This article originally appeared
in the Jamaica
Observer.
Mr.
Bush is on a roll. He’s so happy he’s thumbing his nose at the world. He’s
got away with Abu Ghraib, with Fallujah and Haiti and everywhere the
rent-a-crowd counter-revolutions just seem to go rolling
along.
For a man who had traveled out of the
United States only once (or was it twice) before he stood for
the Presidency of the United States, Mr. Bush seems to know a
lot about the world outside. It rather resembles Texas, only
very slightly bigger.
Instead of signing death
warrants Mr. Bush can now appoint Ambassadors and World Bank
directors to
destroy international institutions, carrying to the logical conclusion
the remark by the prophet of the neoconservatives – Richard
Perle – to the effect that the Iraq War meant the end of the "evil
system of international law."
These days, nobody seems to notice or
at least, nobody of any consequence. We in the (misnamed) developing
world will, however, feel some of the consequences.
Meanwhile the US media, supposedly
dedicated to freedom of the press in aid of the free society,
concerns itself not with the crimes of the grand and greedy,
but with the peccadilloes of rap singers, baseball players and
small time hoodlums. Their picture of America the Beautiful and
Free is oddly disconcerting.
It is a little off-putting
to watch the necrophiliac voyeurism of a Larry King as he probes
the psychic
guts of yet another victim of the American way. It is weirdly
non-compelling to hear the daily recital of the elaborate fictions
served up to discredit Michael Jackson or to learn that the rap
singer L’il Kim faces 30 years in jail for lying about a shooting
incident outside a radio station while somewhere else Ken Lay
is explaining why he is not guilty of anything and the Congress
refuses to investigate American corruption in Iraq or the
corruption of the Republican leader of the House of Representatives,
Mr. Tom DeLay.
Mr. Bush’s appointment of John Bolton
to be Ambassador to the United Nations – a job once held
by Adlai Stevenson – seems weirdly appropriate, since Mr. Bolton
is not only about as far right as Adolph Hitler but is a pathological
liar to boot. Mr. Negroponte’s appointment as America’s
security czar seems fitting too, in this age of American gulags
around the world, and of people being rendered like fat pork – “teased” into
confessing while their brains turn to jelly in some faraway,
foreign torture chamber.
The nomination of Paul Wolfowitz
to head the World Bank seems entirely sensible, even deserved,
in this scenario
where morality consists of denying post facto contraception
to poor women and in prolonging the torture of a brain-dead
woman who has been in a vegetative state since 1990. This
week, the Congress of the United States attempted to prolong the
agony by issuing a subpoena for Terry Schiavo to appear before
them to testify in her own defense. This Grand Guignol gambit was
Congress’ way of trying to ensure that the plug was not pulled
on a ghastly experiment in hypocrisy which has gone on for 15 years.
Of course, people do notice.
Saturday was the anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq
and all round
the world, millions demonstrated their impotent rage and
frustration at the senseless killing and destruction authorized
by Bush, Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, Rice, Bolton
and Negroponte. Just over two weeks ago was the anniversary
of the assisted coup in Haiti where democracy was aborted on “humanitarian” grounds.
Haitians, as the acting Secretary General of the OAS, Mr. Einaudi
has said, should have no business in unning Haiti. Democracy
works, in the horrific personages of La Tortue and his gang of
CIA trained killers.
In a speech before the UN Human Rights
Commission, Perez Roque, Foreign Minister of Cuba was scathing:
“ We all knew
that the Commission on Human Rights was victim to the political
manipulation of its work because the Government of the United
States and its allies have used the Commission as if it were their
private property and have turned it into some sort of inquisition
tribunal to condemn the countries of he South and, particularly,
those who actively oppose their strategy of neocolonial
domination.”
You may remember it was
the new UN Ambassador, Mr. John Bolton, then an Undersecretary
of State, who two years ago invented a monstrous lie against
Cuba
to the effect that iological and chemical weapons were being
manufactured there. In his new post at the UN he will no doubt
have the opportunity to spew his poisoned rhetoric directly
at Cuba and Venezuela and all those other picayune powers who
do not wish to accept US domination.
The UNCHR has long been
used to pillory Cuba and other states which the US wishes to
demonize. So Mr.
Roque chose his platform with care, it seems, and used the
occasion to denounce the international double standards which
allow rich and powerful states to abuse international law and
human rights with impunity. Mr. Roque was harsh on the European
Union. A year ago the EU had shown much tender concern for
the fate of several dozen people who the Cubans considered
treacherous paid agents of the United States. Mr. Roque denounced
the EU for its recent use of a procedural ploy to sabotage “a
draft resolution that proposed to investigate the massive,
flagrant and systematic human rights violations still committed
today against over 500 prisoners at the naval base that the
United States keeps, against the will of the Cuban people,
in Guantanamo Bay."
To the casual visitor
from Mars it must seem a little odd that the US and the EU,
both such doughty “champions” of
human rights don’t seem to be enthusiastic about investigating
the documented abuses up to and including murder, which have
happened just 90 miles north of Oracabessa.
Mr. Roque was disturbed by another
development:
“The second event
was the release of the report presented by the High-Level Group
on Threats, Challenges and Change, set up at the initiative
of the UN Secretary-General. It categorically states that ‘the
Commission cannot be credible if it is seen to be maintaining
double standards in addressing human rights concerns.’ Should
we then wait for the representatives of the United States and its
allies to come up with self-criticisms at this plenary session and
undertake to work with us, Third World countries, to rescue
the Commission on Human Rights from disrepute and confrontation?”
Since that is obviously
not going to happen Mr. Roque spoke on behalf of the civilized
world
when he said that the enjoyment of human rights today
depends on whether you live in a developed country or not,
and on the social class to which you belong. “There will be
no real enjoyment of human rights for all as long as we
fail to achieve social justice in the relations among
countries and within countries themselves.”
With Mr. Negroponte minding
the chicken coop, Mr. Bolton riding herd on the fictional United
Nations and Mr. Wolfowitz flexing his intellectual muscle at
the World Bank it is clear that for the next four years – at
least – Mr. Roque’s prognosis will hold true:
“They will always
be the attackers and never the ones under attack. Their
peace rests on their military power. They have also achieved
economic development, based on the pillage of the wealth of the
other poor countries that were former colonies, which suffer
and bleed to death for those to squander. However, in
those developed countries, incredible as it may seem,
the unemployed, the immigrants and the impoverished do
not enjoy the rights that are most certainly guaranteed
for the rich.”
The invasion and destruction
of the Iraqi state was first mooted by President Bush as a
case for “regime
change.” Saddam Hussein was a bad guy and needed to be removed
for the good of humanity. That impolitic justification
was urgently replaced by something apparently more rational
and likely to be accepted by the world: Bush, backed by Britain’s Tony
Blair said Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction
and was likely to use them against his neighbors and perhaps,
even against the United States. Nightmares of mushroom clouds
in American cities began to be peddled by Bush and Condoleezza
Rice, his National Security adviser.
In the United States,
though nowhere else, a majority of the population had been
convinced by the
Administration’s rhetoric that Saddam was behind the atrocities
of 9/11.
World opinion quickly
assessed the real reason as the United States lust for control
of the
world’s energy resources. I myself carried a sign saying “No
Blood for Oil” in one of the thousands of popular demonstrations
in which millions of people around the world protested
against the coming invasion.
The protests were a waste
of time. Messrs Bush, Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld and Co. were
not to
be stopped. On the night of March 18, 2003, the United States
launched an attack meant to murder Saddam Hussein and to intimidate
his people into submission by frightfulness – “shock and awe” as
it was called. This was followed by a barbaric reduction
to rubble of the Iraqi state and its cities. The 8,000 year
old record of civilization in Babylon and other places
did not escape American vandalism. Museums and government ministries
were looted and the whole apparatus of government destroyed
in an apparent effort to remove from the Iraqi people,
the very idea of autonomy and independence.
No weapons of mass destruction
have ever been found, But no sweat – “Mission accomplished!”
Bush, Rumsfeld, Bremer and the
Halliburton company rule
Two years later the American “cakewalk” has
turned into a pathway to hell for the Iraqi people more than
100,000 of whom have so far perished in the American campaign
to purify their country. Despite the American effort to impose
its own “democratic solution” on the country, the result has
been the substitution of a fundamentalist Islamic government for
the secular regime of Saddam Hussein.
When Mr. Bush began his
crusade against Islamic fundamentalism/”terrorism” he had been warned that
his intervention could have the opposite effect to that hoped
for. That prognosis has turned out to be accurate. To control
Iraq and the Middle East the Americans will need to remain
in Iraq for the foreseeable future. Meanwhile, the Halliburton
company extracts its private tribute in unaccounted and unaccountable
billions and American oil companies wait to be let loose to
exploit Iraq’s massive oil reserves in the service of American
democracy.
There is just one fly
in the ointment. A resistance movement which 18 months ago
numbered less than
five thousand members, today counts anywhere between 25,000
and 50,000 fighters, determined to frustrate Mr. Bush’s grand
design.
It seems that while they may have been shocked
by Mr. Bush’s
display of power, they were clearly not awed.
John Maxwell of the University of the West Indies (UWI)
is the veteran Jamaican journalist who in 1999 single-handedly
thwarted the Jamaican government's efforts to build houses
at Hope, the nation's oldest and best known botanical gardens.
His campaigning earned him first prize in the 2000 Sandals
Resort's annual Environmental Journalism Competition, the region's
richest journalism prize. He is also the author of How to Make Our Own News: A Primer for Environmentalists
and Journalists (Jamaica, 2000). Mr. Maxwell can be
reached at [email protected].
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