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Deceit of Shakespearean Proportions
Behold this unctuous knave, a disgrace to his nation as few before him, yet boasting unvarnished virtue. The deceit of Dick Cheney is indeed of Shakespearean proportions, as evidenced in his new memoir. For the former vice president, lying comes so easily that one must assume he takes the pursuit of truth to be nothing more than a reckless indulgence.
Here is a man who, more than anyone else in the Bush administration, trafficked in the campaign of deceit that caused tens of thousands to die, wasted trillions of dollars in resources and indelibly sullied the legacy of this nation through the practice of torture, which Cheney defends to this day. Still this villain claims that, despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the horrid methods he endorsed were a necessary response to the threat of Osama bin Laden. How convenient to ignore that it was Barack Obama, a resolutely anti-torture president, who made good on the promise of Cheney and the previous administration to take down the al-Qaida leader.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney gestures as he speaks to troops at a rally in 2006. (photo: AP / Ed Zurga)
Not to mention that bin Laden was killed in his hiding place in Pakistan, a nation that the Bush administration had befriended after 9/11 by lifting the sanctions previously imposed in retaliation for Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, a program connected with the proliferation of nuclear weapons know-how and the sale of nuclear material to North Korea, Libya and Iran.
Pakistan joined with only two other nations, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, in granting diplomatic recognition to the Taliban government that provided a safe haven for al-Qaida as bin Laden orchestrated the 9/11 attack. But instead of focusing on the source of the problem, Cheney led the effort to overthrow Saddam Hussein, who had ruthlessly hounded any al-Qaida operatives who dared function in Iraq.
You don’t have to slog too deeply through Dick Cheney’s advertisement for himself to grasp not only the wicked cynicism of the man but also how shallow are his perceptions. He recalls his college years in the 1960s, when he was a draft-deferred young Republican during America’s murderous adventure in Vietnam—in which more than 3 million Indochinese and 59,000 Americans were killed—as a time of career advancement through strategic Washington appointments.
The war that left Martin Luther King Jr. condemning his own government as “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today” is condemned in Cheney’s memoir only for the reactive violence that he attributes to anti-war student protesters. We are told, in a reminiscence of his days as a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin, that “in May 1969, students threw rocks and bottles at police trying to shut down a party on Mifflin Street,” but there is nothing of napalmed Vietnamese or U.S. troops in body bags.
That same May, young Cheney’s Republican contacts in Washington would pay off when he secured an appointment in the Nixon administration working for none other than Donald Rumsfeld. Cheney recalls that he didn’t know he was “signing up for a forty-year career in politics and government—but that was exactly the right call.”
Those 40 years, interrupted by a lucrative stint at defense contractor Halliburton, saw Cheney rise to become secretary of defense and later vice president, presiding over wars that put him in considerable conflict with Colin Powell. It is Powell—who was experiencing the reality of war in Vietnam at the time Cheney was winning bureaucratic battles in Washington—who is scorned in Cheney’s memoir as the hopeless dove.
It was the more cautious war veteran Powell who, as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the first Iraq war, proved to be far more effective as a leader than Cheney, who was then secretary of defense. What is confirmed by Cheney’s memoir is that he seized upon the second Iraq invasion as a way of settling scores with his adversary by assuming the role of an ultra-militarist.
Powell, who, inside the administration, clearly opposed the invasion of Iraq—“If you break it, you own it”—was cast as a puppet who in a dramatic appearance before the United Nations lied to the world when he said Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. But despite Powell’s woefully misplaced sense of loyalty to President George W. Bush, Cheney is merciless in condemning the general for allegedly undermining the administration. Powell has fired back at what he termed Cheney’s “cheap shots” and reminds us that “Mr. Cheney and many of his colleagues did not prepare for what happened after the fall of Baghdad.”
It is not clear that Cheney is a true believer in military mayhem as much as he is an uncontrollable careerist who finds war talk a convenient tool for advancement. He seems to have no real sense of the cost of the Iraq War beyond what it might have done to hurt his own legacy. If his memoir has any enduring value, it is not as another offering of hollow excuses for an unjustifiable war but rather as a study in what the famed historian of European fascism, Hannah Arendt, termed the “banality of evil.”


99 Comments so far
Show AllBanality of evil, indeed. Dick Cheney is the prime example that Amereicha has indeed fallen to depths so low we may truly call ourselves a hopeless nation. Not because we allowed such an evil war criminal to acquire the second highest office in the land in the first place, but because we, as a nation, refuse to prosecute him for his horrendous crimes and even go so far as to raise him to celebrity status as an "elder statesman." This country is utterly screwed. I feel sorry for our children and the even worse country that will exist when they are adults, if this is the precedent we are establishing.
It is nice to hear someone else express my opinions so succinctly. If we want to forgive and forget, let's do it after the trial.
Didn't Nancy Pelosi eliminate the possibility of a trial ?
She took democracy off the table.
Damn! Wish I had said that and it is the best and truest statement yet of what she did. Thank you. Tony
Arendt's phrase "the banality of evil" is an apt one although it may be a little unfair to compare Cheney to Eichmann. Unfair to Eichmann that is. (Ok, I am only joking, Dick.)
It would be pleasant to imagine Iraqi agents seizing Cheney for a friendly little trial in Bagdad but unfortunately there will be no justice for this guy.
(Sean Hannity offered up a hagiographic interview with DC on Fox News last night.)
His tiny shriveled heart will give out in a nice clean bed -- and he will be hailed as another great Amerikan 'statesman' with appropriate honors.
How does the old joke go? He is not heartless. He has the heart of a small boy. He keeps it in a jar on his desk.
Maybe he ate it.
I'd rather do it after the hanging.
Many wars of the US were founded upon deceit. Remember the Maine? Remember the Tonkin Gulf incident? We took over the Philippines and continued crushing the indigenous freedom fighters (my great uncle fought there, and learning more, I mention it). Students in Grenada were not at risk. One merely needed to ask them - not the Acting President.
The US was complicit with corrupt Battista and certain NGOs who profited from Cuba's structure; who were the freedom fighters led by young Castro to turn to?
Surreptitious finding of religiously nuts in Afghanistan (a "country" created by fiat of large empires, as were most of the nations of the Middle East, from Israel to Syria, Iraq and the rest - read 20th century history and find us, Britain, and others there) in the 80s led terrorism to be turned upon a nation that CANNOT do ANYTHING altruistic, but must attempt to exert economic hegemony over ever "ally."
Panamanian Dictators first supported, then betrayed, and a long list of Banana Republic outfitting, are US policy.
Deeply important are our lies to ourselves and to those who trusted us: Endemic in the US are the lies and betrayals involved in treaty-making with every indigenous nation in this land.
Cheney-R-Us: he is our government and every member or citizen who support policies, reversals, lies like these so many documented falsehoods.
Cheney, and the more subtle dissimulation of Obama are not in essence different.
Let none of this be apologia for Cheney. Bush and he are still indictable for some of their major crimes.
Yet if justice is sought, it must also be sought across the historical board, whether reparations to the still-extant tribes and nations within our borders, or merely rewriting history books with relatively complete honesty. Both and more - holding elected and appointed officials responsible for their actions - are required.
A very fine response to Mr. Cheney's career as he himself exposes.
I'm not so sure Arendt's "banality of evil" fits the snarling, arrogant monster who wittingly devised the decline and fall of America.
The horror! The horror.
Mr. Kurtz? He dead.
dwyerj1 wrote:
"I'm not so sure Arendt's "banality of evil" fits the snarling, arrogant monster who wittingly devised the decline and fall of America."
I believe that when you examine the term "banality of evil" within the context of which Hannah Arendt used it to describe Adolph Eichmann's trial proceedings, it is an appropriate description of Dick Cheney.
Hannah Arendt recorded that Eichmann had stated to Israeli interrogators that he was intelligent and well educated. Eichmann was evaluated by a number of Israeli psychiatrists and was found to have no significant psychiatric disorder.
During his trial, Eichmann was asked by the presiding judge, Judge Landau, if he was acquainted with philosopher Immanuel Kant's "categorical imperative".
Immanuel Kant wrote:
"Act according to that maxim which you can at the same time will to become a universal law."
Kant says that we should act in a manner that we would will everyone to act.
Hannah Arednt was well versed on the works of moral philosophers. She stated that Eichmann's explanation of Immanuel Kant's categorical imperative was the most complete description that she had ever heard and that Eichmann had a full understanding of the principles of the categorical imperative.
Hannah Arednt concluded that Eichmann was not an inherently evil man. She felt that he was blinded by ideology and had lost his capacity for critical thought. She viewed Eichmann as an efficient bureaucrat. Hannah Arednt referred to Eichmann as a "desk murderer".
Much like Adolf Eichmann, Dick Cheney may not be inherently evil. He has been blinded by ideology. Dick Cheney lost his ability to think critically. I do not believe that Dick Cheney is a sociopath who lacks empathy for all human beings. He simply lacks empathy for select human beings.
Like Adolf Eichmann, Dick Cheney was an efficient bureaucrat and a "desk murderer". He is no different from odious American figures such as Henry Kissinger and the late Robert McNamara who were also efficient bureaucrats and "desk murderers". Just as Dick Cheney's actions as Secretary of Defense during George H.W. Bush's administration and his actions as Vice-President under G.W Bush resulted in the deaths of thousands of Americans and untold numbers of the citizens of Iraq and Afghanistan, McNamara and Kissinger caused the deaths of thousands of Americans and millions of Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laoatians.
American politics is pregnant with efficient bureaucrats and "desk murderers" like Dick Cheney who are never held accountable.
With all due respect Photius, I would have to say the Mr. Cheney was quite much more than just an expediter of policy handed down from above. He, along with Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Richard Pearle and William Kristol among others were the founders and guiding lights of The Project for The New American Century which was billed as an educational outreach that called for using maximum American military force to produce political outcomes that would favor American interests. Some described this emboldened approach as muscular foreign policy. Indeed. This became the hallmark of the GWBush administration. Mr. Cheney and the office of the vice-president became not only the originators of new policy but also the executor of those policy's. If there is anyone in the whole miserable catastrophe of the Bush White House that could be reduced to being simply a 'desk murderer' it would be George W. Bush.
Precisely, wexxton.
Dubya, just like Ronny Raygun, was put in place not to make any decisions but to give at least half of the US electorate a guy they could relate to and who could deliver the corporate owners' message effectively. Cheney and Rove were the brains of the Dubya Regime and both succeeded by effectively utilizing and refining Hitler's playbook and continue to do so.
Robert McNamara finally wrote a "mea culpa" thirty years after his role in the disastrous Vietnam war was over. The difference with Cheney is that we will never get an apology from him about his monstrous crimes. Dick Cheney is not just a "desk murderer". He is also the most profoundly corrupt U.S. politician I am aware of. It is a disgrace that this appalling man might now be regarded as an "elder statesman" just like Tricky Dick Nixon was and be free to write self-serving books and make speeches critical of anyone who doesn't believe in his diseased Neocon view of the world. If Hell existed there should be a special place in it for these these two war criminals.
Robert McNamara finally wrote a "mea culpa" thirty years after his role in the disastrous Vietnam war was over. The difference with Cheney is that we will never get an apology from him about his monstrous crimes. Dick Cheney is not just a "desk murderer". He is also the most profoundly corrupt U.S. politician I am aware of. It is a disgrace that this appalling man might now be regarded as an "elder statesman" just like Tricky Dick Nixon was and be free to write self-serving books and make speeches critical of anyone who doesn't believe in his diseased Neocon view of the world. If Hell existed there should be a special place in it for these these two war criminals.
Your mention of Kissenger reminded me of others like him, e.g. McGeorge Bundy. In the 1920s, Julien Benda wrote a book about intellectuals who sold out to power brokers. The title of the English translation is The Treason of the Intellectuals.
There always seems to be someone who is willing to sell out. But Bundy and Kissenger were not at Cheney's level. They were "enablers," whereas he was a "decider."
There always seems to be someone who is willing to sell out. But Bundy and Kissenger were not at Cheney's level. They were "enablers," whereas he was a "decider."
On another track, I would quibble with the title of the article. "Deceit" in the Shakespearean context implies Iago, whereas Cheney is analogous to MacBeth, someone who sells his soul for power.
.dwyerj1 wrote...
"Much like Adolf Eichmann, Dick Cheney may not be inherently evil. He has been blinded by ideology. Dick Cheney lost his ability to think critically. I do not believe that Dick Cheney is a sociopath who lacks empathy for all human beings. He simply lacks empathy for select human beings..."
This commentry infering a more benign pathology IMO does not exclude Cheney from being a sociopath and or indeed a narcissistic personality disorder [NPD]...Infact, both conditions predicate a form of cunning and astuteness which can fool highly trained Psychiatrists...and can distinctly display exactly what you unwittingly denied in Cheney... Being a cynical ability to...." show empathy for a very select group [his family and close associates], and completely lack empathy for another select group of human beings..[another race, party, survivors of Katrina etc]...."
Robert Pickton the pig farmer and serial killer convicted of the second-degree murder of over 50 women...had a girl friend living in and around his farm during the entire time he was commiting his heinous crimes...and she lived to tell her tale
.
IN Cheneys case, a "desk muderer", the principle player in the destruction of an entire country over a million Iraqi casualities etc and now claiming... "In My Time"...is just not only arrogant, narcissistic in the extreme, specious; but a pure expression of the "banality of absolute evil"....
To claim anything else, shows a form of intellectual sophistry that shows a malign disrespect for the million plus Iraqis killed, 5 million displaced and the distruction of a countries art and culture that only a sociopathic pathological narcissist would show contempt for....
Sounds like an apt discription of Cheney to me....
Simonhhh: you've got the wrong guy. Photius wrote this. I objected to it just as you do.
Hey dwyerj1...
Appologies for that ....I must have got my wires mixed up...late at night...the new format here at CD from a long while ago is a bit confusing...
best regards
simonhhh
I agree. He's no different. He just loves playing-up his character. He revels in it. Remember the wheelchair and the dark cloak he wore during Jive Turkey's inauguration? The cane? The hat? The darkness of his image? What a spectacle.
He should be dropped in the middle of Pakistan with nothing more than his snarling face. She if that changes his perspective.
Remember the joke that Cheney went to a White House Halloween party dressed as Darth Vader and was surprised to find that Darth Vader was there, disguised as Dick Cheney?
deleted
How did this man get out of jail so soon?
Oh! I forgot! He never went to jail.
Cheney is one of the most obviously corrupt politicians that has ever led America and he has been a star in the movement to make war crimes acceptable again.
Only way I'd pay for his book or waste my time reading his and his daughters' BS, is if it would be used to prosecute him.
McClachey news has an excellent political cartoon today:
Cheney is at a booksigning and on the table is a sign saying, "Buy this book".
A woman looks at the sign and says, "I'd rather be water boarded".
And, exactly why do you claim McClachey is or was a Cheney supporter? Come one. Give up the data, the links. That should be easy since you are so sure of yourself.
Ah, I didn't think you could.
McClachey and it's (former) parent publishing company, Knight Ridder, were on top of the multiple levels of deceit surrounding so many of our common woes. But we lumped them into the MSM and refused to hear them. They gave us a clarion call that we did not hear.
Who loses?
I recall Knight-Ridder/McClatchy producing numerous investigative pieces the went against the administration's narrative during the Bush nightmare years.
The Knight-Ridder/McClatchy investigative reporters Warren Sobel and Jonathan Landy wrote numerous pieces that refuted the Bush administration's narrative during the run up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
US Abuse of Detainees Was Routine at Afghanistan Bases
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/06/16/9648
Israeli Soldiers in Gaza Describe a 'Moral Twilight Zone'
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/07/15-0
Iraqis Claim Marines Are Pushing Christianity in Fallujah
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/05/29/9283
Easing of Laws That Led to Detainee Abuse Hatched in Secret
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/06/18/9706
In Nuclear Accident, Risks Extend Beyond Evacuation Zone
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/04/27-4
Mexico, Cradle of Corn, Finds Its Noble Grain Under Assault
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/02/03-5
google mcclatchy site:commondreams.org to see many more
I see you don't let the facts interfere with your opinion. That's a good quality in a zealot.
Only way I'd pay for his book or waste my time reading his and his daughters' BS, is if it would be used to prosecute him.
Just unplug the bastard from his wall socket!
Hannah Arendt said in "Eichmann in Jerusalem" that "justice must be seen to be done."
I have no intention of buying or reading Cheney's book. His conscience is his responsibility.
Well stated, barreldowl. I wouldn't soil my hands by reading his book!!!
Yet Scheer is comfortable with, almost lauds, the mafia-style "hit" on Lee Harvey Ben Lauden. By all accounts the kill-squad had him in total control and could have arrested him and brought him to stand trial, like a country based on due process of law would have. Of course, the treatment meted out to Bradley Manning by our constitutional law professor president shows that such concerns are "quaint notions" (words Cheney himself has used), and, besides, if OBL DID testify, Mr. Scheer's first 4 paragraphs would probably be shown to be the state-generated propaganda that they are. Like Lee Oswald he had to be silenced. Cheney is a snake, but the underlying message of establishment liberal apologists is that the Dem's are any different.
Thanks, Rudy. I agree with Scheer that Cheney is a war criminal in need of prosecution. But what about Obama, Biden, Hillary, Bill, W, Condi Rice, Colin Powell, down through the rest of their cabinets, their generals, and the other Eichmann-like aparatchiks who have run our government for the last 60 years.
I don't follow the various pundits enough to have known that Scheer supported the murder of bin Laden (or whoever they killed since a lot of people seem to think he died years earlier), so thanks for the info. Other lefty pundits loved by "liberals," like Eric Alterman of the Nation also supported the murder. Others, like Maddow, support the mass murder in Libya. I don't see the difference between war criminals. Maybe we can give them separate D and R wings in prison.
rudyspeaks and tomcarberry,
I agree. The rogues gallery is long. The common thread is love of power, hatred of democracy and massive greed without conscience.
The fact that the media apologists on all sides of the political spectrum (in main stream media) were instrumental in providing population conditioning and war crime cover is perpetually ignored. This shit happened (and happens) because the media gave these bastards cover. The media is an accessory before and after the fact to war crimes perpetrated by the USA. The media's complicity places them in the "deciders" category; not just the "enablers" category. Without the Judith Millers, Cheney and his ilk would not have been able attack to Iraq.
We could call them the Amoral Majority.
Yet more wasted breath by more "leftist" journalists such as Mr. Scheer who - taking his preordained role as castigator of evil - writes upon the crimes of Mr. Cheney all the while bolstering the official fairy tale about the events of 9/11.
Why speculate about the truth when we have to deal with Cheney's very real crimes?
Number one, because Cheney and his ilk were evil and smart enough to cover their tracks and cloak their actions in legality.
However tenuous the "legality" of the claims it's enough to keep the "debate" going and Mr. Scheer - like a good little kindergartner - plays his role to the hilt.
Hey, Robert, if you really, really hate Mr. Cheney and his minions, then why not ONE SINGLE article about the the chimerical claims of the 9/11 commission and the events of those days?
If you really can't stand what has happened to this country then why not ONE COMMENT about the obvious falsity that was sold to the American public on that day and ensuing months in 2001?
So, shut your mouth, old man.
You're not saying anything worthwhile anymore.
In fact, with every wasted word you type in every wasted column, you take all of us farther away from the treasonous truths of those days.
polycarpe,
Hear, hear!
911 - The gift that continues to give.
Take a look at this video put together by Architects and Engineerss:-
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article28906.htm
It becomes crystal clear. There isn't too much doubt any more.
"it was Barack Obama, a resolutely anti-torture president ..."
I don't know if this was a good article or not, because I couldn't finish it. I puked on my keyboard when I read the above sentence.
Robert Scheer is apparently as big a liar as Cheney.
I caught this as well. It only goes to show the mendacity of liberal apologists like Sheer would like to convince people that the Democrats are more humane and principled than those nasty Republican thugs.
The supposed Obama "anti-torture" executive order has huge loop holes in it. See, for example, Prof. James Hill's analysis
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12041
One of the most outstanding things about the Obama administration is it's almost complete continuity and extension of Bush era policies.
Americans are too easily fooled to have a democracy.
Yes, apparently Mr. Sheer doesn't seem to have a problem with the fact that Lord Obama has declared he has the authority to order the assassination/death of any human being anywhere on the planet, at any time, without due process, on his say-so alone.
But he is FAR better than any Republican, dontchaknow.
"bin Laden was killed in his hiding place in Pakistan, a nation that the Bush administration had befriended after 9/11 by lifting the sanctions previously imposed in retaliation for Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, a program connected with the proliferation of nuclear weapons know-how and the sale of nuclear material to North Korea, Libya and Iran."
It's not very encouraging that this article - while sporting an interesting title - is full of the hand-me-down lies of corporate America, dressed up as opposition to the powers that be.
In this way, it's kind of like the Obama administration itself.
Reading this with Shakespeare in mind, I now understand that Cheney sees war as an opportunity for career advancement and financial stability with no down side. He is now merely trying to provide the same opportunities to the young men who coddle and diddle him. Call it "Cheny in Love".
Photius: Ms. Arendt, a German Jew during WWII, underwent conditions that are akin to those that Iraqis and Afghanis and Lybians and Yemenis do today (as a consequence of Mr. Cheney's "philosophy"). Her phrase, banality of evil, cannot be so glossed as to equate Mr. Cheney's behavior with that of Adolph Eichmann.
The whole Hitler obfuscation is irrelevant. Ms. Arendt as well as her friends Walter Benjamin and Karl Jaspers were "defending" a way of life, a "culture" that permeates the University of Chicago, where Mr. Cheney studied as an undergraduate. While I hold in high esteem her work (as well as Heidegger's) I do think that the subjection of art to the laws of the market is important to my comment. Readers of Common Dreams may constitute a reading public that generally scorns or at least expresses a feeling of disatisfaction with the "public". Whom do you and I write to?
When you use pre-existent materials to manufacture approval of Mr. Scheer's allusion to Ms. Arendt, you fail to focus on the person and behaviors of Mr. Cheney. He is not "like" Mr. Eichmann, and he does not suffer from the adoption of a "wrong" ideology.
He does not simply lack empathy for select human beings.
He, to me, seems inherently evil. I am, of course, empathetic to those victims of the viscious and barbaric behavior wrought upon them by "the best fighting force in the world". Mr. Cheney led us all through excitation of our fears to believe somehow in a holy war against all those who reject "our way of life". It is somehow "holy" to torture, to break down doors and execute unarmed wholly restrained foreigners in their own homes!
Our culture is wholly corrupted by the changes wrought upon our very nature by the embrace of the thoroughly selfish system of free and unrestrained commerce whereby everyone subjects even art to the laws of the market. We buy things at the lowest price we can squeeze out of our neighbors and sell for the highest price we can manipulate other neighbors to believe is their worth. Our public schools make widgets out of youth, manufacturing obedient and uncritical minds as on an assembly line of material objects.
Such a way of life, such a culture formed the monstrous conscience of Mr. Dick Cheney. Such is what he has imposed upon America. Such is what so many of us want to impose upon all the inhabitants of Earth.
I, for one, cannot let him (nor Mr. Powell and the others) "off the hook". I take exception to Professor Arendt's opposition to Marxist and leftist thought. Think of Schindler's definition of power explained to Goethe as opposed to Arendt's definition: the ability of people to act in concert.
Look what happened to "United we stand".
DWYER: Excellent post. I wanted to see if anyone else took issue with the casual way that PHOTIUS described Cheney as "just" a desk murderer, an allusion that works adroitly to subliminally normalize all the torture, depraved indifference to life, and wanton killing done at this madman's behest. By downplaying these evident evils, such a post, for all its intended scholarship gives the morally objectionable a pass.
Also, very few posters took notice of the degree to which Scheer accepts the official 911 story; although a few did reference how Scheer still stands firmly on Obama's team. Pity that one who's rather sharp in deconstructing SOME lies, entirely misses the larger ones.