13 questions for President
George W. Bush
Doubts about America’s anti-terrorism crusade
Martin A. Lee
The Ethical Spectacle
http://www.spectacle.org/1001/lee.html
If we had an aggressive, independent press
corps in the United States, our national conversation about the terrorist
attacks that demolished the World Trade Center towers in New York and
damaged the Pentagon would be far more probing and informative. Here are
some examples of questions that reporters ought to be asking President
Bush:
1. Before the attacks in New York and
Washington, your administration quietly tolerated Saudi Arabian and
Pakistani military and financial aid for the Taliban regime, even though
it harbored terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. But now you say fighting
terrorism will be the main focus of your administration. By making
counter-terrorism the top priority in bilateral relations, aren’t you
signaling to abusive governments in Sudan, Indonesia, Turkey, and
elsewhere that they need not worry much about their human rights
performance as long as they join America’s anti-terrorist crusade? Will
you barter human rights violations like corporations trade pollution
credits? Will you condone, for example, the brutalization of Chechnya in
exchange for Russian participation in the "war against
terrorism"? Or will you send a message loud and clear to America’s
allies that they must not use the fight against terrorism as a cover for
waging repressive campaigns that smother democratic aspirations in their
own countries?
2. Terrorists finance their operations by
laundering money through offshore banks and other hot money outlets. Yet
your administration has undermined international efforts to crack down on
tax havens. Last May, you withdrew support for a comprehensive initiative
launched by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD),
which sought greater transparency in tax and banking practices. In the
wake of the September 11 massacre, will you reassess this decision and
support the OECD proposal, even if it means displeasing wealthy Americans
and campaign contributors who avoid paying taxes by hiding money in
offshore accounts?
3. Four months ago, U.S. officials
announced that Washington was giving $43 million to the Taliban for its
role in reducing the cultivation of opium poppies, despite the Taliban’s
heinous human rights record and its sheltering of Islamic terrorists of
many nationalities. Doesn’t this make the U.S. government guilty of
supporting a country that harbors terrorists? Do you think your obsession
with the "war on drugs" has distorted U.S. foreign policy in
Southwest Asia and other regions?
4. According to U.S., German, and Russian
intelligence sources, Osama bin Laden’s operatives have been trying to
acquire enriched uranium and other weapons-grade radioactive materials for
a nuclear bomb. There are reports that in 1993 bin Laden’s well-financed
organization tried to buy enriched uranium from poorly maintained Russian
facilities that lacked sufficient controls. Why has your administration
proposed cutting funds for a program to help safeguard nuclear materials
in the former Soviet Union?
5. On September 23rd, you announced plans
to make public a detailed analysis of the evidence gathered by U.S
intelligence and police agencies, which proves that Osama bin Laden and
his cohorts are guilty of the terrorist attacks in New York and the
Pentagon. But the next day your administration backpedaled. "As we
look through [the evidence]," explained Secretary of State Colin
Powell, "we can find areas that are unclassified and it will allow us
to share this information with the public. But most of it is
classified." Please explain this sudden flip-flop. How can we believe
what you say about fighting terrorism if your administration can’t make
its case publicly with sufficient evidence? How do you expect to win the
support of governments and people who otherwise might suspect
Washington’s motives, particularly some Muslim and Arab nations?
6. Exactly who is a terrorist, and who is
not? When the CIA was busy doling out an estimated $2 billion to support
the Afghan mujahadeen in the 1980s, Osama bin Laden and his colleagues
were hailed as anti-communist freedom fighters. During the cold war, U.S.
national security strategists, many of whom are riding top saddle once
again in your administration, didn’t view bin Laden’s fanatical
religious beliefs as diametrically opposed to western civilization. But
now bin Laden and his ilk are unabashed terrorists. Definitions of what
constitutes terror and terrorism seem to change with the times. Before he
became vice president, Dick Cheney and the U.S. State Department denounced
Nelson Mandela, leader of the African National Congress, as a terrorist.
Today Mandela, South Africa’s president emeritus, is considered a great
and dignified statesman. And what about Israeli prime minister Ariel
Sharon, who bears significant responsibility for the 1982 massacre of
1,800 innocents at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Lebanon. What
role will Sharon play in your crusade against international terrorism?
7. There’s been a lot of talk lately
about unshackling the CIA and lifting the alleged ban on CIA
assassinations. Many U.S. officials attribute the CIA ’s inability to
thwart the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington to rules that
supposedly have prohibited the CIA from utilizing gangsters, death squad
leaders, and other "unsavory" characters as sources and assets.
Why don’t you set the record straight, Mr. President, and acknowledge
there were always gaping loopholes in these rules, which allowed such
activity to continue unabated? It’s precisely this sort of dubious
activity enlisting unsavory characters to advance U.S. foreign policy
objectives that set the stage for tragic events on September 11th.
It’s hardly a secret that the CIA trained and financed Islamic
extremists to topple the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan. Some of the
same extremists supported by the CIA, most notably bin Laden, have since
turned their psychotic wrath against the United States. Instead of
rewarding the CIA with billions of additional dollars to fight terrorism,
shouldn’t you hold accountable those shortsighted and perilously naïve
U.S. intelligence officials who ran the covert operation in Afghanistan
that got us into this mess?
8. John Negroponte, the new U.S. ambassador
the United Nations, says he intends to build an international
anti-terrorist coalition. During the mid-1980s, Negroponte was involved in
covering up right-wing death squad activity and other human rights abuses
in Honduras when he served as ambassador to that country. Doesn’t
Negroponte’s role in aiding and abetting state terrorism in Central
America undermine the moral authority of the United States as it embarks
upon a crusade against international terrorism?
9. The attacks on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon brought home the frightening extent to which U.S.
citizens and installations are vulnerable to terrorist attacks. If
terrorists hit a nuclear power plant, it could result in an enormous
public health disaster. In the interest of protecting national security,
why haven’t you ordered the immediate phase-out of the 103 nuclear power
plants that are currently operating in the United States? Why doesn’t
your administration emphasize safe, renewable energy alternatives, such as
solar and wind power, which would not invite terrorism?
10. After years of successful lobbying
against rigorous safety procedures, the heads of the airline industry will
receive a multibillion-dollar taxpayer bailout for their ailing companies.
Given your support for the airline rescue package, do you now agree that
letting the free market run its course won’t resolve all our economic
and social problems? (That’s what anti-globalization activists have been
saying all along.) And if airlines deserve a bail-out, how about a
multibillion-dollar rescue package for human needs like health and
education? Why aren’t we bailing out our under-funded public schools,
our insolvent hospitals, our national railroads, and other elements of our
dilapidated social infrastructure?
11. September 11th will be remembered as a
day of infamy in the United States because of the terrorist attacks in New
York and Washington. In Chile, September 11th is also remembered as the
day when a U.S.-back coup toppled the democratically elected government of
Salvador Allende in 1973, initiating a reign of terror by General Augusto
Pinochet. Given your administration’s avowed stance against terrorism,
will you cooperate with the various international legal cases that are
honing in on ex-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger for colluding with
Pinochet’s murderous regime?
12. You say you’re a loving man, Mr.
President, but you must feel unrequited, for no empire has ever been loved
by its subjugants, and that’s what the USA is an empire. You talk as
though the United States has in no way contributed to the spread of
fanaticism around the globe. As hideous as it might sound, there are many
people on the planet who consider the September 11th attacks a response
however twisted or demented to U.S. actions. If the killing of innocent
people in New York and Washington is indefensible, and surely it is, then
why do U.S. officials defend American air strikes that kill innocent
civilians in Iraq, Sudan, Serbia, and Afghanistan? More than 500,000 Iraqi
children under age 5 have died as a result of the 1990 Gulf War,
subsequent economic sanctions, and ongoing U.S. bombing raids against
Iraq. Will your planned actions lead to a similar fate for the children of
Afghanistan?
13. What will you accomplish if you bomb
Afghanistan? Wouldn't this galvanize Islamic fundamentalist movements that
are already powerful in Algeria, Egypt, Pakistan, Sudan, the oil-rich Arab
monarchies, and the Balkans? Wouldn't a U.S.-led military onslaught
against Afghanistan be the fastest way to create a new generation of
terrorists? Adept at manipulating real grievances, terrorist networks
breed on poverty, despair, and social injustice. Do you think you can wipe
out or even reduce this scourge, Mr. President, without seriously and
systematically addressing the root causes of terrorism?
Martin A. Lee is the author of Acid Dreams
and The Beast Reawakens. He can be reached at martinalee117@yahoo.com
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