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Jonathan
Hershfield, DMY Columnist, 4-5-03 |
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We are quick to jump to the conclusion that the world seems
to have turned upside down solely because Bush is president. And while
he may very well be the worst president yet, let's not kid ourselves into
thinking everything was going well before him. A common question circulating
is, would we be in this mess if Gore had won in 2000? Would 9/11 have
happened? Would there have been this embarrassing push for war?
While certain aspects of 9/11 seem to single out Bush rather
quickly - the Bush family's long personal history with the bin Laden family
and Bush's bizarre connections to the insurance and security on the WTC
buildings, to name but twowe shouldn't be so naive as to fantasize
that the US would no longer be a target for terrorism under a Democratic
administration. The 1993 WTC bombing was on Clinton's watch. The fact
of the matter is, while Clinton may have been skilled at diplomacy, his
foreign policy was nothing to cheer about. He bombed Iraq in 1993 after
some Kuwaitis alleged that they had uncovered a plot to assassinate Bush,
Sr. He bombed Iraq harder in 1998, not to mention the Sudan, both with
civilian casualties, neither with achieved objectives. He perpetuated
the starvation campaigns (or "sanctions") against Iraq and Cuba.
He increased funding for the Colombian military (which not only tortures
people but apparently traffics about as much drugs as the opposition),
Indonesia (where people were getting their arms chopped off) and, of course,
Israel (which operates to this day in a perpetual state of international
crime).
People say the US hasn't had a discernible foreign policy
since Bush became president. But US foreign policy has been plagued with
inconsistincies for decades. Or rather, the one thing that has been conistent
is a disrespect for the international community. Everyone says, yeah we
screwed up Vietnam, Korea, Grenada, etc., but what about WWII? Nobody
seems to remember that WWII was going on for years before the US got involved.
Maybe while Canada was fighting Hitler and Mussolini, we were still figuring
out how to vindicate the American corporations and individuals, such as
Prescott Bush, that helped finance the nazis.
I know some readers are desperately waiting to jump in and
say that I don't support the men and women that gave their lives, and
are giving their lives, in the service of our country. But that's just
silly because soldiers don't write policy. They do their jobs which is
to follow orders. And frankly, if you're not critical of those who make
the policies that abuse this relationship, then you really don't support
the troops.
Obviously, this war changes US policy (for the worse) and
certainly we can amuse ourselves by imagining at the very least that Gore
wouldn't have had the personal interest in Iraq that Bush and Cheneyburton
do. But we know Gore's connection to Occidental Petroleum, a company promoting
the tear-gas extermination of the Colombian native population. So maybe
we'd be at war there instead.
We'd be fooling ourselves if we didn't recognize that the
interests of corporations have long outweighed the interests of the American
people and this is a bipartisan disgrace. Bin Laden once said that the
only way the Americans can protect themselves now is by choosing different
leaders. I don't relish the thought of taking advice from him. But if
our leaders are being recruited from corporations whose only objectives
are to increase the profit margin, even if it requires child slave labor
overseas or the imposition of a brutal dictator, then we must realize
that our struggle cannot end with the removal of Bush, but only with the
legitimate and moral improvement of the way this country operates in the
international arena.
Dick Cheney rarely seems to make public appearances anymore,
and not just because he looks like an evil henchman from a Bond flick,
but because he doesn't want to answer questions about how involved he
still is with Halliburton. Not that anyone would notice, but Halliburton's
affiliate didn't win the contract to fight the Iraqi oil firesit
was given it. Now apologists may scramble to explain that Halliburton
has all the resources and experience, but one might think it a conflict
of interest when all this experience came from another Bush war when Cheney
had Rumsfeld's job.
Even our nation's not-so-secret secret gay lover, the United
Kingdom, seems disappointed to find that the American (and incidentally,
anti-union) Stevedoring company will be managing the recently conquered
port of Umm Qasr. Didn't these corporate philanthropists make some mention
of turning the future of Iraq over to the, oh what are they called...
Iraqis? Sure, just like our installation of Hamid Karzai, the president
of Afghanistan none of the Afghanis seemed to have heard of, a former
executive at UNOCAL (or The Burmese Slave Labor Co.), a man sure to have
his priorities straight.
The point of all this rambling is that we can no longer
point the finger directly at Bush and say "his fault". Well,
maybe for the instigation of this specific war, but not for the environment
that made it possible. We need to be reaching out with all fingers on
all hands and grab the entire government by its ears and scream for change.
The United States needs to start writing its history to reflect its true
ideals. No sense in repeating them. You should know what they are.
The United States has the power to serve as a beacon
of hope and while it already does for many, it does the opposite for more.
Foreign policy has to be based on protecting sovereignty and on compromise
for the good of all people, not just a wealthy few. Your mother may get
away with saying "do as I say, not as I do" but she wasn't elected
democratically.
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