Libya and The Holy Triumvirate
The words they find it very difficult to say — "civil war".
Libya is engaged
in a civil war. The United States and the European Union and NATO — The
Holy Triumvirate — are intervening, bloodily, in a civil war. To
overthrow Moammar Gaddafi. First The Holy Triumvirate spoke only of
imposing a no-fly zone. After getting support from international bodies
on that understanding they immediately began to wage war against Libyan
military forces, and whoever was nearby, on a daily basis. In the world
of commerce this is called "bait and switch".
Gaddafi's crime?
He was never respectful enough of The Holy Triumvirate, which recognizes
no higher power, and maneuvers the United Nations for its own purposes,
depending on China and Russia to be as spineless and hypocritical as
Barack Obama. The man the Triumvirate allows to replace Gaddafi will be
more respectful.
So who are the
good guys? The Libyan rebels, we're told. The ones who go around
murdering and raping African blacks on the supposition that they're all
mercenaries for Gaddafi. One or more of the victims may indeed have been
members of a Libyan government military battalion; or may not have
been. During the 1990s, in the name of pan-African unity, Gaddafi opened
the borders to tens of thousands of sub-Saharan Africans to live and
work in Libya. That, along with his earlier pan-Arab vision, did not win
him points with The Holy Triumvirate. Corporate bosses have the same
problem about their employees forming unions. Oh, and did I mention that
Gaddafi is strongly anti-Zionist?
Does anyone know
what kind of government the rebels would create? The Triumvirate has no
idea. To what extent will the new government embody an Islamic influence
as opposed to the present secular government? What jihadi forces might
they unleash? (And these forces do indeed exist in eastern Libya, where
the rebels are concentrated.) Will they do away with much of the welfare
state that Gaddafi used his oil money to create? Will the
state-dominated economy be privatized? Who will wind up owning Libya's
oil? Will the new regime continue to invest Libyan oil revenues in
sub-Saharan African development projects? Will they allow a US military
base and NATO exercises? Will we find out before long that the "rebels"
were instigated and armed by Holy Triumvirate intelligence services?
In the 1990s,
Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia was guilty of "crimes" similar to
Gaddafi's. His country was commonly referred to as "the last communists
of Europe". The Holy Triumvirate bombed him, arrested him, and let him
die in prison. The Libyan government, it should be noted, refers to
itself as the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. American
foreign policy is never far removed from the Cold War.
We must look
closely at the no-fly zone set up for Iraq by the US and the UK (falsely
claimed by them as being authorized by the United Nations) beginning in
the early 1990s and lasting more than a decade. It was in actuality a
license for very frequent bombing and killing of Iraqi citizens;
softening up the country for the coming invasion. The no-fly zone-cum
invasion force in Libya is killing people every day with no end in
sight, softening up the country for regime change. Who in the universe
can stand up to The Holy Triumvirate? Has the entire history of the
world ever seen such power and such arrogance?
And by the way, for the 10th time, Gaddafi did not carry out the bombing of PanAm Flight 103 in 1988.1 Please enlighten your favorite progressive writers on this.
Barack "I'd kill for a peace prize" Obama
Is anyone keeping count?
I am. Libya makes six.
Six countries
that Barack H. Obama has waged war against in his 26 months in office.
(To anyone who disputes that dropping bombs on a populated land is act
of war, I would ask what they think of the Japanese bombing of Pearl
Harbor.)
America's first black president now invades Africa.
Is there anyone left who still thinks that Barack Obama is some kind of improvement over George W. Bush?
Probably two
types still think so. 1) Those to whom color matters a lot; 2) Those who
are very impressed by the ability to put together grammatically correct
sentences.
It certainly
can't have much otherwise to do with intellect or intelligence. Obama
has said numerous things, which if uttered by Bush would have inspired
lots of rolled eyeballs, snickers, and chuckling reports in the columns
and broadcasts of mainstream media. Like the one the president has
repeated on a number of occasions when pressed to investigate Bush and
Cheney for war crimes, along the lines of "I prefer to look forward
rather than backwards". Picture a defendant before a judge asking to be
found innocent on such grounds. It simply makes laws, law enforcement,
crime, justice, and facts irrelevant.
There's also the
excuse given by Obama to not prosecute those engaged in torture: because
they were following orders. Has this "educated" man never heard of the
Nuremberg Trials, where this defense was summarily rejected? Forever, it
was assumed.
Just 18 days
before the Gulf oil spill Obama said: "It turns out, by the way, that
oil rigs today generally don't cause spills. They are technologically
very advanced." (Washington Post, May 27, 2010) Picture George W. having said this, and the later reaction.
"All the forces
that we're seeing at work in Egypt are forces that naturally should be
aligned with us, should be aligned with Israel," Obama said in early
March.2
Imagine if Bush had implied this — that the Arab protesters in Egypt
against a man receiving billions in US aid including the means to
repress and torture them, should "naturally" be aligned with the United
States and — God help us — Israel.
A week later, on
March 10, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told a forum in
Cambridge, Mass. that Wikileaks hero Bradley Manning's treatment by the
Defense Department in a Marine prison was "ridiculous, counterproductive
and stupid." The next day our "brainy" president was asked about
Crowley's comment. Replied the Great Black Hope: "I have actually asked
the Pentagon whether or not the procedures that have been taken in terms
of his confinement are appropriate and are meeting our basic standards.
They assure me that they are."
Right, George. I
mean Barack. Bush should have asked Donald Rumsfeld whether anyone in US
custody was being tortured anywhere in the world. He could then have
held a news conference like Obama did to announce the happy news — "No
torture by America!" We would still be chortling at that one.
Obama closed his
remark with: "I can't go into details about some of their concerns, but
some of this has to do with Pvt. Manning's safety as well." 3
Ah yes, of
course, Manning is being tortured for his own good. Someone please
remind me — Did Georgieboy ever stoop to using that particular absurdity
to excuse prisoner hell at Guantanamo?
Is it that Barack
Obama is not bothered by the insult to Bradley Manning's human rights,
the daily wearing away of this brave young man's mental stability?
The answer to the question is No. The president is not bothered by these things.
How do I know?
Because Barack Obama is not bothered by anything as long as he can exult
in being the president of the United States, eat his hamburgers, and
play his basketball. Let me repeat once again what I first wrote in May
2009:
The problem, I'm
increasingly afraid, is that the man doesn't really believe strongly in
anything, certainly not in controversial areas. He learned a long time
ago how to take positions that avoid controversy, how to express
opinions without clearly taking sides, how to talk eloquently without
actually saying anything, how to leave his listeners' heads filled with
stirring clichés, platitudes, and slogans. And it worked. Oh how it
worked! What could happen now, having reached the presidency of the
United States, to induce him to change his style?
Remember that in
his own book, "The Audacity of Hope", Obama wrote: "I serve as a blank
screen on which people of vastly different political stripes project
their own views."
Obama is a product of marketing. He is the prime example of the product "As seen on TV".
Writer Sam Smith
recently wrote that Obama is the most conservative Democratic president
we've ever had. "In an earlier time, there would have been a name for
him: Republican."
Indeed, if John
McCain had won the 2008 election, and then done everything that Obama
has done in exactly the same way, liberals would be raging about such
awful policies.
I believe that
Barack Obama is one of the worst things that has ever happened to the
American left. The millions of young people who jubilantly supported him
in 2008, and numerous older supporters, will need a long recovery
period before they're ready to once again offer their idealism and their
passion on the alter of political activism.
If you don't like how things have turned out, next time find out exactly what your candidate means when he talks of "change".
Dear Lord, please save us from the Holy Republican Empire
Glenn Beck, Sarah
Palin, Mike Huckabee, John Boehner, and many other Republicans often
find it difficult to speak about domestic or foreign issues without
bringing religion into the picture. Speaker of the House of
Representatives John Boehner, for example, in a recent talk at the
National Religious Broadcasters conference stated that America's
national debt is a "moral hazard." The Washington Post (March 5, 2011) reported that "Boehner made clear that this fiscal crisis requires people to get on their knees."
Rep. Joe Barton of Texas justified his opposition to controlling greenhouse gases because "you can't regulate God."
Arizona Senator
Jon Kyl accused Democratic Senate Leader Harry Reid of "disrespecting
one of the two holiest of holidays for Christians" for considering
keeping Congress in session during Christmas.
Rep. Steve King of Iowa compared Democrats to Pontius Pilate, the ancient Roman official who sentenced Jesus to be crucified.4
And South
Carolina Senator Jim DeMint recently declared that "the bigger
government gets, the smaller God gets. ... America works, freedom works,
when people have that internal gyroscope that comes from a belief in
God and Biblical faith. Once we push that out, you no longer have the
capacity to live as a free person without the external controls of an
authoritarian government. I've said it often and I believe it –– the
bigger government gets, the smaller God gets. As people become more
dependent on government, less dependent on God." 5
So, in a futile
attempt to enlighten the likes of these esteemed Republican members of
Congress, I feel obliged to point out the following:
On the 4th day of
November 1796, a "Treaty of peace and friendship between the United
States of America and the Bey and subjects of Tripoli, of Barbary" was
concluded at Tripoli [Libya]. Article 11 of the treaty begins: "As the
government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded
on the Christian Religion ... " Be it further noted: Article VI, Section
II, of the United States Constitution states: "This Constitution, and
the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof;
and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of
the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges
in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or
Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."
The creed of America's founders was neither Christianity nor secularism, but religious liberty.
After the
terrorist attacks of 9-11, a Taliban leader declared that "God is on our
side, and if the world's people try to set fire to Afghanistan, God
will protect us and help us." 6
"With or without
religion, good people will do good things and bad people will do bad
things. But for good people to do bad things — that takes religion." — Steven Weinberg, Nobel Prize-winning physicist
The Bad Guys
I've written on
many occasions about America's ODE — Officially Designated Enemies:
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Hugo Chávez, Fidel Castro, Daniel Ortega, Hasan
Nasrallah, Moammar Gaddafi, and others. Once the government of the
United States of America makes it clear that an individual foreign
leader is not one of the Good Guys, that he doesn't believe that America
is God's gift to humankind, and that he is not willing to allow his
country to become an obedient client state, the US mainstream media
invariably picks up on this and goes out of its way to denigrate the
individual at every opportunity. (If any reader knows of any exceptions
to this rule I'd be interested in hearing from them.)
Juan Forero has long been a Latin American correspondent for the Washington Post. He's also the same for National Public Radio. I used to send letters to the Post
pointing out how Forero was distorting the facts each time he wrote
about Hugo Chávez, errors of omission compounded with errors of
commission. None were printed, so I began to send my missives directly
to Forero. He once actually replied saying that he (sort of) agreed with
me on the point I had raised and implied that he would try to avoid
similar errors in the future. I actually detected some improvement after
that for a short period, then it was back to usual. During the current
unrest in Libya he wrote: "Chavez said it 'was a great lie' that
Gaddafi's forces had attacked civilians." 7
Well, how stupid can Hugo Chávez think the world is? We've all seen and read of Gaddafi's attacks on civilians.
But it turns out
that if you find the original Spanish you get a fuller and different
picture. According to the United Press International (UPI)
Spanish-language report, Chávez said that the fighting in Libya was a
civil war and those who were attacked were thus not simply protestors or
civilians; they were on the other side of the civil war; i.e.,
combatants. 8
Al Jazeera in America
The uprisings in
North Africa and the Middle East have given a great boost to al Jazeera,
the television network based in Doha, Qatar. Until recently Americans
shied away from the station; it was just too easily associated with the
Middle East and Muslims, which of course leads easily to thinking about
terrorists and "terrorists"; and certainly any well-brought-up American
knew that the station could not be as unbiased as CBS, CNN, NPR or Fox
News. The station had reason to be paranoid about its office in the
United States, land of ten million crazies (more than a few of them
holding public office). It occupies six floors in a downtown Washington,
DC office building, but its name doesn't appear on the building
directory.
But US mainstream
media now quote al Jazeera English and show their news footage. Many
progressives, including myself, have taken to watching the station in
preference to US mainstream media. In general, the news is of more
substance, the guests are mainly more or less progressive, and there are
no commercials. However, the more I watch it the more I realize that
the station's presenters and correspondents are not necessarily as well
imbued with the progressive perspective as they should be.
One case in point
of many I could give: On March 12 al Jazeera correspondent Roger
Wilkinson was reporting about the trial in Cuba of Alan Gross, the
American arrested after he dispensed electronic equipment to Cuban
citizens. Gross entered Cuba as a tourist but was actually there in
behalf of Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI), a private contractor
working for the Agency for International Development (AID), a division
of the State Department. Gross was thus a covert unregistered agent of a
foreign government. Wilkinson reported this very controversial story
with all the innocence and distortion of the US mainstream media. He
mentioned in passing that the Cuban government tries to control the
Internet. What can one conclude from that other than that Cuban
officials want to hide certain information from its citizens? Just like
the US mainstream media, Wilkinson gave no examples of any Internet
sites blocked by the Cuban government; for the simple reason, perhaps,
that there aren't any. What is the terrible truth that Cubans might
learn if they had full access to the Internet? Ironically, it's the US
government and US multinationals who impinge upon this access, for
political reasons and by pricing their services beyond Cuba's means.
This is why Cuba and Venezuela are building their own undersea cable
connection.
Wilkinson spoke
of AID's program of "democracy promotion", but gave no hint that in the
world of AID and the private organizations that contract with it —
including Gross's employer — this term is code for "regime change". AID
has long played a subversive role in world affairs. Here is John
Gilligan, Director of AID during the Carter administration:
"At one time,
many AID field offices were infiltrated from top to bottom with CIA
people. The idea was to plant operatives in every kind of activity we
had overseas, government, volunteer, religious, every kind." 9
AID has been but
one of many institutions employed by the United States for more than 50
years to subvert the Cuban revolution. It is because of this that we can
formulate this equation: The United States is to the Cuban government
like al Qaeda is to American government. Cuba's laws dealing with
activities typically carried out by the likes of AID and DAI reflect
this history. It's not paranoia. It's self-preservation. In discussing a
case like Alan Gross without considering this equation is a serious
defect in journalism and political analysis.
Hopefully the Gross case will serve to temper the nature of US "democracy promotion" efforts in Cuba.
Washington's
policy — and therefore Britain's policy — toward Cuba has always stemmed
mainly from a desire to keep the island from becoming a good example
for the Third World of an alternative to capitalism. But Western leaders
actually do not, or do not dare, understand what can motivate people
like the Cuban leaders and their followers. Here's one of the Wikileaks
US-Embassy cables, March 25, 2009 — William Hague, then-British
Conservative MP and Shadow Foreign Secretary, giving the US embassy in
London a report on his recent visit to Cuba: Hague "said that he was
slightly surprised that the Cuban leadership did not appear to be moving
toward more of a Chinese model of economic opening, but were rather
still 'romantic revolutionaries'." In his conversation with Cuban
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez "the discussion turned to political
ideology, during which Hague commented that people in Britain were more
interested in shopping than ideology." [Oh dear, what a jolly good
defense of the Western way of life. Rule Britannia! God Bless America!]
Hague then reported that "Rodriguez appeared disdainful of the notion
and said one needed shopping only to buy food and a few good books."
Japan devastated by an earthquake and tsunami. America devastated by the profit motive.
Christine Todd
Whitman, George W. Bush's first Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
administrator, speaking of how the nuclear industry has learned from
every previous nuclear accident or disaster: "It's safer than working in
a grocery store," she said.
Whitman is now co-chairwoman of the nuclear industry's Clean and Safe Energy Coalition. 10
Upcoming talks by William Blum
Saturday, April 2, 7:00 pm
University of Pittsburgh at Titusville, PA
504 East Main Street
Henne Auditorium
Titusville is about 2 hours by car from Pittsburgh and 2 1/2 hours from Cleveland.
For further information call 888-878-0462 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 888-878-0462 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Or email Mary Ann Caton: caton@pitt.edu
Thursday, May 19
Paris, France
Conference: "Ethics and US Foreign Policy in the 21st Century"
Université de Paris Ouest-Nanterre-La Défense, Amphi B-2
All day, beginning at 9 am
Email me for full schedule
Notes
- killinghope.org/bblum6/panam.htm ↩
- March 4, 2011, Democratic Party function, Miami, FL, CQ Transcriptions ↩
- Los Angeles Times, March 11, 2011 ↩
- For this and the previous two examples, see "Jim DeMint's Theory Of Relativity: 'The Bigger Government Gets, The Smaller God Gets'", Think Progress, March 15, 2011↩
- Fox News Sunday, December 19, 2010 ↩
- Washington Post, September 19, 2001 ↩
- Washington Post, March 7, 2011 ↩
- UPI Reporte LatAm, March 4, 2011 (email me for the text) ↩
- George Cotter, "Spies, strings and missionaries", The Christian Century (Chicago), March 25, 1981, p.321 ↩
- "Former EPA chief: Nuke crisis 'a very good lesson'", Politico, March 14, 2011 ↩
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