Okay, let�s get the obvious out of the way. It was historic.
I choked up a number of times, tears came to my eyes, even though I didn�t vote
for him. I voted for Ralph Nader for the fourth time in a row.
During the past eight years when I�ve listened to news
programs on the radio each day I�ve made sure to be within a few feet of the
radio so I could quickly change the station when that preposterous man or one
of his disciples came on; I�m not a masochist, I suffer fools very poorly, and
I get bored easily.
Sad to say, I�m already turning the radio off sometimes when
Obama comes on. He doesn�t say anything, or not enough, or not often enough.
Platitudes, clich�s, promises without substance, �hope and change,� almost
everything without sufficient substance, �change and hope,� without specifics,
designed not to offend. What exactly are the man�s principles? He never
questions the premises of the empire. Never questions the premises of the �War
on Terror.�
I�m glad he won for two reasons only: John McCain and Sarah
Palin, and I deeply resent the fact that the American system forces me to
squeeze out a drop of pleasure from something so far removed from my ideals. Obama�s
votes came at least as much from people desperate for relief from neoconservative
suffocation as from people who genuinely believed in him. It�s a form of
extortion -- vote for Obama or you get more of the same. Those are your only
choices.
Is there reason to be happy that the insufferably religious
George W. is soon to be history? �I believe that Christ died for my sins and I
am redeemed through him. That is a source of strength and sustenance on a daily
basis.� That was said by someone named Barack Obama. [1] The United States
turns out religious fanatics like the Japanese turn out cars. Let�s pray for an
end to this.
As I�ve mentioned before, if you�re one of those who would
like to believe that Obama has to present center-right foreign policy views to
be elected, but once he�s in the White House we can forget that he misled us
repeatedly and the true, progressive man of peace and international law and
human rights will emerge . . . keep in mind that as a US Senate candidate in
2004 he threatened missile strikes against Iran [2], and winning that election
apparently did not put him in touch with his inner peacenik. He�s been
threatening Iran ever since.
The world is in terrible shape. I don�t think I have to
elucidate on that remark. How nice, how marvelously nice it would be to have an
American president who was infused with progressive values and political
courage. Just imagine what could be done. Like a quick and complete exit from
Iraq. You can paint the picture as well as I can.
With his popularity Obama could get away with almost
anything, but he�ll probably continue to play it safe. Or what may be more
precise, he�ll continue to be himself, which, apparently, is a committed
centrist. He�s not really against the war. Not like you and I are. During Obama�s
first four years in the White House, the United States will not leave Iraq. I
doubt that he�d allow a complete withdrawal even in a second term. Has he ever
unequivocally called the war illegal and immoral? A crime against humanity? Why
is he so close to Colin Powell? Does he not know of Powell�s despicable role in
the war? And retaining George W. Bush�s Defense Secretary, Robert Gates, a man
against whom it would not be difficult to draw up charges of war crimes? Will
he also find a place for Rumsfeld? And Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, a
supporter of the war, to run the Homeland Security department? And General
James Jones, a former NATO commander [sic], who wants to �win� in Iraq and
Afghanistan, and who backed John McCain, as his national security adviser?
Jones is on the Board of Directors of the Boeing Corporation and Chevron Oil.
Out of what dark corner of Obama�s soul does all this come?
As Noam Chomsky recently pointed out, the election of an
indigenous person (Evo Morales) in Bolivia and a progressive person
(Jean-Bertrand Aristide) in Haiti were more historic than the election of
Barack Obama.
He�s not really against torture either. Not like you and I
are. No one will be punished for using or ordering torture. No one will be
impeached because of torture. Michael Ratner, president of the Center for
Constitutional Rights, says that prosecuting Bush officials is necessary to set
future anti-torture policy. �The only way to prevent this from happening again
is to make sure that those who were responsible for the torture program pay the
price for it. I don�t see how we regain our moral stature by allowing those who
were intimately involved in the torture programs to simply walk off the stage
and lead lives where they are not held accountable.� [3]
As president, Obama cannot remain silent and do nothing,
otherwise he will inherit the war crimes of Bush and Cheney and become a war
criminal himself. Closing the Guantanamo hellhole means nothing at all if the
prisoners are simply moved to other torture dungeons. If Obama is truly against
torture, why does he not declare that after closing Guantanamo the inmates will
be tried in civilian courts in the US or resettled in countries where they
clearly face no risk of torture? And simply affirm that his administration will
faithfully abide by the 1984 Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment, of which the United States is a signatory, and
which states: �The term �torture� means any act by which severe pain or
suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person
for such purposes as obtaining information or a confession . . . inflicted by
or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public
official or any other person acting in an official capacity.�
The convention affirms that: �No exceptional circumstances
whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political
stability or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of
torture.�
Instead, Obama has appointed former CIA official John O.
Brennan as an adviser on intelligence matters and co-leader of his intelligence
transition team. Brennan has called �rendition� -- the kidnap-and-torture
program carried out under the Clinton and Bush administrations -- a �vital tool,�
and praised the CIA�s interrogation techniques for providing �lifesaving�
intelligence. [4]
Obama may prove to be as big a disappointment as Nelson Mandela,
who did painfully little to improve the lot of the masses of South Africa while
turning the country over to the international forces of globalization. I make
this comparison not because both men are black, but because both produced such
great expectations in their home country and throughout the world. Mandela was
freed from prison on the assumption of the Apartheid leaders that he would
become president and pacify the restless black population while ruling as a
non-radical, free-market centrist without undue threat to white privilege. It�s
perhaps significant that in his autobiography he declines to blame the CIA for
his capture in 1962 even though the evidence to support this is compelling. [5]
It appears that Barack Obama made a similar impression upon the American power
elite who vetted him in many fundraising and other meetings and smoothed the
way for his highly unlikely ascendancy from obscure state senator to the
presidency in four years. The financial support from the corporate world to sell
�Brand Obama� was extraordinary.
Another comparison might be with Tony Blair. The Tories
could never have brought in university fees or endless brutal wars, but New
Labour did. The Republicans would have had a very difficult time bringing back
the draft, but I can see Obama reinstating it, accompanied by a suitable
slogan, some variation of �Yes, we can!�
I do hope I�m wrong, about his past and about how he�ll rule
as president. I hope I�m very wrong.
Many people are calling for progressives to intensely lobby
the Obama administration, to exert pressure to bring out the �good Obama,�
force him to commit himself, hold him accountable. The bold reforms of
Roosevelt�s New Deal were spurred by widespread labor strikes and other
militant actions soon after the honeymoon period was over. At the moment I have
nothing better to offer than that. God help us.
Notes
1. Washington Post,
August 17, 2008
2. Chicago Tribune,
September 25, 2004
3. Associated Press,
November 17, 2008
4. New York Times,
October 3, 2008
5. Nelson Mandela, Long
Walk to Freedom (1994) p.278; William Blum, Rogue State, chapter 23, �How the CIA sent Nelson Mandela to
prison for 28 years�
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.�