A story catches your eye -- usually something buried beneath the
"big news" of the day -- and once again you're tumbled from your
private concerns into a dreadful realization of where history has taken
you: into a strange hybrid world of unfree freedom, where you can say
what you want, do what you want -- unless those in power arbitrarily
decide that you can't. In 99 cases out of 100, they'll leave you alone
(as long as you're white and look non-threatening; if not, that ratio
drops considerably). But this liberty is illusory; it no longer has a
physical reality, or even a statutory one. It is now a "gift" of the
authorities, one which they can bestow -- or revoke -- according to
their own, ever-shifting needs and desires.
The idea of
arbitrary power beyond all check of law or outside supervision is the
sum total of the so-called "
Unitary Executive" theory of the Bush
Administration, which has put this radical and barbaric idea into
practice. It is also undergirds the "
crown prerogative" of British
governance, where the ancient immunities of the sovereign ("The king
can do no wrong" -- or as that proto-unitary executive Richard Nixon
once put it: "If the president does it, it's not illegal") have
"devolved" upon the prime minister as head of the government. In
neither of these endlessly self-celebrating democracies is the consent
of the governed or the rule of law the basis for the exercise of power.
Otherwise, the leaders of these countries -- the dual lame ducks Bush
and Blair -- could not have launched an illegal war or maintained this
criminal enterprise year after blood-soaked year. And many of their
exercises of arbitrary power have been in aid of masking the true
nature of this war.
Thus we come to the latest shaking of our
troubled sleep. While the media world gaped and gabbed about
Tony
Blair's long-belated announcement of his
long-overdue retirement
yesterday, a more revealing story was buried beneath the fold or in the
back pages -- except in the dogged Independent, which put it on the
front page:
Two jailed for
trying to leak details of Blair's talks with Bush
Tony
Blair's ill-fated war with Iraq claimed two more victims yesterday when
a civil servant and an MP's researcher were convicted of disclosing
details of a secret conversation between the Prime Minister and
President George Bush. Last night, MPs, lawyers and civil rights groups
described the prosecution as a "farce" and accused the Government of
misusing the Official Secrets Act to cover up political embarrassment
over the war.
David Keogh, 50, a Cabinet Office communications
officer, was today jailed for six months. He passed on an "extremely
sensitive memo" to Leo O'Connor, 44, a political researcher who worked
for an anti-war Labour MP, Anthony Clarke. O'Connor was today sentenced
to three months in jail after an Old Bailey jury found them guilty
yesterday of breaching Britain's secrecy laws.
Their trial
was carried out under extraordinary secrecy, clamped down even tighter
than Britain's continuing series of terror plot trials. The judge
wouldn't even allow the press to report Keogh's response "when he was
asked in open court what preyed on his mind when he first saw the
document,"
the Guardian reports. What's more, the British press were
also forbidden from referring to stories they had previously published
about the memo when it first came to light and reports of its contents
were being freely discussed. The attorney general --
Blair's old friend
Peter Goldsmith, the same legal eagle who infamously reversed his stand
on the illegality of the Iraq invasion after a talking to from the
Beltway boys, and who most recently quashed a years-long probe into a
sex-car-cash bribery scheme between the Saudi royals and the UK's top
arms merchant -- draped a retroactive veil of secrecy over the case --
much like the one the Bush gang has used on
fired FBI truth-teller
Sibel Edmonds after she threatened to expose a nest of high-level
treason and corruption. The only thing the British press could tell the
British people about the trial yesterday -- beyond the sentences handed
down -- was the reaction Keogh had given to the police when he was
first arrested in 2005. He told them that what he had seen in the memo
convinced him that "Bush was a madman."
But
what was this document whose very existence posed such a dire threat to
the life of the nation that its contents could not even be hinted at in
public? It was a four-page record of a White House meeting between
George W. Bush and Tony Blair on April 16, 2004. It is known in the
trade as the "al-Jazeera Bombing Memo" because in those early news
reports -- after Keogh had leaked the document in May 2004 to O'Connor,
in the hopes that it would be brought before the people's
representatives in Parliament -- at least one part of its contents
became widely known; to wit, that Bush had proposed to Blair that they
bomb the headquarters of the independent Arabic news agency al-Jazeera
in Qatar, as well as agency offices elsewhere.
The context of
this criminal proposal is important. In April 2004, the grand
Babylonian Conquest was turning into a nightmare. The tortures at Abu
Ghraib had just been exposed. (Outrages which, as we now know, were
just the
barest tip of a massive iceberg: the vast gulag of secret
prisons, "disappeared" captives, and "strenuous interrogation
techniques" specifically approved by Bush and Rumsfeld). But beyond
that scandal -- which was being successfully fobbed off with the "bad
apple" defense, and would never be in an issue in the coming
presidential election -- there was also, more glaringly, the ongoing
bloodfest in Fallujah: the
Guernica of the Iraq War.
The
attack was launched in retaliation for the killing of four American
mercenaries from the politically-wired firm of Blackwater on March 31,
2004 -- another PR hit for the "Mission Accomplished" team in the White
House. Fallujah -- a once quiet city whose citizens had rebelled
against Saddam Hussein -- had been turned into a hotbed of unrest over
the course of the previous year by a heavy-handed American occupation,
which included several civilian deaths after occupation troops fired
into crowds exercising what they believed was their liberated right to
protest. Anger and insurgency took hold in the city, leading to the
"Black Hawk Down" style despoliation of the dead mercenaries a year
later.
Against the advice of military commanders on the scene,
Bush ordered the "pacification" of the city a few days later. But the
L'il Commander's attack turned into yet another PR nightmare, spreading
death and destruction through civilian areas, causing hundreds of
deaths, launching airstrikes into residential areas, closing the city's
main hospitals while thousands were suffering -- and failing to
dislodge the insurgents who were the ostensible target of the
operation. (There were two other main targets, of course: the American
people, who were meant to be seduced by the man-musk of the War Leader,
and the Iraqi people, who were meant to be terrorized into submission
by the shock-and-awe of Fallujah's decimation.)
In addition to
the lack of progress on the battleground, Bush was beset by the
presence of al-Jazeera correspondents in the city. The agency --
headquartered in Qatar, a staunch U.S. ally -- was a rare independent
voice in the Arab world, reporting from all sides and offering a
platform for all sides, including Israeli and American officials. It
was, in fact, the very kind of thing that Bush claimed he wanted to
instill in the Middle East through his invasion of Iraq. But of course,
this was just another lie. Al-Jazeera's independence proved
inconvenient for the Bushists, who in both Iraq and Afghanistan had
sought to impose the greatest degree of message control (and "psy-ops"
spin) ever seen in an American war. For both the Bushists and the
Blairites, truth was not the first casualty of war; it was a deadly
enemy -- an enemy combatant, in fact, to be rendered, disappeared,
tortured, killed, like any other gulag captive.
So it was no
surprise at all that Bush and Blair would be discussing al-Jazeera
during that fretful confab in April 2004. Nor is it any surprise that
Bush's answer to the "problem" of an independent Arab news agency would
be to kill the ragheads where they stand. He had already demonstrated
that wanton violence and mass murder was his preferred option for
dealing with problems in the Middle East.
The contents of the
controversial memo were actually well-known after it came to light --
and before Blair's buddy Goldsmith lowered the boom. The Daily Mirror,
for example, had
this report in November 2005:
President
Bush planned to bomb Arab TV station al-Jazeera in friendly Qatar, a
"Top Secret" No 10 memo reveals. But he was talked out of it at a White
House summit by Tony Blair, who said it would provoke a worldwide
backlash...The attack would have led to a massacre of innocents on the
territory of a key ally, enraged the Middle East and almost certainly
have sparked bloody retaliation.
A source said last night: "The
memo is explosive and hugely damaging to Bush. He made clear he wanted
to bomb al-Jazeera in Qatar and elsewhere. Blair replied that would
cause a big problem. There's no doubt what Bush wanted to do - and no
doubt Blair didn't want him to do it."
A Government official
suggested that the Bush threat had been "humorous, not serious". But
another source declared: "Bush was deadly serious, as was Blair. That
much is absolutely clear from the language used by both men."
Al-Jazeera's
HQ is in the business district of Qatar's capital, Doha. Its
single-storey buildings would have made an easy target for bombers. As
it is sited away from residential areas, and more than 10 miles from
the US's desert base in Qatar, there would have been no danger of
"collateral damage".
Dozens of al-Jazeera staff at the HQ are
not, as many believe, Islamic fanatics. Instead, most are respected and
highly trained technicians and journalists. To have wiped them out
would have been equivalent to bombing the BBC in London and the most
spectacular foreign policy disaster since the Iraq War itself.
The
No 10 memo now raises fresh doubts over US claims that previous attacks
against al-Jazeera staff were military errors. In 2001 the station's
Kabul office was knocked out by two "smart" bombs. In 2003, al-Jazeera
reporter Tareq Ayyoub was killed in a US missile strike on the
station's Baghdad centre. The memo, which also included details of
troop deployments, turned up in May last year at the Northampton
constituency office of then Labour MP Tony Clarke.
This is
the kind of thing that filled British papers for weeks. But now, in the
brave new world of unfree freedom that Bush and Blair have bestowed
upon their subjects, Britons can no longer mention any of this in
public. Indeed, the judge in the Keogh case reinforced Goldsmith's
earlier ban with a new gag order, decreeing "that allegations already
in the public domain could not be repeated if there was any suggestion
they related to the contents of the document," the Guardian reports.
Anyone who does so can be jailed for contempt. Yes, jailed for
repeating in public what has already been published.
During the
trial, Blair's top foreign policy wonk, Sir Nigel Sheinwald, offered
this notable justification for jailing faithful government servants
whose consciences had been shocked into action by the discovery of a
plot for mass murder by the "leader of the free world":
In
evidence at the trial, Sir Nigel Sheinwald..said private talks between
world leaders must remain confidential however illegal or morally
abhorrent aspects of their discussions might be.
Quite
right, too. After all, if a memo of, say, a summit meeting between
Hitler and Mussolini had come to light in, say, 1938, detailing how
Hitler had told Mussolini that he was going to, say, kill a few million
Jews just as soon as he could lay his hands on them, then obviously
such confidences between statesmen should be respected -- and any civil
servant who tried to warn the world about this "madman" should
obviously be prosecuted.
Blair -- who in his lachrymose and
self-pitying resignation speech yesterday again reiterated his pride in
standing "shoulder-to-shoulder" with Bush in the slaughter of more than
600,000 innocent human beings in Iraq -- obviously talked his pal down
from his murderous rage at al-Jazeera, which is now so respectable that
it appears on American cable TV systems. But there was no such
consideration for the people of Fallujah. Bush soon called off the
attack as the bad PR mounted, but promised that the city would be
"pacified" in the end -- after the election. And so it was, without
demur from Blair. Just days after Bush had procured office again in
November 2004, a second assault -- even
more savage than the first, was
launched, destroying the city with bombs,
shells and chemical fire.
It
is entirely typical of our strange days that the arbitrary, draconian
power that now characterizes the Anglo-American "democracies" would be
used here in an attempt to suppress a political embarrassment -- the
revelation of a barbaric idea that never came to fruition -- while the
actual physical slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people is openly
and unashamedly embraced -- even championed as an act of moral courage,
as in Blair's unctuous parting bromide, "Hand on my heart, I did what I
thought was right."
So did Pol Pot. So did Stalin. So did Osama
bin Laden. So does every madman who vaunts himself beyond the law, and
kills in the name of a "higher cause."