Washington and multinational corporate officials who were on the
board of directors of the planet were indeed concerned. Besides
anything else, Portugal was a member of NATO. Destabilization became
the order of the day: covert actions; attacks in the US press;
subverting trade unions; subsidizing opposition media; economic sabotage
through international credit and commerce; heavy financing of selected
candidates in elections; a US cut-off of Portugal from certain military
and nuclear information commonly available to NATO members; NATO naval
and air exercises off the Portuguese coast, with 19 NATO warships moored
in Lisbon's harbor, regarded by most Portuguese as an attempt to
intimidate the provisional government. In 1976 the "Socialist" Party
(scarcely further left and no less anti-communist than the US Democratic
Party) came to power, heavily financed by the CIA, the Agency also
arranging for Western European social-democratic parties to help foot
the bill. The Portuguese revolution was dead, stillborn. 1
The events in Egypt cannot help but remind me of Portugal. Here,
there, and everywhere, now and before, the United States of America, as
always, is petrified of anything genuinely progressive or socialist, or
even too democratic, for that carries the danger of allowing god-knows
what kind of non-America-believer taking office. Honduras 2009, Haiti
2004, Venezuela 2002, Ecuador 2000, Bulgaria 1990, Nicaragua 1990 ...
dozens more ... anything, anyone, if there's a choice, even a dictator, a
torturer, is better.
We are so good even our enemies believe our lies
I've devoted a lot of time and effort to the question of how to reach
the American mind concerning US foreign policy. To a large extent what
this comes down to is trying to counterbalance the lifetime of
indoctrination someone raised in the United States receives. It comes
in news stories every day.
On January 27, the Washington Post ran a story about the
State Department personnel who were held hostage at the American embassy
in Tehran, Iran for some 14 months, 1979-81. The former hostages were
preparing to hold a 30th anniversary remembrance the next day.
"It was wrong on every conceivable count," said L. Bruce Laingen, who
was the charge d'affaires. "It was absolutely wrong. ... That is my
most vivid memory today." Former political officer John W. Limbert
agrees, saying that he "would take any opportunity" to tell his captors
"what a terrible thing they had done by their own criteria."
What criteria, I wonder, did the man think his Iranian captors were
guided by? In 1954, the United States had overthrown the democratically
elected government of Mohammad Mossadegh, resulting, as planned, in the
return to power from exile of the Shah. This led to 25 years of rule
by oppression including routine torture as the Shah was safeguarded
continuously by US military support. Is this not reason enough for
Iranians to be bitterly angry at the United States? What was Mr.
Limbert thinking? What do Americans who read or hear such comments
think? They read or hear distorted news reports pertaining to America's
present or historical role in the world every day, and like in the Washington Post
article cited here — there's no correction by the reporter, no
questions asked, no challenge put forth to the idea of America the
Noble, America the perpetual victim of the Bad Guys.
Atheist: "Blasphemy is a victimless crime."
Salman Taseer was murdered in Pakistan a few weeks ago. He was the
governor of Punjab province and a member of the secular Pakistan
People's Party. The man who killed him, Mumtaz Qadri, was lauded by
some as a hero, showering rose petals on him. Photos taken at the scene
show him smiling.
Taseer had dared to speak out against Pakistan's stringent
anti-blasphemy law, calling for leniency for a Christian mother
sentenced to death under the blasphemy ban. A national group of 500
religious scholars praised the assassin and issued a warning to those
who mourned Taseer. "One who supports a blasphemer is also a
blasphemer," the group said in a statement, which warned journalists,
politicians and intellectuals to "learn" from the killing. "What Qadri
did has made every Muslim proud."2
Nice, really nice, very civilized. It's no wonder that decent,
god-fearing Americans believe that this kind of thinking and behavior
justify Washington's multiple wars; that this is what the United States
is fighting against — Islamic fanatics, homicidal maniacs, who kill
their own countrymen over some esoteric piece of religious dogma, who
want to kill Americans over some other imagined holy sin, because we're
"infidels" or "blasphemers". How can we reason with such people? Where
is the common humanity the naive pacifists and anti-war activists would
like us to honor?
But war can be seen as America's religion — most recently Pakistan,
Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, Yemen, and many more in the past — all
non-believers in Washington's Church of Our Lady of Eternal Invasion,
Sacred Bombing, and Immaculate Torture, all condemned to death for
blasphemy, as each day the United States unleashes blessed robotic death
machines called Predators flying over their lands to send "Hellfire"
(sic) missiles screaming into wedding parties, funerals, homes, not
knowing who the victims are, not caring who the victims are, thousands
of them by now, as long as Washington can claim each time –- whether
correctly or not — that amongst their number was a prominent blasphemer,
call him Taliban, or al Qaeda, or insurgent, or militant. How can we
reason with such people, the ones in the CIA who operate these drone
bombers? What is the difference between them and Mumtaz Qadri? Qadri
was smiling in satisfaction after carrying out his holy mission. The
CIA man sits comfortably in a room in Nevada and plays his holy video
game, then goes out to a satisfying dinner while his victims lay dying.
Mumtaz Qadri believes passionately in something called Paradise. The
CIA man believes passionately in something called American
Exceptionalism.
As do the great majority of Americans. Our drone operator is not
necessarily an "extremist". Sam Smith, the publisher of the marvelously
readable newsletter, the Progressive Review, recently wrote:
"One of the greatest myths draped over this land is that the so-called
wing nuts mainly come from the far right and left. And that there is,
however, a wise and moderate establishment that will save us from their
madness. In fact, the real wing nuts are to be found in the middle. ...
having captured both public office and major media, [they] spread
disaster, death and decay with impunity. Take, for example, the 60,000
some American troops killed in pointless wars beginning with Vietnam.
Now count the number of political assassinations, hate murders,
terrorist acts and so forth. There is simply no comparison. Yet every
war that we have fought in modern times has been the direct choice of
the American establishment, those who pompously describe themselves as
moderates, centrists, or bipartisan." 3
Extending the comparison: In 2008 a young American named Sharif
Mobley moved to Yemen to study Arabic and religion. American officials
maintain that his purpose was actually to join a terror group. They
"see Mobley as one of a growing cadre of native-born Americans who are
drawn to violent jihad." 4
Can one not say as well that the many young native-born Americans who
voluntarily join the military to fight in one of America's many foreign
wars "are drawn to violent jihad"?
Items of interest from a journal I've kept for 40 years
(Some written by me, most by others; for those lacking a source you can send me an email.)
- "The biggest crimes of our generation — torture, warrantless
wiretapping, and extraordinary rendition — would not have come to light
but for the unauthorized disclosure of classified information. For the
hand-wringing "but we can't willy-nilly reveal classified information"
crowd, do you think Abu Ghraib wasn't classified?" – Jesselyn Radack
- "The principal beneficiary of America's foreign assistance
programs has always been the United States." – US Agency for
International Development, "Direct Economic Benefits of U.S. Assistance
Programs" (1999); i.e., most of the money is paid directly to US
corporations.
- In 1963, the Kennedy administration was faced with a steadily
disintegrating situation in Vietnam. At a turbulent cabinet meeting,
Attorney General Robert Kennedy asked: If the situation is so dire, why
not withdraw? Historian Arthur Schlesinger, present at the meeting,
noted how "the question hovered for a moment, then died away." It was
"a hopelessly alien thought in a field of unexplored assumptions and
entrenched convictions."
- I watched 21 Marines in full dress uniform with rifles, fire a
21-gun salute to the President. It was then that I realized how far
America's military had deteriorated. Every one of them missed the
bastard.
- Soviet expansion was self-defense, not imperialism like with the
United States. The Soviets, in World War I and II, lost about 40
million people because the West had used Eastern Europe as a highway to
invade Russia. It should not be surprising that after WW2 the Russians
were determined to close down that highway.
- In March 2010 Secretary of "Defense" Robert Gates complained that
"the general [European] public and the political class" are so opposed
to war they are an "impediment" to peace.
- The major problem in establishing both the United States and
Israel as nations was what to do with the indigenous people. Same
solution. Kill 'em. Without legality. Without mercy.
-
From the film "The Battle of Algiers":
Journalist: M. Ben M'Hidi, don't you think it's a
bit cowardly to use women's baskets and handbags to carry explosive
devices that kill so many innocent people?
Ben M'Hidi: And doesn't it seem to you even more
cowardly to drop napalm bombs on defenseless villages, so that there are
a thousand times more innocent victims? Of course, if we had your
airplanes it would be a lot easier for us. Give us your bombers, and
you can have our baskets.
- ... the seamless transition from the Cold War to a perpetual Global War on Terrorism
- One of the reasons some countries allow US bases is because the
leaders are worried about being overthrown in a coup and they think that
the presence of the US military might discourage such action, or that
if a coup breaks out the US can help to put it down. There's also the
large payments made to the government by the US and the prestige factor.
Small countries can have inferiority complexes and, as absurd as it
may seem to the likes of you and I, having an American base in the
country can seem to be a feather in their cap; one of the same reasons
they join NATO. Another reason for a base: the US can have intelligence
information embarrassing to the country's leader. This is known as
blackmail.
- George Washington referred to the new American republic as the "infant empire"
- Foreign aid might be defined as a transfer of money from poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries.
- "He [Obama] is trying to say: 'Do not hate us ... but we will continue to kill you'." – Ayman al-Zawahri, Al Qaeda's second-in-command
- "Since both the US and France lost in Vietnam, then the 'fight for
our freedom' must have been unsuccessful, and we must be under the
occupation of the North Vietnamese Army. Next time you're out on the
street and you see a passing NVA patrol, please wave and tell them Tim
says hello." – Tim Moriarty
- The American Museum of History, on the Mall in Washington, DC:
One of the popular exhibitions in recent years was "The Price of
Freedom: Americans at War". This included a tribute to the "exceptional
Americans [who] saved a million lives" in Vietnam, where they were
"determined to stop communist expansion". In Iraq, other true hearts
"employed air strikes of unprecedented precision".
- "The United States became the target of terrorists on 9/11 not
because of the country's freedom and democracy, but because U.S. Middle
East policy has had nothing to do with freedom and democracy." – Stephen Zunes
- The Wikileaks documents raise issues of national embarrassment, not national security.
- Orange, Rose and Green Revolutions in other countries require
coordinated US government intervention aimed at creating what has been
called "genetically modified" grassroots movements.
- Mikhail Gorbachev: "I feel betrayed by the West. The opportunity
we seized on behalf of peace has been lost. The whole idea of a new
world order has been completely abandoned." (Interview in 2000.)
- George Bernard Shaw used three concepts to describe the positions
of individuals in Nazi Germany: intelligence, decency, and Naziism. He
argued that if a person was intelligent, and a Nazi, he was not decent.
If he was decent and a Nazi, he was not intelligent. And if he was
decent and intelligent, he was not a Nazi. — (I suggest that the reader
make any substitution for the word "Nazi" s/he deems appropriate.)
- "The whole art of Conservative politics in the 20th century is
being deployed to enable wealth to persuade poverty to use its political
freedom to keep wealth in power." – Aneurin Bevan, Labour Party (UK) minister, 1897-1960
- "Which adversary has a navy justifying our expenditure of $90
billion for 30 Virginia-class submarines, and which enemy air force
justifies our plans for about 340 F-22 fighter planes at a cost of $63
billion? This is pork and waste writ large, making the 'Bridge to
Nowhere' look like child's play." – Letter in the Washington Post, 2009
- So many foreign leaders keep silent in the face of US crimes,
even when they're the victim, that we've gotten used to that. So Hugo
Chávez's outbursts can seem weird and dangerous.
A talk by William Blum
Saturday, April 2, 7:00 pm
University of Pittsburgh at Titusville, PA
504 East Main Street
Broadhurst Auditorium
Titusville is about 2 hours by car from Pittsburgh and 2 1/2 hours from Cleveland.
For further information: 888-878-0462
Or email Mary Ann Caton at caton@pitt.edu
Notes
- William Blum, "Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower", pages 187, 228 for sources ↩
- Washington Post, January 5, 2011↩
- Progressive Review, January 27, 2011 ↩
- Washington Post, September 5, 2010 ↩
–
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
- Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire
Portions of the books can be read, and signed copies purchased, at www.killinghope.org
Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website.
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