The Anti-Empire Report
December 16 ... I'm standing in the snow in front of the White House
... Standing with Veterans for Peace ... I'm only a veteran of standing
in front of the White House; the first time was February 1965, handing
out flyers against the war in Vietnam. I was working for the State
Department at the time and my biggest fear was that someone from that
noble institution would pass by and recognize me.
Five years later I was still protesting Vietnam, although long gone
from the State Department. Then came Cambodia. And Laos. Soon,
Nicaragua and El Salvador. Then Panama was the new great threat to
America, to freedom and democracy and all things holy and decent, so it
had to be bombed without mercy. Followed by the first war against the
people of Iraq, and the 78-day bombing of Yugoslavia. Then the land of
Afghanistan had rained down upon it depleted uranium, napalm,
phosphorous bombs, and other witches' brews and weapons of the chemical
dust; then Iraq again. And I've skipped a few. I think I hold the
record for most times picketing the White House by a right-handed
batter.
And through it all, the good, hard-working, righteous people of
America have believed mightily that their country always means well;
some even believe to this day that we never started a war, certainly
nothing deserving of the appellation "war of aggression".
On that same snowy day last month Julian Assange of Wikileaks was
freed from prison in London and told reporters that he was more
concerned that the United States might try to extradite him than he was
about being extradited to Sweden, where he presumably faces "sexual"
charges. 1
That's a fear many political and drug prisoners in various countries
have expressed in recent years. The United States is the new Devil's
Island of the Western world. From the mid-19th century to the mid-20th,
political prisoners were shipped to that god-forsaken strip of French
land off the eastern coast of South America. One of the current
residents of the new Devil's Island is Bradley Manning, the former US
intelligence analyst suspected of leaking diplomatic cables to
Wikileaks. Manning has been imprisoned for seven months, first in
Kuwait, then at a military base in Virginia, and faces virtual life in
prison if found guilty, of something. Without being tried or convicted
of anything, he is allowed only very minimal contact with the outside
world; or with people, daylight, or news; among the things he is denied
are a pillow, sheets, and exercise; his sleep is restricted and
frequently interrupted. See Glenn Greenwald's discussion of how
Manning's treatment constitutes torture. 2
A friend of the young soldier says that many people are reluctant to
talk about Manning's deteriorating physical and mental condition because
of government harassment, including surveillance, seizure of their
computer without a warrant, and even attempted bribes. "This has had
such an intimidating effect that many are afraid to speak out on his
behalf." 3
A developer of the transparency software used by Wikileaks was detained
for several hours last summer by federal agents at a Newark, New Jersey
airport, where he was questioned about his connection to Wikileaks and
Assange as well as his opinions about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. 4
This is but a tiny incident from the near-century buildup of the
American police state, from the Red Scare of the 1920s to the
McCarthyism of the 1950s to the crackdown against Central American
protesters in the 1980s ... elevated by the War on Drugs ... now
multiplied by the War on Terror. It's not the worst police state in
history; not even the worst police state in the world today; but
nonetheless a police state, and certainly the most pervasive police
state ever — a Washington Post study has just revealed that there are
4,058 separate federal, state and local "counterterrorism" organizations
spread across the United States, each with its own responsibilities and
jurisdictions. 5
The police of America, of many types, generally get what and who they
want. If the United States gets its hands on Julian Assange, under any
legal pretext, fear for him; it might be the end of his life as a free
person; the actual facts of what he's done or the actual wording of US
laws will not matter; hell hath no fury like an empire scorned.
John Burns, chief foreign correspondent for The New York Times,
after interviewing Assange, stated: "He is profoundly of the conviction
that the United States is a force for evil in the world, that it's
destructive of democracy." 6 Can anyone who believes that be entitled to a full measure of human rights on Devil's Island?
The Wikileaks documents may not produce any world-changing
revelations, but every day they are adding to the steady, gradual
erosion of people's belief in the US government's good intentions, which
is necessary to overcome a lifetime of indoctrination. Many more
individuals over the years would have been standing in front of the
White House if they had had access to the plethora of information that
floods people today; which is not to say that we would have succeeded in
stopping any of the wars; that's a question of to what extent the
United States is a democracy.
One further consequence of the release of the documents may be to put
an end to the widespread belief that Sweden, or the Swedish government,
is peaceful, progressive, neutral and independent. Stockholm's
behavior in this matter and others has been as American-poodle-like as
London's, as it lined itself up with an Assange-accuser who has been
associated with right-wing anti-Castro Cubans, who are of course
US-government-supported. This is the same Sweden that for some time in
recent years was working with the CIA on its torture-rendition flights
and has about 500 soldiers in Afghanistan. Sweden is the world's
largest per capita arms exporter, and for years has taken part in
US/NATO military exercises, some within its own territory. The left
should get themselves a new hero-nation. Try Cuba.
There's also the old stereotype held by Americans of Scandinavians
practicing a sophisticated and tolerant attitude toward sex, an image
that was initiated, or enhanced, by the celebrated 1967 Swedish film I Am Curious (Yellow),
which had been banned for awhile in the United States. And now what do
we have? Sweden sending Interpol on an international hunt for a man
who apparently upset two women, perhaps for no more than sleeping with
them both in the same week.
And while they're at it, American progressives should also lose their
quaint belief that the BBC is somehow a liberal broadcaster. Americans
are such suckers for British accents. The BBC's Today presenter, John
Humphrys, asked Assange: "Are you a sexual predator?" Assange said the
suggestion was "ridiculous", adding: "Of course not". Humphrys then
asked Assange how many woman he had slept with. 7 Would even Fox News
have descended to that level? I wish Assange had been raised in the
streets of Brooklyn, as I was. He would then have known precisely how
to reply to such a question: "You mean including your mother?"
Another group of people who should learn a lesson from all this are
the knee-reflex conspiracists. Several of them have already written me
snide letters informing me of my naiveté in not realizing that Israel is
actually behind the release of the Wikileaks documents; which is why,
they inform me, that nothing about Israel is mentioned. I had to inform
them that I had already seen a few documents putting Israel in a bad
light. I've since seen others, and Assange, in an interview with Al Jazeera
on December 23, stated that only a meager number of files related to
Israel had been published so far because the publications in the West
that were given exclusive rights to publish the secret documents were
reluctant to publish much sensitive information about Israel. (Imagine
the flak Germany's Der Spiegel would get hit with.) "There are
3,700 files related to Israel and the source of 2,700 files is Israel,"
said Assange. "In the next six months we intend to publish more
files." 8
Naturally, several other individuals have informed me that it's the CIA that is actually behind the document release.
The right to secrecy
Many of us are pretty tired of supporters of Israel labeling as
"anti-Semitic" most any criticism of Israeli policies, which is
virtually never an appropriate accusation. Consider the Webster
Dictionary definition: "Anti-Semite. One who discriminates against or
is hostile to or prejudiced against Jews." Notice that the state of
Israel is not mentioned, or in any way implied.
Here's what real anti-Semitism looks like. Listen to former
president Richard Nixon: "The Jews are just a very aggressive and
abrasive and obnoxious personality. ... most of our Jewish friends ...
they are all basically people who have a sense of inferiority and have
got to compensate." This is from a tape of a conversation at the White
House, February 13, 1973, recently released. 9 These tapes, and there are a large number of them, are the Wikileaks of an earlier age.
Yet, as the prominent conservative Michael Medved pointed out after
the release of Nixon's remarks: "Ironically, though, no American did
more to rescue the Jewish people when it counted most: after the 1973
Egyptian-Syrian surprise attack destroyed a third of Israel's air force
and killed the American equivalent of 200,000 Israelis, Nixon overruled
his own Pentagon and ordered immediate re-supply. To this day, Israelis
feel gratitude for this decisiveness that enabled the Jewish state to
turn the tide of war." 10 So, was Richard Nixon anti-Semitic? And should his remarks be kept secret?
In another of his recent interviews, Julian Assange was asked whether
he thought that "a state has a right to have any secrets at all." He
conceded that there are circumstances when institutions have such a
need, "but that is not to say that all others must obey that need. The
media has an obligation to the public to get out information that the
public needs to know." 11
I would add that the American people — more than any other people —
have a need to know what their government is up to around the world
because their government engages in aggressive actions more than any
other government, continuously bombing and sending young men and women
to kill and die. Americans need to know what their psychopathic leaders
are really saying to each other and to foreign leaders about all this
shedding of blood. Any piece of such information might be used as a
weapon to prevent yet another Washington War. Michael Moore has
recently written:
We were taken to war in Iraq on a lie. Hundreds of thousands are
now dead. Just imagine if the men who planned this war crime back in
2002 had had a Wikileaks to deal with. They might not have been able to
pull it off. The only reason they thought they could get away with it
was because they had a guaranteed cloak of secrecy. That guarantee has
now been ripped from them, and I hope they are never able to operate in
secret again.
And, dear comrades, let us not forget: Our glorious leaders spy on us
all the time; no communication of ours, from phone call to email, is
secret from them; nothing in our bank accounts or our bedrooms is
guaranteed any kind of privacy if they wish to know about it. Recently,
the FBI raided the midwest homes of a number of persons active in
solidarity work with Palestinians, Colombians, and others. The agents
spent many hours going through each shelf and drawer, carting away
dozens of boxes of personal belongings. So what kind of privacy and
secrecy should the State Department be entitled to?
Preparing for the propaganda onslaught
February 6 will mark the centenary of the birth of Ronald Reagan,
president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. The conservatives
have wasted no time in starting the show. On New Years Day a 55-foot
long, 26-foot high float honoring Reagan was part of the annual Rose
Parade in Pasadena, California. To help you cope with, hopefully even
counter, the misinformation and the omissions that are going to swamp
the media for the next few months, here is some basic information about
the great man's splendid achievements, first in foreign policy:
-
Nicaragua
For eight terribly long years the people of Nicaragua were under
attack by Ronald Reagan's proxy army, the Contras. It was all-out war
from Washington, aiming to destroy the progressive social and economic
programs of the Sandinista government — burning down schools and medical
clinics, mining harbors, bombing and strafing, raping and torturing.
These Contras were the charming gentlemen Reagan called "freedom
fighters" and the "moral equivalent of our founding fathers".
-
El Salvador
Salvador's dissidents tried to work within the system. But with US
support, the government made that impossible, using repeated electoral
fraud and murdering hundreds of protestors and strikers. When the
dissidents took to the gun and civil war, the Carter administration and
then even more so, the Reagan administration, responded with unlimited
money, military aid, and training in support of the government and its
death squads and torture, the latter with the help of CIA torture
manuals. US military and CIA personnel played an active role on a
continuous basis. The result was 75,000 civilian deaths; meaningful
social change thwarted; a handful of the wealthy still owned the
country; the poor remained as ever; dissidents still had to fear
right-wing death squads; there was to be no profound social change in El
Salvador while Ronnie sat in the White House with Nancy.
-
Guatemala
In 1954, a CIA-organized coup overthrew the democratically-elected
and progressive government of Jacobo Arbenz, initiating 40 years of
military-government death squads, torture, disappearances, mass
executions, and unimaginable cruelty, totaling more than 200,000 victims
— indisputably one of the most inhumane chapters of the 20th century.
For eight of those years the Reagan administration played a major role.
Perhaps the worst of the military dictators was General Efraín Ríos
Montt, who carried out a near-holocaust against the indians and
peasants, for which he was widely condemned in the world. In December
1982, Reagan went to visit the Guatemalan dictator. At a press
conference of the two men, Ríos Montt was asked about the Guatemalan
policy of scorched earth. He replied "We do not have a policy of
scorched earth. We have a policy of scorched communists." After the
meeting, referring to the allegations of extensive human-rights abuses,
Reagan declared that Ríos Montt was getting "a bad deal" from the media.
-
Grenada
Reagan invaded this tiny country in October 1983, an invasion totally
illegal and immoral, and surrounded by lies (such as "endangered"
American medical students). The invasion put into power individuals
more beholden to US foreign policy objectives.
-
Afghanistan
After the Carter administration provoked a Soviet invasion, Reagan
came to power to support the Islamic fundamentalists in their war to
eject the Soviets and the secular government, which honored women's
rights. In the end, the United States and the fundamentalists "won",
women's rights and the rest of Afghanistan lost. More than a million
dead, three million disabled, five million refugees; in total about half
the population. And many thousands of anti-American Islamic
fundamentalists, trained and armed by the US, on the loose to terrorize
the world, to this day.
"To watch the courageous Afghan freedom fighters battle modern
arsenals with simple hand-held weapons is an inspiration to those who
love freedom," declared Reagan. "Their courage teaches us a great
lesson — that there are things in this world worth defending. To the
Afghan people, I say on behalf of all Americans that we admire your
heroism, your devotion to freedom, and your relentless struggle against
your oppressors." 12
-
The Cold War
As to Reagan's alleged role in ending the Cold War ... pure fiction. He prolonged it. Read the story in one of my books. 13
Some other examples of the remarkable amorality of Ronald Wilson Reagan and the feel-good heartlessness of his administration:
Reagan, in his famous 1964 speech, "A Time for Choosing", which
lifted him to national political status: "We were told four years ago
that 17 million people went to bed hungry each night. Well, that was
probably true. They were all on a diet."
"Undermining health, safety and environmental regulation. Reagan
decreed such rules must be subjected to regulatory impact analysis —
corporate-biased cost-benefit analyses, carried out by the Office of
Management and Budget. The result: countless positive regulations
discarded or revised based on pseudo-scientific conclusions that the
cost to corporations would be greater than the public benefit."
"Kick-starting the era of structural adjustment. It was under
Reagan administration influence that the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank began widely imposing the policy package known as structural
adjustment — featuring deregulation, privatization, emphasis on
exports, cuts in social spending — that has plunged country after
country in the developing world into economic destitution. The IMF
chief at the time was honest about what was to come, saying in 1981
that, for low-income countries, 'adjustment is particularly costly in
human terms'."
"Silence on the AIDS epidemic. Reagan didn't mention AIDS publicly
until 1987, by which point AIDS had killed 19,000 in the United
States."
– Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman 14
"Reagan's election changed the political reality. His agenda was
rolling back the welfare state, and his budgets included a wide range of
cuts for social programs. He was also very strategic about the
process. One of his first targets was Legal Aid. This program, which
provides legal services for low-income people, was staffed largely by
progressive lawyers, many of whom used it as a base to win
precedent-setting legal disputes against the government. Reagan
drastically cut back the program's funding. He also explicitly
prohibited the agency from taking on class-action suits against the
government — law suits that had been used with considerable success to
expand the rights of low- and moderate-income families."
"The Reagan administration also made weakening the power of unions a
top priority. The people he appointed to the National Labor Relations
Board were qualitatively more pro-management than appointees by prior
Democratic or Republican presidents. This allowed companies to ignore
workers' rights with impunity. Reagan also made the firing of strikers
an acceptable business practice when he fired striking air traffic
controllers in 1981. Many large corporations quickly embraced the
practice. ... The net effect of these policies was that union membership
plummeted, going from nearly 20 percent of the private sector workforce
in 1980 to just over 7 percent in 2006. "
– Dean Baker 15
Reaganomics: a tax policy based on a notion of incentives which
says that "the rich aren't working because they have too little money,
while the poor aren't working because they have too much."
– John Kenneth Galbraith
"According to the nostrums of Reagan Age America, the current
Chinese system — in equal measure capitalist and authoritarian — cannot
actually exist. Capitalism spread democracy, we were told ad nauseam by
a steady stream of conservative hacks, free-trade apologists,
government officials and American companies doing business in China.
Given enough Starbuckses and McDonald's, provided with sufficient
consumer choice, China would surely become a democracy."
– Harold Meyerson 16
Throughout the early and mid-1980s, the Reagan administration
declared that the Russians were spraying toxic chemicals over Laos,
Cambodia and Afghanistan — the so-called "yellow rain" — and had caused
more than ten thousand deaths by 1982 alone, (including, in Afghanistan,
3,042 deaths attributed to 47 separate incidents between the summer of
1979 and the summer of 1981, so precise was the information). President
Reagan himself denounced the Soviet Union thusly more than 15 times in
documents and speeches. The "yellow rain", it turned out, was
pollen-laden feces dropped by huge swarms of honeybees flying far
overhead. 17
Reagan's long-drawn-out statements re: Contragate (the scandal
involving the covert sale of weapons to Iran to enable Reaganites to
continue financing the Contras in the war against the Nicaraguan
government after the US Congress cut off funding for the Contras) can be
summarized as follows:
- I didn't know what was happening.
- If I did know, I didn't know enough.
- If I knew enough, I didn't know it in time.
- If I knew it in time, it wasn't illegal.
- If it was illegal, the law didn't apply to me.
- If the law applied to me, I didn't know what was happening.
Notes
- Sunday Telegraph (Australia), December 19, 2010 ↩
- Salon.com, December 15, 2010, "The inhumane conditions of Bradley Manning's detention". See also his attorney's account of Manning's typical day; and Washington Post, December 16, 2010↩
- The Guardian (London), December 17, 2010 ↩
- New York Times, December 19, 2010 ↩
- Washington Post, December 20, 2010 ↩
- Diane Rehm show, National Public Radio, Dec. 9, 2010↩
- The Guardian (London), December 21, 2010 ↩
- Information Clearing House, December 23 2010, "WikiLeaks to Release Israel Documents in Six Months"↩
- Washington Post, December 12, 2010 ↩
- From Medved's radio show, December 14, 2010; "Nixon: The Anti-Semitic Savior of Israel" ↩
- Al Jazeera, December 22 2010, Frost Over the World: Julian Assange interview ↩
- March 21, 1983, in the White House ↩
- "Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions
Since World War II", p.17-18. Also for the five countries listed above,
see the respective chapters in this book. ↩
- June, 2004; Mokhiber is editor of Corporate Crime Reporter; Weissman, editor of the Multinational Monitor, both in Washington, D.C. ↩
- April, 2007; Baker is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Washington, DC ↩
- Washington Post columnist, June 3, 2009 ↩
- "Killing Hope", p.349 ↩
–
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
KillingHope