon of Powell's U.N. speech, we formally warned President Bush that the evidence adduced by Powell fell far short of justifying an attack on Iraq and that such an attack would be a huge fillip to terrorism around the world.
And since it was obvious that Powell had thrown in his lot with those rolling the juggernaut to war, we urged the president to "widen the circle of your advisers beyond those clearly bent on a war for which we see no compelling reason, and from which we believe the unintended consequences are likely to be catastrophic."
Suave Martinet
Why Powell simply saluted, in full knowledge that his imprimatur would grease the skids to a highly dubious war can be debated. It may be as simple as the clues he provided in his memoir about honoring the "wisdom of superiors" and his penchant to obey, even when it made little sense and even when lots of folks would lose their homes and their lives.
Who was the colonel in Vietnam who insisted he was duty bound to destroy a village in order to save it from the communists? Powell was cut from similar cloth, albeit with a greater sense of subtlety and a much better knack for PR.
In April 2006, Powell admitted to journalist Robert Scheer that top State Department experts never believed that Iraq posed an imminent nuclear threat, but that the president followed the misleading advice of Vice President Dick Cheney and the CIA in making the claim.
It may simply be that by the time other generals promote you to general (the current system) you have distinguished yourself first and foremost by saluting smartly - by obeying and not asking too many questions.
But why Powell acquiesced is less important than THAT he went along. Though perhaps not the brightest star in the galaxy, he certainly was aware he was being co-opted, and that he needed not only to bless the war but also to wax enthusiastic about it, in order to remain welcome in the White House.
Surely he had learned something since his days in Vietnam - something about the "wisdom" of superiors, and of blind obedience. He could have said no, but he just did not have it in him to do so.
Powell's stature (especially with the FCM) made his blessing of the Iraq War especially valuable to Cheney/Rumsfeld and the war-hungry neocons.
"The Only Guy Who Could Perhaps Have Stopped It"
Don't take my word for it. Take it from the quintessential Republican elder statesman, former Secretary of State James Baker - hero of the Florida escapade that stopped the recount in Florida and, with the help of the U.S. Supreme Court, gave the 2000 election to George W. Bush.
In his book The War Within, Bob Woodward wrote: "Powell...didn't think [Iraq] was a necessary war, and yet he had gone along in a hundred ways, large and small...He had succumbed to the momentum and his own sense of deference - even obedience - to the president...Perhaps more than anyone else in the administration, Powell had become the ‘closer' for the president's case on war."
On Oct. 19, 2008, Tom Brokaw asked Powell about this on "Meet the Press;" Brokaw alluded to Woodward's revelations and how Baker had grilled Powell when he appeared before the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group. Here's Brokaw quoting Woodard's book:
"‘Why did we go into Iraq with so few people?' Baker asked. ... ‘Colin just exploded at that point,' [former Secretary of Defense William] Perry recalled later. ‘He unloaded,' [former White House Chief of Staff and now CIA Director Leon] Panetta added, ‘He was angry. He was mad as hell.'... Powell left [the Iraq Study Group meeting].
"Baker turned to Panetta and said solemnly. ‘He's the only guy who could have perhaps prevented this from happening.'"
I added the bold, so you wouldn't miss it.
Powell responded to Brokaw's question by again pointing his finger at the CIA - "a lot of the information that the intelligence community provided us was wrong" - and then insisting that his war role wasn't that consequential.
Stung by Baker's observation, Powell said, "I also assure you that it was not a correct assessment by anybody that my statements or my leaving the administration would have stopped" going to war.
Unlike the Good Samaritan who went out of his way to help a stranger in trouble, Powell simply looked to his own convenience, carefully protecting his status within the Bush administration and keeping his place at fashionable Washington dinner parties.
Whether he could have stopped the war or not, the truth is that Colin Powell didn't even try. He would not risk his reputation for all those victims - Iraqi and American - who have died or suffered horribly from an unnecessary war. The blot on his record was self-inflicted; the FCM is likely to run out of Clorox trying to remove the stain.
- Posted in




46 Comments so far
Show AllThis article is RACIST and full of lies. Colin Powell was under pressure from Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld. Powell is an honorable general and he even endorsed Obama for president. Cindy Sheehan, on the other hand, is an anarchist and is mooching off of government money. I'm glad Pelosi crushed Sheehan like a bug. Since this author worked from the CIA, give him a rehab instead and don't forget to rehab the purist bedwetters.
Corn-fed Demo troll.
Dennis Duncan May 29th, 2009 11:01 am...Precisely...best IGNORED!
My word, under pressure? If those morons were responsible for Powell caving, what can we expect from the "General" if he was under the pressure our kids were under who actually saw the bombs bursting in the air? How absurd and ignorant a post you make. What planet have you been living on?
thong-girl
thong-girl,
NN is just an Obama troll. I'll bet that the only reason he supports Colin Powell is Powell endorsed Obama. NN is just a cornfed troll.
We need scholars on this website, not jerks.
You have your head so far up your corn-fed arse that you will never see the light of day, nor any form of enlightenment that may come from it. You are the dream of every image-maker and huckster on Madison Avenue and in Hollywood. Sadly, too many Americans share your naive and infantile perception of the world around them. You see and hear only that which jibes with your ill-conceived notions of reality.
Get a life!
Major Colin Powell got a fast track to senior officership by covering up My Lai and other American atrocities in Viet Nam. At the U.N. he flat-out lied by saying, "We KNOW...." He did NOT know. He deserves to hang with Bush, Cheney, Rice, et. al. at Nuremberg.
Please don't feed the troll.
Good idea. I can see where we're wasting our time and bandwidth trying to reform cornfed trolls such as NN. I wonder how long NN would stay if nobody responded to him.
Except for 'ego' there cannot possibly be any real reason why Gen. Powell or any of the other members of the Bush admin
would say anything other than---'I am ready to confess'---and the likely hood of that is so far removed from reality as to be inconceivable.
Powell and all of the administration members, as well as the high command, and since we are there, every single person who participated---at will---in the destruction of Iraq should be held accountable, from top to bottom.
This of course is as likely in my opinion as the Sun rising in the West tomorrow morning.
They are all scrambling now for some voice in the aftermath but the only reason they are doing so is because the Republicans lost their hold on the 'control panel' and no other reason. They were self assured of a 'victory' and were careless in their conspiracy leaving many details uncovered since if there had been a 'victory' no one would be questioning----even the Democrats would be bragging about their "parts played" and 'how clever we were' to help those 'republicans bring freedom and democracy to those poor Iraqis' ----and the "bull shit stack" would make Everest look like a 'mole hill' in comparison.
I do think it ironic that Powell, working hard to cover his ass, is referring to the 'bible'----a very unreliable source of 'fiction' to justify behavior and the results of that behavior that will eventually see all of them become the 'negative example' for history. And some may even go to jail----maybe.
The 'drowning rats' using other 'drowning rats' as 'flotation devices' while they still have air inside to float with.
And these people have been promoted in the past as the "best America has to offer".....
Good Luck America, you really need it.
The devil can also quote Scripture. Powell is a fraud.
"The devil can also quote Scripture."
he likely wrote a good whack of it.
Really? Which part did he whack out, except for the conversation with Jesus? Let's hear it, scripture scholar.
Great piece by Ray McGovern, again. Thank God for men like him.
If we take a retrospective view of things, and consider the PNAC as a sort of statement of goals, then it is quite clear that it succeeded better than their wildest dreams, and yes, Colin Powell was instrumental in its success.
I never liked Colin Powell. Harry Belafonte was right about him. He sold his soul. His speech at the UN was a total embarassment. And don't even try to call me a racist. I'm black.
I am with you on that. I did watch Harry Belafonte's warning to Powell before the war that he would be used like a house slave and tossed aside. At that time (and now) I trusted Harry's instincts rather than Powell’s. Even as we speak, Powell cannot muster enough courage to face Cheney head on. His response was meek and sounded as if he was still taking orders from Bush. The only good that came out of his recent response was that he will remain a republican.
Nor I ...ever. He had the smell of hypocrite all around him if one only lightly sniffed. How he sleeps at all with all the lies he told and suffering he helped cause is beyond me. But the great hypocrites have well developed delusional defense mechanisms, neh? If there is an afterlife--a special Hell for this "Man of Honor". mofo...
If Powell hadn't gotten caught with his pants down shamelessly pimping President Unitard's vengeance-driven illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq, he would probably be sitting in the Oval Office himself.
Instead, this corporate-media anointed Eminently Respectable Centrist Negro opted to ride shotgun on the War Wagon out of his degraded and perverse concept of "loyalty", and took himself out of the running forever. Too bad; how sad.
Luckily, the powers that be had already been grooming a replacement. So all's well that ends well, except for Powell.
But he's not doing so bad. He ought to be occupying a cell with the rest of the criminal gang. Instead, even if his remaining sycophantic supporters and the cringing, obsequious media infotainwhores aren't successful in returning him to his former pedestal, he'll still be able to drift through life from one highly-paid sinecure to the next.
And I expect he'll eventually get one of those agonizing teevee funerals with a surfeit of preposterous accolades.
So, as they say: it's all good.
· Yr Obd't Servant
"Baker turned to Panetta and said solemnly, 'He's the only guy who could have perhaps prevented this from happening.'"
Go back and re-read the section of this article again where readers (sourced to an insider Bob Woodward book) are given a glimpse at the internal dynamics of the elite bipartisan Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group in 2008.
Venerable GOP fixer/statesman Jim Baker asks Colin Powell "Why did we go into Iraq with so few people?"
Powell explodes in anger, unloads, angry, mad as hell, and eventually leaves the meeting.
Baker turns to his Study Group colleague Leon Panetta and says "He's the only guy who could perhaps have prevented this from happening."
Prevented what from happening? The invasion of Iraq? Or the invasion of Iraq with an insufficient number of troops?
This whole exchange reeks with ambiguity. As a career military man, Powell probably was part of the Pentagon faction that was leery of Rumsfeld's belief that you could make do with a small, nimble, hi tech ground force.
McGovern interprets the question, Powell's angry response, and Baker's aside to Panetta as a reference to the Bush administration's decision to bring the blessings of regime change to Iraq in the first place. I think it's more likely Jim Baker was talking about the conventional militarists' wisdom that too few US troops were deployed to successfully occupy and stabilize the country. Big difference.
Bill from Saginaw
This is not at all to offer excuses for Powell. (I don't think he's nearly as solid as the fawning media makes him out to be, but he's not the big nasty the left makes him out to be either.)
Powell has been very careful about his career, to say the least, and the Repugnants have used him shamelessly...and he has allowed it. I agree with Belafonte.
But...the so-called Powell doctrine about invading another country was solid and exceptionally clear:
1) Clear specific goal
2) Solid international coalition
3) OVER-WHELMING FORCE to make sure things move very quickly, and making it
exceptionally difficult for an insurgency to develop.
4) Well-planned exit strategy once the goal is reached
Dumsfeld did things completely the opposite way, being so desperate to 'prove' that his method of a very small force coupled with high-tech gadgetry and lots of private soldiers was the way of the future for the global US empire.
Powell's recurring nightmare will be that he likely could have stopped the war or could at least have made it much more difficult for Cheney and his gang to justify it had Powell only done what he should have done: resign and denounce the Iraq war from every podium. He knew how dicey the whole deal really was, and he was deeply suspicious of the garbage info they fed him for that horrible UN speech. Yet he went ahead with the speech anyway for careerist reasons...
Rumsfield is the guy who cut the troops going into Iraq. You have to remember that neither Rumsfield, Cheney or Bush had any military experience. Rumsfield dodged the draft 5 times, Cheney 3 and Bush took cover in the Texas Air Guard. There was two years of planning before we went into WWII and 60 days before we went into Iraq. No one had any brains under Bush 43. And Colin Powell was the fall guy!
So the war in Iraq was wrong.
The world is still waiting for the USA to apologize.
The USA wont EVER apologize for the invasion and occupation of Iraq as it wont ever apologize for the many, many, many , many, many other war crimes and crimes against humanity it has perpetrated since its inception.
It is a testament to the depths that the GOP has sunk that as damaged a figure as Colin Powell (whom, along with Condisleeza Rice, was being discussed as a possible presidential candidate before the Bush error took its' toll) is now being bandied about by the corporate media as a Republican "voice of moderation."
While his recent tete a tete with Dick Cheney has been entertaining in a schadenfreude sort of way, it does not change this unalterable fact: Colin Powell should be hauled before a Nuremberg style proceeding along with the rest of the Bush crime family and should spend his last days in a jail setting not unlike Spandau prison.
Damn, I'd sure love to see this article printed in my local paper. But like our president, I don't believe the editor would care to hash over old news. What a shame.
Damn, I'd sure love to see this article printed in my local paper. But like our president, I don't believe the editor would care to hash over old news. What a shame.
I'll tell you when I knew Colin Powell was a gonner- well, except for the fact he's a GENERAL- it was the night we were watching the evening news (CBS, NBC, ABC, one of them) and they showed Powell being videotaped on a stage in a grass skirt and hard-hat singing and dancing. It was night, outside. I looked at my husband and said, "I would bet you anything that's Bohemian Grove. That there is a message to Powell: 'Shut up and do what we tell you to do, because we own you.'" And he is and was and does and did.
I used to work near Bohemian Grove--a creepy vibe every time I passed the place. I always wanted to drive right in and ask to look around but thought better of it, loving my non-incarcerated self more than the alternative. It looks like a lovely place there in the Redwoods. I'd love to be a fly on the wall.
It's like a "Gallagher" performance, I believe; even the flies are given plastic sheeting-- and duct tape-- to protect themselves from all the splatter.
· Yr Obd't Servant
At some point, it would be very helpful for McGovern to admit what the "noble cause" was: Dominence and control of fossil energy sources and their distribution--something the CIA has been working on for decades. So, yes, Ray needs to come clean. By not doing so, he continues to compromise his credibility, and is really no better than Powell. Further, Ray's VIPS group attempts to lend some aspect of legitimacy to the CIA by "demonstrating" it contains what appear to be "good apples." The reality is Ray and his VIPS are responsible for killing tens of thousands and greatly increasing the scope of the US Empire during their CIA careers--VIPS is NOT an antiwar group. They are a form of PSYOP--good cop/bad cop type. When Ray McGovern calls for the eradication of the CIA, then I will put more weight to his words. But until then, they ring hollow.
Colin Powell is nothing but a rich FAT cat living in his really rich mansion in Mclean, VA where it's expensive as hell ! He once said he grew up in the Bronx out in NY but I find that hard to believe. That General Murderer is nothing but a big monied opportunist and a disgrace to African Americans, most of whom have no chance of being as rich as that filth ! Colin Powell is nothing but an opportunist and a murderer for the fat piece of shit that he is.
Don't hold back, Carla. Tell us what you really think.
If politicians wouldn't be living in Northern VA of all places, traffic hell wouldn't be so bad. And my husband and I were loving Loudoun County back when it was rural before the suburban sprawl took over. And yet the growing cultural diversity with some residual memories of the place keeps us from moving. Most pols suck and he's just one of them.
Confusion here between objective and subjective. I think it would be wise to focus on the subject of the article (crimes, cowardice, treachery, etc.) rather than the fact that your cost of living has gone up because of well-to-do Washingtonians who are suburban sprawling in your neighbourhood.
Colin Powell's wife told him to avoid politics.
Men seldom listen.
"Their sacrifice was in vain, hear? Our task now is two-fold: (1) Bury the dead with respect and care for the wounded and their families; and (2) ensure that the truth gets out, so that a war built on lies will not soon happen again."
To me this is a losing argument. Whether the dead or maimed soldier "signed on the line" as a noble warrior to protect family and nation, transcend the Ghetto, get an education, or to travel the world are all valid and of high moral standing which cannot be taken away due to the illegal and immoral actions of political leaders (this reasoning comes from conversations between Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers in The Power Of Myth).
To insult the sensibilities of a grief stricken parent or spouse with "your loved one died in vain" is hardly a way to "Bury the dead with respect and care for the wounded and their families", it will be met with at best stoic inaction, at worst contempt. It is much more effective, compassionate and empathically human to measure the dead or maimed soldiers noble cause for signing on the line against the immoral and illegal actions of the politicians: it is this scale of justice, not adding insult to injury, that will culture more Cindy Sheehan's, and thus "ensure that the truth gets out, so that a war built on lies will not soon happen again."
It seems to me the media and others are trying to reform the image of Colin Powell for a run at the Presidency in 2012.
The man is a charlatan withou an iota of integrity which makes him ideal for the position .
It has been said that Colin Powell was in charge at the My Lai massacre in Vietnam. Is this not true? I expected someone else to mention this, although Powell's name is securely anchored in infamy, without that feat.
He was not in charge of the Massacre. He was in charge in the PR around it and tried to cover it up. He failed in that regard.
Now keep in mind that there were well over 300 like atrocities committed in Vietnam by US forces that merited investigation by the US Military because they were so overt and obvious. Powell payed a role in supressing many of those others,
He was very good at coverups. To this day most Americans are oblivious to the true number of such atrocities that occurred.
Another thought: About Colin Powell"s race: we tend to think of him as Black. Look at the man! I think we White people can claim that he is at least 80 percent White. So, if he has "betrayed his race", which race is it?
Silly.
Septimus and Louise, I agree with you both.
GwNorth, you have a point. The Republican field isn''t exactly overflowing if you discount the crazies.
I don't agree with the premise that Powell could have stopped the Iraq invasion (let's stop calling it a war). Bush wanted it even before he was president, and he was going to get it.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
Bob Marley would sureley be ashemed of his "homie", Powell, as is Mr. Belafonte, man.
Thanks Ray McGovern. Every sentence on point.
A man may smile and smile and still a villain be, to paraphrase the Bard.
A person may (mis)quote Willy and still a moron be.