| Obsession
with seeming unequivocal and the immovable has
been frequent in the Oval Office. During the
Vietnam War, such fixations were indifferent to
the fact that the war was losing the U.S.
government moral credibility around the world.
But from the outset, Lyndon Johnson invoked
credibility as an argument for staying the
course. "If we are driven from the field in
Vietnam, then no nation can ever again have the
same confidence in American promises, or in
American protection," President Johnson said
on July 28, 1965. Early the next year, when the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee heard
testimony from a legendary foreign-policy savant,
there was this exchange with a senator from Iowa:
Senator Bourke Hickenlooper: "Now, there
are problems facing us and others.... How we
disengage ourselves without losing a tremendous
amount of face or position in various areas of
the world." George Kennan: "Senator, I
think precisely the question, the consideration
that you have just raised is the central one that
we have to think about; and it seems to me, as I
have said here, that a precipitate, sudden, and
unilateral withdrawal would not be warranted by
circumstances now."
Thirty-eight years later, in a Time cover
story headlined "No Easy Options," the
magazine noted that "calls for a pullout
could increase" and then swiftly put its
editorial foot down in the penultimate paragraph:
"Foreign policy luminaries from both parties
say a precipitous U.S. withdrawal would cripple
American credibility, doom reform in the Arab
world and turn Iraq into a playground for
terrorists and the armies of neighboring states
like Iran and Syria." The consensus range of
alternatives would need to stay within the bounds
of plunging deeper into a bloody vortex of war.
For its several million readers, the nation's
largest-circulation newsmagazine summed up with a
question and a ready answer: "So when can
the U.S. walk away? After last week's eruptions,
the most this administration -- or, should Kerry
win in November, the next one -- can hope for is
that some kind of elected Iraqi government will
eventually emerge from the wreckage, at which
point the U.S. could conceivably reduce the
number of its troops significantly. But getting
there requires a commitment of at least several
more months of American blood and treasure."
Hedge words were plentiful: "the
most" that could be hoped for was that
"some kind" of elected Iraqi government
would "eventually emerge," at which
time the United States "could
conceivably" manage to "reduce"
its troop level in Iraq "significantly"
although even that vague hope necessitated a
commitment of "at least several more
months" of Americans killing and dying. But
in several more months, predictably, there would
still be no end in sight -- just another blank
check for more "blood and treasure," on
the installment plan.
"Quagmire" is a word made famous
during the Vietnam War. The invasion of Iraq and
the subsequent occupation came out of a very
different history, but there were some chilling
parallels. One of them was that the editorial
positions of major U.S. newspapers had an echo
like a dirge.
At one end of the limited spectrum, the Wall
Street Journal could not abide any doubts. Its
editorials explained, tirelessly, that the Iraq
invasion was Good and the occupation was Good --
and those who doubted were fools and knaves (the
rough modern equivalent of LBJ's "Nervous
Nellies"). In 2004 the Journal editorial
writers were fervently promoting a "war on
terrorism" version of what used to be called
the domino theory. Ultimately disproved by actual
events, that theory -- put forward as a momentous
fact by supporters of the Vietnam War during the
1960s and early '70s -- insisted that a U.S.
defeat in Vietnam would set the dominos falling
through Southeast Asia until the entire region
and beyond went Communist. The day after the
United Nations' Baghdad headquarters blew up in
August 2003, the Wall Street Journal closed its
latest gung-ho editorial by touting a quote from
General John Abizaid: "If we can't be
successful here, then we won't be successful in
the global war on terror. It is going to be hard.
It is going to be long and sometimes bloody, but
we just have to stick with it."
On the same day, the lead editorial of the New
York Times insisted: "The Bush
administration has to commit sufficient
additional resources, and, if necessary,
additional troops." The Times went on to
describe efforts in Iraq as "now the most
important American foreign policy endeavor."
In other words, the occupation that resulted from
an entirely illegitimate invasion should be seen
as entirely legitimate.
During the late 1960s, concerns about a
"quagmire" grew at powerful media
institutions. Following several years of
assurances from the Johnson administration about
the Vietnam War, rosy scenarios for military
success were in disrepute. But here's a revealing
fact: In early 1968, the Boston Globe conducted a
survey of thirty-nine major U.S. daily newspapers
and found that not a single one had editorialized
in favor of U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam. While
millions of Americans were demanding an immediate
pullout, such a concept was still viewed as
extremely unrealistic by the editorial boards of
big daily papers -- including the liberal New
York Times and Washington Post.
After more than a year of U.S. occupation
warfare in Iraq, the editorial positions of major
dailies were much more conformist than the
American public. In mid-spring 2004, a Wall
Street Journal/NBC poll was showing that
"one in four Americans say troops should
leave Iraq as soon as possible and another 30
percent say they should come home within 18
months." But as usual, when it came to
rejection of the latest war, the media
establishment lagged way behind the populace.
Despite sometimes-withering media criticism of
the Bush administration's foreign policy, all of
the sizable newspapers steered clear of urging
withdrawal. Many favored sending in even more
troops. On May 7, 2004, Editor & Publisher
headlined a column by the magazine's editor this
way: "When Will the First Major Newspaper
Call for a Pullout in Iraq?"
In September 2003, trying to justify
Washington's refusal to let go of the occupation
of Iraq, Colin Powell had used the language of a
venture capitalist: "Since the United States
and its coalition partners have invested a great
deal of political capital, as well as financial
resources, as well as the lives of our young men
and women -- and we have a large force there now
-- we can't be expected to suddenly just step
aside." Over a span of thirteen months,
there was a doubling of the number of Americans
who viewed the Iraq war as a "mistake"
-- 24 percent when the invasion began, 48 percent
in April 2004. In late June, a USA
Today/CNN/Gallup poll found 54 percent said so.
"It is the first time since Vietnam that a
majority of Americans has called a major
deployment of U.S. forces a mistake," USA
Today reported. Given the swing of public
sentiment against the war, the media's shortage
of high-profile policy advocates calling for
swift withdrawal of U.S. troops was notable.
In effect, the war had to go on because the
war had to go on -- widely promoted as the least
bad option, in contrast to the taboo of
withdrawal. Meanwhile, a prerequisite for any
Baghdad government to exist would be that it
sufficiently satisfied the administration in
Washington.
The fact that John Negroponte's diplomatic
resume included a stint in Vietnam got a positive
spin at his confirmation hearing to be ambassador
to the new U.S.-assembled Iraq government.
"Senator after senator praised Mr.
Negroponte for his willingness to take on a tough
assignment after a long career that began as a
junior Foreign Service officer in Saigon during
the Vietnam War, a posting many said might
prepare him for Iraq," the New York Times
recounted. He had gone on to be the U.S.
ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985. When
Negroponte took the oath for his new post in late
June 2004, Larry Birns at the Council on
Hemispheric Affairs commented: "Rather than
heading for Iraq, Ambassador Negroponte should be
facing proceedings concerning his sanctioning of
Honduran death squads, payoffs to venal Honduran
military officials, violations of environmental
procedures relating to a supply road construction
project he was supervising, and a cover-up of the
full scale of human rights violations that
occurred in Honduras during his watch." But
Negroponte flew off to Baghdad unimpeded by his
record in Tegucigalpa.
Pretense and realism were at war. Washington
was preparing to hand over power to Iraqis while
steadfastly refusing to do so; putting an Iraqi
"face" on authority in Iraq while
retaining ultimate authority in Iraq; striving
for Iraqis to take up the burden of their
country's national security while insisting that
military control must remain in Uncle Sam's
hands.
To some readers, the headline across the top
of USA Today's front page one day in June 2004
must have been reassuring: "New Leader Asks
U.S. to Stay." The banner headline was a
classic of occupation puppetry and media
gimmickry. Iraq's "new leader" Iyad
Allawi -- selected and installed as prime
minister by the U.S. government -- had shown
distinct reliability over the years. The USA
Today story made only fleeting reference to
Allawi's longtime U.S. entanglement, identifying
him as "a Shiite close to the CIA." The
contradiction did not seem to trouble American
media outlets, though they sometimes openly
fretted that Iraqis might not be so accepting.
Allawi "is the secretary general of the
Iraqi National Accord, an exile group that has
received funds from the Central Intelligence
Agency," the New York Times reported.
"His ties with the CIA and his closeness to
the United States could become an issue in a
country where public opinion has grown almost
universally hostile to the Americans." A
separate Times article noted that Allawi
"lived abroad for 30 years and is not well
known in Iraq." All in all, by Washington's
lights, the man was eminently qualified to be
Iraq's "new leader." And his superb
judgment was immediately apparent: New leader
asks U.S. to stay!
Major U.S. news media and politicians refused
to challenge the Iraq war along the lines that
activist historian Howard Zinn explored in 1967:
"The only way we can stop the mass killing
of civilians -- of women and children -- is to
stop the war itself. We have grown accustomed to
the distinction between 'ordinary' acts of war
and 'atrocities,' and so came a whole host of
international conventions setting up rules for
mass slaughter. It was a gigantic fraud, enabling
the normal horror of war to be accepted if
unaccompanied by 'atrocities.' The Vietnam War,
by its nature, does not permit this distinction.
In Vietnam, the war itself is an atrocity. Since
the killing of civilians is inevitable in our
military actions in Vietnam, it cannot be called
an 'accident' on the ground that nobody intends
to kill civilians. The B-52 crews, the Marines
and GIs moving through the villages, don't plan
to kill civilians, but when bombs are dropped on
fishing villages and sampans, when grenades are
dropped down tunnels, when artillery is poured
into a hamlet, when no one can tell the
difference between a farmer and a Vietcong and
the verdict is guilty until proved innocent, then
the mass killing of civilians is inevitable. It
is not deliberate. But neither is it an accident.
It is not part of the war and so discardable. It
is the war."
In the midst of a deepening counterinsurgency
war, with the Vietnamese population largely
hostile to the U.S. military presence, the White
House and editorialists insisted that withdrawal
of soldiers from Vietnam was an irresponsible
notion, a bumper-sticker idea lacking in realism.
From the start, the pullout option was
stigmatized as beyond reasonable discussion.
Uncounted numbers of erudite commentators made
fervent declarations very much like what New York
Times columnist C. L. Sulzberger wrote in January
1963: "Come what may, we cannot afford to be
driven ignominiously from Vietnam, where we have
committed so much prestige, interest and treasure
and are beginning tangibly to commit our
blood." Two years later, moderate
accommodation to more war was passing for
opposition: "In its editorials and in the
opinions of its major columnists," Daniel
Hallin writes, "the Times broke sharply with
the administration early in 1965, calling for
negotiation rather than escalation and decrying
the secrecy that surrounded administration
policy. But it never broke with the assumption
that the cause of the war was Communist
aggression and that -- to quote [James] Reston --
'the political and strategic consequences of
defeat would [be] serious for the free world all
over Asia.' The debate of 1965 ... was a debate
over tactics: there were some who favored
escalation, some who favored negotiation, but
very few in Congress, the press, the
administration, and the 'establishment' generally
who doubted that the United States had, in one
way or another, to preserve South Vietnam as an
outpost of the Free World."
"Anti-war" politicians had ways of
being circumspect. "We must face the fact
that there is no quick or easy answer to
Vietnam," Senator Robert F. Kennedy said on
April 27, 1966; even when he ran for president in
the spring of 1968, RFK did not support quick
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam.
The mainstream press went with the war flow.
Countercurrents were mild. In August 1966, the
owner of the Washington Post huddled with a
writer in line to take charge of the newspaper's
editorial page: "We agreed that the Post
ought to work its way out of the very supportive
editorial position it had taken, but that we
couldn't be precipitate; we had to move away
gradually from where we had been," Katharine
Graham was to write (unapologetically) in her
autobiography. Many years of horrendous tragedies
resulted from such unwillingness to "be
precipitate." During the late '60s, after
several years of assurances from the Johnson
administration about the Vietnam War, rosy
scenarios for military success were wilting. But
the public emphasis was on developing a winnable
strategy -- not ending the war. Pull out the U.S.
troops? The idea was unthinkable.
"Thus far," Zinn wrote in 1967,
"almost all of the nationally known critics
of our Vietnam policy -- perceptive as they are
-- have been reluctant to call for the withdrawal
of the United States from Vietnam." He
believed that frequently "it is because
these critics consider total military withdrawal,
while logical and right, 'too extreme' as a
tactical position, and therefore unpalatable to
the public and unlikely to be adopted as national
policy." The dynamic included journalists,
politicians and academics. "Scholars, who
pride themselves on speaking their minds, often
engage in a form of self-censorship which is
called 'realism.' To be 'realistic' in dealing
with a problem is to work only among the
alternatives which the most powerful in society
put forth. It is as if we are all confined to a,
b, c, or d in a multiple-choice test, when we
know there is another possible answer. American
society, although it has more freedom of
expression than most societies in the world, thus
sets limits beyond which respectable people are
not supposed to think or speak. So far, too much
of the debate on Vietnam has observed these
limits."
With the Iraq war in its second year, the
option of withdrawal was often derided with the
pejorative "cut and run." The phrase
had currency among a cross section of the war's
supporters. Terry Anderson, the former Associated
Press reporter who'd endured a six-year ordeal as
a hostage in Lebanon until 1991, wrote an op-ed
piece in spring 2004 declaring that the United
States was duty-bound to stay in Iraq: "We
cannot cut and run, as we did in Lebanon,
Somalia, Sudan and Vietnam." The reference
to Vietnam was remarkable. The U.S. war there
lasted a dozen years, causing fifty-eight
thousand American deaths in Vietnam and upward of
two million Vietnamese deaths. The magnitude of
the bombardment was beyond comprehension.
"Before we finished in Vietnam,"
according to author Ronald Bruce St. John, who
was a U.S. serviceman in the war, "we had
dropped more bombs on Indochina than had been
dropped on the remainder of the world in all the
wars to that time." It's difficult to
imagine what more Anderson wished the U.S.
government had done to Vietnam in order to avoid
the retrospective accusation that it had
"cut and run."
When Anderson's essay appeared in the Wall
Street Journal, the cover story of the latest
Newsweek was "Crisis in Iraq: The Vietnam
Factor." Near the top of the lead article,
assistant managing editor Evan Thomas wrote that
the president "did surprise reporters by
appearing before them after meeting with the
family of Army infantryman Chris Hill, killed by
a bomb in the Iraq town of Fallujah. 'We've got
to stay the course and we will stay the course,'
said Bush, who appeared teary-eyed." The
rest of the paragraph also spun ahead like a war
press agent's dream: "Hill's father-in-law,
Douglas Cope, had not been eager for the meeting
with the president because, he told Newsweek, he
was concerned that the encounter would be
'political.' But Cope reported that Bush was
emotional and that the president told the dead
soldier's family, 'I promise this job will be
finished over there.' Cope added: 'That really
was what I wanted to hear. We cannot leave this
like Vietnam.'"
Newsweek's Thomas wrote: "Not a quagmire,
not yet. But the atmospherics have a distinctly
familiar feel. At a recent Washington dinner
party attended by some famous names from the
foreign-policy establishment and the media elite,
the conversation went something like this."
The article proceeded to paraphrase the
discourse:
Former Senior Administration Official: I had
real doubts about going in there... Echoes Around
the Table: Me too, me too, but... Chorus: But we
have to stay the course. We can't cut and run.
Lone Voice (who has imbibed one more, or perhaps
one less, glass of wine than the others): Why
not? Chorus: American credibility!
"The exact same conversation," the
article added, "could have been heard in a
dozen Georgetown salons on almost any given
weekend night from about 1966 to the winter of
1968, when the establishment decided that it was
time to get out, one way or the other."
While mocking the lemming-like trudge for war,
the Newsweek spread also participated in it. And
there was an unnoted irony in the article's claim
that "the establishment decided that it was
time to get out" of Vietnam in the winter of
1968; after all, the Vietnam War went on for
several years after that while the United States
continued to make war in Southeast Asia. As would
be the case in 2004 with U.S. forces in Iraq, the
calcified wisdom of politics and media insisted
that withdrawal was not practical. Even when
"the establishment decided that it was time
to get out," the elites were determined to
take their time; much more carnage would have to
ensue. A key technique for keeping the war going
was to blast those who suggested otherwise as
less-than-honorable people eager to abandon
sacred obligations. At the start of what turned
out to be his last spring as president, Lyndon
Johnson traveled to Minneapolis and delivered a
speech that accused war opponents of wanting to
"tuck our tail and violate our
commitments." Advocates of withdrawal from
Vietnam, the president declared, would "cut
and run."
For Newsweek in 2004, the way to close the
main story of a twenty-three-page "Vietnam
Factor" spread was to quote the father of a
U.S. Army captain killed a year earlier in Iraq
-- "If my son were here today, and I wasn't
disabled, we'd both put our uniforms on and say,
'Where to?'" -- and then the dead man's
mother. Her final words: "I don't think you
can go into a place and start something so
significant and just walk out... As family
members of soldiers serving in wartime, we have
to have faith. It's not blind faith, but it's a
deep faith."
That set up one last paragraph, from
Newsweek's reportorial voice, telling readers
what it all meant with a generalization that
winked at the further war to come in Iraq:
"It is such faith that sustains Americans
and drives them forward. We do best when we
defend freedom without trampling it, defeat
tyranny without becoming tyrannical, and
understand what is worth the blood of our
children and what is not. That is the true lesson
of Vietnam."
In fact, any number of "true
lessons" of Vietnam could be cited --
including many diametrically opposed to each
other. For Americans, the Rorschach qualities of
the U.S. experience in Vietnam made it
susceptible to all kinds of conclusions. If the
"lessons" were about trying to make war
better next time, then those who had drawn those
particular conclusions were inclined to support
letting others suffer the consequences. When it
became evident during the first few months of
2004 that the American troops in Iraq were
fighting a counterinsurgency war against forces
gaining strength, polls showed the U.S. public
roughly split -- the exact numbers, of course,
varied depending on how questions were phrased --
about whether the continuing war was worthwhile.
A month into the spring, assessing a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll and a Gallup poll,
the Wall Street Journal noted: "Both surveys
found there is significant support for sending
more troops to Iraq -- a sentiment that the
Gallup poll found actually has grown as the
problems have gotten worse." A confluence of
political tendencies, including many conservative
and liberal commentators, saw increasing the
troop levels in Iraq as the least bad option;
thus, it seemed that the biggest "lesson of
Vietnam" might be that no crucial lesson had
been learned.
As for what was actually going on in Iraq, a
U.S. media focus on the trials and tribulations
of the occupiers had the continuing effect of
keeping at a psychological distance the people
living and dying in their own country. Seen
through the lenses of American media and
politics, Iraq's big problem was that it was a
problem for America.
"Regime change, occupation,
nation-building -- in a word, empire -- are a
bloody business," George Will wrote.
"Now Americans must steel themselves for
administering the violence necessary to disarm or
defeat Iraq's urban militias, which replicate the
problem of modern terrorism -- violence that has
slipped the leash of states."
For the horrors that continued to result from
unleashing the Pentagon's violence, the
rationales were inexhaustible. "There are
thugs and terrorists in Iraq who are trying to
shake our will," presidential spokesman
Scott McClellan told reporters. "And the
president is firmly committed to showing resolve
and strength." With many Iraqis, liberated
by the Americans, now taking up arms to liberate
themselves from the Americans, the major players
of the administration in Washington were on
message. A day later, the man running the
Pentagon echoed the White House. "We're
facing a test of will," Donald Rumsfeld
said, "and we will meet that test." The
declaration was newsworthy enough for the main
headline in the New York Times: "Iraqi
Uprising Spreads; Rumsfeld Sees It as 'Test of
Will.'"
Donning the royal "we" mantle of the
"civilized world," President Bush told
a televised news conference: "Now is the
time, and Iraq is the place, in which the enemies
of the civilized world are testing the will of
the civilized world. We must not waver." The
crucial need was to not back down: "It's the
intentions of the enemy to shake our will. That's
what they want to do. They want us to leave. And
we're not going to leave. We're going to do the
job." New York Times columnist Paul Krugman
commented: "One of the real motives for the
invasion of Iraq was to give the world a
demonstration of American power. It's a measure
of how badly things have gone that now we're told
we can't leave because that would be a
demonstration of American weakness."
The writer James Baldwin challenged our desire
to deny responsibility -- what he called
"the fraudulent and expedient nature of the
American innocence which has always been able to
persuade itself that it does not know what it
knows too well." Do we really not know that
bombs financed by our tax dollars are turning
life into death? Aren't we at least dimly aware
that -- no matter how smooth and easy the news
media and elected officials try to make it for us
-- in faraway places there are people not so
different than us who are being destroyed by what
journalists and politicians glibly depict as
necessary war?
Back to Top
3.
BLAIR'S ALLIANCE WITH BUSH BOMBED
|
BY
Robert Fisk
|
| |
| "If
you bomb our cities," Osama bin
Laden said in a recent videotape,
"we will bomb yours."' It was
clear Britain would be a target ever
since British Prime Minister Tony Blair
decided to join President Bush's
"war on terror" and his
invasion of Iraq. We had, as they say,
been warned. The G-8 summit was obviously
chosen, well in advance, as Attack Day. It's
no use Blair telling us, "They will
never succeed in destroying what we hold
dear." They are not trying to
destroy "what we hold dear."
They are trying to get public opinion to
force Blair to withdraw from Iraq, out of
his alliance with the United States, out
of his adherence to Bush's policies in
the Middle East. The Spanish paid the
price for their support for Bush -- and
Spain's subsequent retreat from Iraq
proved that the Madrid bombings achieved
their objectives -- while the Australians
were made to suffer in Bali.
It is easy for Blair to call
yesterday's bombings
"barbaric"' -- they were -- but
what were the civilian deaths of the
Anglo American invasion of Iraq in 2003,
the children torn apart by cluster bombs,
the innocent Iraqis gunned down at
American military checkpoints. When they
die, it is "collateral damage";
when "we" die it is
"barbaric terrorism."
If we are fighting insurgency in Iraq
what makes us believe insurgency won't
come to us? One thing is certain: If
Blair really believes that by
"fighting terrorism"' in Iraq
we could more efficiently protect
Britain, this argument is no longer
valid.
To time these bombs with the G-8
summit, when the world was concentrating
on Britain, was not a stroke of genius.
You don't need a Ph.D. to choose another
Bush-Blair handshake to close down a
capital city with explosives and massacre
its citizens. The G-8 summit was
announced so far in advance that he gave
the bombers all the time they needed to
prepare. A coordinated system of attacks
of the kind we saw yesterday takes weeks
to plan; we can forget the idiotic
fantasy these were timed to coincide with
the Olympic decision. Bin Laden and his
supporters don't set up an operation like
this on the off chance that France will
lose its bid to host the Games. Al-Qaida
does not play football.
No, this would have taken months -- to
choose safe houses, prepare explosives,
identify targets, ensure security, choose
the bombers, to plan the communications.
Coordination and sophisticated
planning -- and the usual utter
indifference toward the lives of the
innocent -- are characteristic of
al-Qaida.
Let us reflect on the fact that
yesterday -- the opening of the G-8 --
represented a total failure of our
security services. These are the same
intelligence "experts" who
claim there were weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq when there were none
but who utterly failed to uncover a
months-long plot to kill Londoners.
Trains, planes, buses, cars, metros.
Transportation appears to be the science
of al-Qaida's dark arts. No one can
search 3 million London commuters every
day. No one can stop every tourist.
Then come the Muslims of Britain, who
have long been awaiting this nightmare.
Now every one of our Muslims becomes the
usual suspect, the man or woman with
brown eyes, the man with the beard, the
woman in the scarf, the boy with the
worry beads, the girl who says she's been
racially abused.
I remember, crossing the Atlantic on
9/11 -- my plane turned around off
Ireland when the United States closed its
airspace -- how the aircraft purser and I
toured the cabins to see if we could
identify any suspicious passengers. I
found about a dozen, of course, totally
innocent men who had brown eyes or long
beards or who looked at me with
"hostility." And sure enough,
in just a few seconds, bin Laden turned
nice, liberal, friendly Robert into an
anti-Arab racist.
And this is part of the point of
yesterday's bombings: to divide British
Muslims from British non-Muslims (let us
not mention the name Christians), to
encourage the very kind of racism that
Blair claims to resent.
But here's the problem. To go on
pretending that Britain's enemies want to
destroy "what we hold dear"
encourages racism; what we are
confronting here is a specific, direct,
centralized attack on London as a result
of a "war on terror" that Blair
has locked us into. Just before the U.S.
presidential elections, bin Laden asked:
"Why do we not attack Sweden?"
Lucky Sweden. No Osama bin Laden there.
And no Tony Blair.
Back
to Top
4. THE PRICE OF
OCCUPATION
|
By
Tariq
Ali
|
| |
| During
the last phase of the Troubles,
the IRA targeted mainland
Britain: it came close to blowing
up Margaret Thatcher and her
cabinet in Brighton. Some years
later a missile was fired at No
10. London's financial quarter
was also targeted. There was no
secret as to the identity of the
organisation that carried out the
hits or its demands. And all this
happened despite the various
Prevention of Terrorism Acts
passed by the Commons. The
bombers who targeted London
yesterday are anonymous. It is
assumed that those who carried
out these attacks are linked to
al-Qaida. We simply do not know.
Al-Qaida is not the only
terrorist group in existence. It
has rivals within the Muslim
diaspora. But it is safe to
assume that the cause of these
bombs is the unstinting support
given by New Labour and its prime
minister to the US wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
One of the arguments deployed
by Ken Livingstone, the mayor of
London, when he appealed to Tony
Blair not to support the war in
Iraq was prescient: "An
assault on Iraq will inflame
world opinion and jeopardise
security and peace everywhere.
London, as one of the major world
cities, has a great deal to lose
from war and a lot to gain from
peace, international cooperation
and global stability."
Most Londoners (as the rest of
the country) were opposed to the
Iraq war. Tragically, they have
suffered the blow and paid the
price for the re-election of
Blair and a continuation of the
war.
Ever since 9/11, I have been
arguing that the "war
against terror" is immoral
and counterproductive. It
sanctions the use of state terror
- bombing raids, torture,
countless civilian deaths in
Afghanistan and Iraq - against
Islamo-anarchists whose numbers
are small, but whose reach is
deadly. The solution then, as
now, is political, not military.
The British ruling elite
understood this perfectly well in
the case of Ireland. Security
measures, anti-terror laws rushed
through parliament, identity
cards, a curtailment of civil
liberties, will not solve the
problem. If anything, they will
push young Muslims in the
direction of mindless violence.
The real solution lies in
immediately ending the occupation
of Iraq, Afghanistan and
Palestine. Just because these
three wars are reported
sporadically and mean little to
the everyday lives of most
Europeans does not mean the anger
and bitterness they arouse in the
Muslim world and its diaspora is
insignificant. As long as western
politicians wage their wars and
their colleagues in the Muslim
world watch in silence, young
people will be attracted to the
groups who carry out random acts
of revenge.
At the beginning of the G8,
Blair suggested that
"poverty was the cause of
terrorism". It is not so.
The principal cause of this
violence is the violence being
inflicted on the people of the
Muslim world. And unless this is
recognised, the horrors will
continue.
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5. COSTS PROMPT
MANY WOMEN TO SKIMP ON
HEALTH CARE, SURVEY FINDS
|
By
Ely
Portillo
|
| |
| WASHINGTON
- A quarter of U.S. women
say they're skipping
doctor visits and
delaying or skipping on
buying prescribed drugs
because they can't afford
them. Women are also
passing on preventive
care such as osteoporosis
tests, according to a
survey released Thursday
by the Kaiser Family
Foundation, a
health-advocacy group.
Even women who go to
their doctors often
aren't talking about
lifestyle concerns such
as smoking, exercise,
reproductive health and
sexually transmitted
diseases, the study
found.
Twenty-seven percent
of women under the
Medicare age of 65 told
Kaiser that they'd
skipped or delayed care
that they thought they
needed in the prior year.
Among uninsured women,
the figure soared to
two-thirds. One-fifth of
all women said they
hadn't bought at least
one prescribed drug
because they felt they
couldn't afford it.
The findings are based
on a representative
sample of 2,766 women
nationwide.
The numbers track an
earlier Kaiser study in
2001 in which 25 percent
of women under Medicare
age and 59 percent of
uninsured women said
they'd delayed or skipped
care because of the cost.
Amy Niles, president
of the National Women's
Health Resource Center,
blamed cost - and lack of
time - for women skimping
on their health care. Her
group sponsored a similar
study last year.
In the latest Kaiser
study, only 55 percent of
women said they'd talked
to their doctor about a
lumped-together category
called "diet,
exercise and
nutrition" in the
past three years. Less
than a third of all women
of reproductive age said
they'd talked with a
doctor about their sexual
history, sexually
transmitted diseases and
HIV/AIDS.
According to
researcher Susan Sered,
who did interviews for
the study, one of the
most frequent
conversations women
reported having with
doctors was about paying
for care.
"Money was
actually replacing things
like lifestyle in
discussions with
doctors," she said.
Paula Johnson,
director of the Mary
Horrigan Connors Center
for Women's Health and
Gender Biology in Boston,
which participated in the
study, said preventive
care is suffering. The
study found that only 38
percent of women age 50
and older said they'd had
a colon cancer test in
the prior two years and
only 37 percent said
they'd had an
osteoporosis test.
"Women are not
really being worked with
by their health care
providers around these
prevention issues,"
Johnson said.
To read the Kaiser
study, go to www.kff.org/womenshealth/whp070705pkg.cfm.
Back to Top
6. DEAR GEORGE
W. BUSH
|
By
Ralph
Nader
|
| |
| On
June 28, 2005 you
addressed the nation in
prime time about the
situation in Iraq. You
called the casualties,
destruction and suffering
in that country
"horrifying and
real." Then you
declared: "I know
Americans ask the
question: Is the
sacrifice worth it? It is
worth it," you
asserted and went on to
explain your position. My
question to you is this:
"Who is doing the
sacrificing on the US
side besides our troops
and their families and
other Americans whose
dire necessities and
protections cannot be met
due to the diversion of
huge spending for the
Iraq war and
occupation?"
Let's start with the
wealthy. In the midst of
the ravages of war, you
gave them a double tax
cut, pushing these
enormous windfalls
through Congress at the
same time as
concentrations of wealth
among the top one percent
richest were
accelerating.
You also cut taxes for
the large corporations
that benefit most from
arcane, detailed tax
legislation. Many of
these corporations have
profited greatly from the
tens of billions of
dollars in contracts
which you have handed
them.
Companies like
Halliburton, from which
Vice President Dick
Cheney receives handsome
retirement benefits, keep
getting multi-billion
contracts even though the
Pentagon auditors and
investigations by Rep.
Henry Waxman have shown
vast waste,
non-performances, and not
a little corruption. Not
much corporate sacrifice
there.
You and Mr. Cheney
need to be reminded that
your predecessors
pressed, during wartime,
for surcharges on
corporate profits of the
largest corporations. As
Rep. Major R. Owens
pointed out recently in
introducing such
legislation (H.R. 1804),
the precedents for such
an equitable policy, at a
time of growing federal
deficits, occurred during
World War I, World II,
the Korean and Vietnam
wars. Ponder the
difference. Past
Presidents increased
taxes on the large
companies as a way of
spreading out the
economic sacrifice a
little. Instead, during
record, even staggering
big corporate profits,
you reduce their
contributions to the US
Treasury and military
expenditures.
Where is the presence
of the sons and daughters
of the top political and
economic rulers in the
Iraq theater, where they
can see the suffering of
millions of innocent
Iraqi people? You can
count on the fingers of
one hand the number of
family members serving
over there among the 535
members of Congress, and
the White House. No
specific data is
available for the
families of the CEOs of
the Fortune 500. But we
can guess that very few
are stationed in and
around the Sunni triangle
these days. Can't get
much tennis, golf or
sailing in, if that were
the case. How often have
you extolled the
patriotic sacrifice of
members of the armed
forces, the Reserves and
the National Guard? How
often have you praised
their work as the highest
form of service to their
nation, its security and
future. Well, what about
your daughters' having
this sublime opportunity
to be on the receiving
end of their father's
encomiums? Remember Major
John Eisenhower, among
others.
In an earlier
unanswered letter, I
urged you and Mr. Cheney
to announce that you
would reject the tens of
thousands of dollars in
personal tax cuts that
passage of your tax cut
legislation for the
wealthy would have
accorded both of your
fortunes. Recusing
yourselves would have
conveyed the message that
it is unseemly to sign
your own personal tax
reduction. It would also
have furthered the
principle of the moral
authority to govern.
Well, you did sign
your own tax cut, while
tens of thousands of
Americans had to leave
their employment and
small businesses and go
to Iraq at a reduced pay
and worrying about
inadequate protective
equipment and
insufficient training.
Those rulers who send
young men and women into
undeclared wars on
platforms of
fabrications, deceptions,
and cover-ups do not have
proper incentives for
responsible and effective
behavior and politics.
Some degrees of shared
sacrifice provide prudent
restraint against the
manipulations and
recklessness of
politicians and the
supporting avarice of
their fellow oligarchs.
Without some measure
of sacrifice, programs
are miss-designed to
pursue stateless
terrorists in ways and
areas that actually
produce recruitment
opportunities for more
such terrorists. Note
your own CIA Director
Porter Goss's testimony
before the Senate earlier
this year. But the
resulting warmongering,
where the
"intelligence and
the facts" are fixed
to the policy, became
unsavory re-election
strategies in 2004.
You have often told us
that you want to nominate
federal judges who
believe in a strict
construction of the
Constitution. How about a
President who believes in
the strict constitutional
authority of Article One,
Section Eight which gives
Congress and Congress
alone the power to
declare war? Requiring a
declaration of war,
together with legislation
requiring, upon such a
declaration, the
conscription of all
eligible members of
Congressional and White
House families would
assure that only
"unavoidable and
necessary wars" are
declared and fought.
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