The Anti-Empire Report: Things you need to know before the world ends
By William Blum
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Feb 15, 2006, 16:14
In case you don't know, on January 19 the latest audiotape
from Osama bin Laden was released and in it he declared: "If you
[Americans] are sincere in your desire for peace and security, we have answered
you. And if Bush decides to carry on with his lies and oppression, then it
would be useful for you to read the book 'Rogue State,' which states in its
introduction . . ." He then goes on to quote the opening of a paragraph I
wrote (which appears actually in the Foreword of the British edition only, that
was later translated to Arabic), which in full reads:
"If I were the president, I could stop terrorist
attacks against the United States in a few days. Permanently. I would first
apologize -- very publicly and very sincerely -- to all the widows and the
orphans, the impoverished and the tortured, and all the many millions of other
victims of American imperialism. I would then announce that America's global
interventions -- including the awful bombings -- have come to an end. And I
would inform Israel that it is no longer the 51st state of the union but -–
oddly enough -– a foreign country. I would then reduce the military budget by
at least 90 percent and use the savings to pay reparations to the victims and
repair the damage from the many American bombings and invasions. There would be
more than enough money. Do you know what one year of the US military budget is
equal to? One year. It's equal to more than $20,000 per hour for every hour
since Jesus Christ was born.
"That's what I'd do on my first three days in the White
House. On the fourth day, I'd be assassinated."
Within hours I was swamped by the media and soon appeared on
many of the leading TV shows, dozens of radio programs, with long profiles in
the Washington Post, Salon.com and elsewhere. In the previous 10 years the Post
had declined to print a single one of my letters, most of which had pointed out
errors in their foreign news coverage. Now my photo was on page one.
Much of the media wanted me to say that I was repulsed by
bin Laden's "endorsement." I did not say I was repulsed because I was
not. After a couple of days of interviews I got my reply together and it
usually went something like this: "There are two elements involved here:
On the one hand, I totally despise any kind of religious fundamentalism and the
societies spawned by such, like the Taliban in Afghanistan. On the other hand,
I'm a member of a movement which has the very ambitious goal of slowing down,
if not stopping, the American Empire, to keep it from continuing to go round
the world doing things like bombings, invasions, overthrowing governments, and
torture. To have any success, we need to reach the American people with our
message. And to reach the American people we need to have access to the mass
media. What has just happened has given me the opportunity to reach millions of
people I would otherwise never reach. Why should I not be glad about that? How
could I let such an opportunity go to waste?"
Celebrity -- modern civilization's highest cultural
achievement -- is a peculiar phenomenon. It really isn't worth anything unless
you do something with it.
The callers into the programs I was on, and sometimes the
host, in addition to numerous emails, repeated two main arguments against me:
1) Where else but in the United States could I have the freedom to say what I
was saying on national media?
Besides their profound ignorance in not knowing of scores of
countries with at least equal freedom of speech (particularly since September
11), what they are saying in effect is that I should be so grateful for my
freedom of speech that I should show my gratitude by not exercising that
freedom. If they're not saying that, they're not saying anything.
2) America has always done marvelous things for the world,
from the Marshall Plan and defeating communism and the Taliban to rebuilding
destroyed countries and freeing Iraq.
I have dealt with these myths and misconceptions previously;
like sub-atomic particles, they behave differently when observed. For example,
in last month's report I pointed out in detail that "destroyed
countries" were usually destroyed by American bombs; and America did not
rebuild them. As to the Taliban, the United States overthrew a secular,
women's-rights government in Afghanistan, which led to the Taliban coming to
power; so the US can hardly be honored for ousting the Taliban a decade later,
replacing it with an American occupation, an American puppet president,
assorted warlords, and women chained.
But try to explain all these fine points in the minute or so
one has on radio or TV. However, I think I somehow managed to squeeze in a lot
of information and thoughts new to the American psyche.
Some hosts and many callers were clearly pained to hear me
say that anti-American terrorists are retaliating against the harm done to
their countries by US foreign policy, and are not just evil, mindless, madmen
from another planet.[1] Many of them assumed, with lots of certainty and no
good reason at all, that I was a supporter of the Democratic Party and they
proceeded to attack Bill Clinton. When I pointed out that I was no fan at all
of the Democrats or Clinton, they were usually confused into silence for a few
moments before seamlessly jumping to some other piece of nonsense. They do not
know that an entire alternative world exists above and beyond the Republicans
and Democrats.
Just recently we have been hearing and reading comments in
the American media about how hopelessly backward and violent were those Muslims
protesting the Danish cartoons, carrying signs calling for the beheading of
those that insult Islam. But a caller to a radio program I was on said I "should
be taken care of," and one of the hundreds of nasty emails I received
began: "Death to you and your family."
One of my personal favorite moments: On an AM radio program
in Pennsylvania, discussing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
The host (with anguish in her voice): "What has Israel
ever done to the Palestinians?"
Me: "Have you been in a coma the past 20 years?"
This is a question I could ask many of those who
interrogated me the past few weeks. Actually, 60 years would be more
appropriate.
Elections My
Teacher Never Told Me About
Americans are all taught from childhood on of the
significance and sanctity of free elections: You can't have the thing called
"democracy" without the thing called "free elections." And
when you have the thing called free elections it's virtually synonymous with
having the thing called democracy. And who were we taught was the greatest
champion of free elections anywhere in the world? Why, our very same teacher,
God's country, the good ol' US of A.
But what was God's country actually doing all those years we
were absorbing and swearing by this message? God's country was actually
interfering in free elections in every corner of the known world; seriously so.
The latest example is the recent elections in Palestine,
where the US Agency for International Development (AID) poured in some two
million dollars (a huge amount in that impoverished area) to try to tilt the
election to the Palestinian Authority (PA) and its political wing, Fatah, and
prevent the radical Islamic group Hamas from taking power. The money was spent
on various social programs and events to increase the popularity of the PA; the
projects bore no evidence of US involvement and did not fall within the
definitions of traditional development work. In addition, the United States
funded many newspaper advertisements publicizing these projects in the name of
the PA, with no mention of AID.
"Public outreach is integrated into the design of each
project to highlight the role of the P.A. in meeting citizens needs," said
a progress report on the projects. "The plan is to have events running
every day of the coming week, beginning 13 January, such that there is a
constant stream of announcements and public outreach about positive happenings
all over Palestinian areas in the critical week before the elections."
Under the rules of the Palestinian election system,
campaigns and candidates were prohibited from accepting money from foreign
sources.[2] American law explicitly forbids the same in US elections.
Since Hamas won the election, the United States has made it
clear that it does not recognize the election as any kind of victory for
democracy and that it has no intention of having normal diplomatic relations
with the Hamas government. (Israel has adopted a similar attitude, but it
should not be forgotten that Israel funded and supported the emergence of Hamas
in Gaza during its early days, hoping that it would challenge the Palestine
Liberation Organization as well as Palestinian leftist elements.)
By my count, there have been more than 30 instances of gross
Washington interference in foreign elections since the end of World War II --
from Italy in 1948 and the Philippines and Lebanon in the 1950s, to Nicaragua,
Bolivia and Slovakia in the 2000s -- most of them carried out in an even more
flagrant manner than the Palestinian example.[3] Some of the techniques
employed have been used in the United States itself as our electoral system,
once the object of much national and international pride, has slid inexorably
from "one person, one vote," to "one dollar, one vote."
Coming Soon to a
Country (or City) Near You
On January 13 the United States of America, in its shocking
and awesome wisdom, saw fit to fly an unmanned Predator aircraft over a remote
village in the sovereign nation of Pakistan and fire a Hellfire missile into a
residential compound in an attempt to kill some "bad guys." Several
houses were incinerated, 18 people were killed, including an unknown number of
"bad guys"; reports since then give every indication that the unknown
number is as low as zero, al Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri, the
principal target, not being amongst them. Outrage is still being expressed in
Pakistan. In the United States the reaction in the Senate typified the American
outrage:
"We apologize, but I can't tell you that we wouldn't do
the same thing again" said Sen. John McCain of Arizona
"It's a regrettable situation, but what else are we
supposed to do?" said Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana.
"My information is that this strike was clearly
justified by the intelligence," said Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi.[4]
Similar US attacks using such drones and missiles have
angered citizens and political leaders in Afghanistan, Iraq and Yemen. In has
not been uncommon for the destruction to be so complete that it is impossible
to establish who was killed, or even how many people. Amnesty International has
lodged complaints with the Busheviks following each suspected Predator strike.
A UN report in the wake of the 2002 strike in Yemen called it "an alarming
precedent [and] a clear case of extrajudicial killing" in violation of
international laws and treaties.[5]
Can it be imagined that American officials would fire a
missile into a house in Paris or London or Ottawa because they suspected that
high-ranking al Qaeda members were present there? Even if the US knew of their
presence for an absolute fact, and not just speculation as in the Predator
cases mentioned above? Well, most likely not, but can we put anything past
Swaggering-Superarrogant-Superpower-Cowboys-on -steroids? After all, they've
already done it to their own, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On May 13, 1985, a
bomb dropped by a police helicopter burned down an entire block, some 60 homes
destroyed, 11 dead, including several small children. The police, the mayor's
office, and the FBI were all involved in this effort to evict an organization
called MOVE from the house they lived in.
The victims were all black of course. So let's rephrase the
question. Can it be imagined that American officials would fire a missile into
a residential area of Beverly Hills or the upper east side of Manhattan? Stay
tuned.
"The struggle of man against tyranny is the struggle
of memory against forgetting." --Milan Kundera
I'm occasionally taken to task for being so negative about
the United States role in the world. Why do you keep looking for all the
negative stuff and tear down the positive? I'm asked.
Well, it's a nasty job, but someone has to do it. Besides,
for each negative piece I'm paid $500 by al Qaeda. And the publicity given to
my books by Osama . . . priceless.
The new documentary film by Eugene Jarecki, "Why We
Fight," which won the Sundance Festival's Grand Jury prize, relates how
the pursuit of profit by arms merchants and other US corporations has fueled
America's post-World War II wars a lot more than any love of freedom and
democracy. The unlikely hero of the film is Dwight Eisenhower, whose famous
warning about the dangers of the "military-industrial complex" is the
film's principal motif.
Here is Jarecki being interviewed by the Washington Post:
Post: Why did you make "Why We Fight?"
Jarecki: The simple answer: Eisenhower. He caught me
off-guard. He seemed to have so much to say about our contemporary society and
our general tilt towards militarism. . . . The voices in Washington and the
media have become so shrill. . . . It seemed important to bring a little gray
hair into the mix.
Post: How would you classify your politics? You've been
accused of being a lefty.
Jarecki: I'm a radical centrist. . . . If Dwight Eisenhower
is a lefty, I am too. Then I'll walk with Ike.[6]
[ellipses in original]
Isn't it nice that a film portraying the seamier side of the
military-industrial complex is receiving such popular attention? And that we
are able to look fondly upon an American president? How long has that been?
Well, here I go again.
Eisenhower, regardless of what he said as he was leaving the
presidency, was hardly an obstacle to American militarism or corporate
imperialism. During his eight years in office, the United States intervened in
every corner of the world, overthrowing the governments of Iran, Guatemala,
Laos, the Congo, and British Guiana, and attempting to do the same in Costa
Rica, Syria, Egypt, and Indonesia, as well as laying the military and political
groundwork for the coming Indochinese holocaust.
Eisenhower's moralistically overbearing secretary of state,
John Foster Dulles, summed up the administration's world outlook thusly:
"For us there are two sorts of people in the world: there are those who
are Christians and support free enterprise and there are the others."[7]
NOTES
[1] See my essay on this subject at members.aol.com/essays6/myth.htm.
[2] Washington Post, January 22 and 24, 2006
[3] Rogue State, chapter 18, includes the text of the US law
prohibiting foreign contributions to US elections.
[4] Associated Press, January 15, 2006
[5] Los Angeles Times, January 29, 2006
[6] Washington Post, February 12, 2006, p.N3
[7] Roger Morgan, "The United States and West Germany,
1945-1973" (1974), p.54
William Blum is the author of
"Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2,"
"Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only
Superpower," "West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir" and
"Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire"
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