Although the 9/11 Commission
will not lay a glove on her, Condoleezza Rice is finished as a Black
political asset of the White Man’s (War) Party. Colin Powell, a much
smarter and cagier opportunist, will likely escape this administration
still clutching his devalued aura, having hoarded some small measure
of political capital for himself. This is not true for Condoleezza
Rice. Her complete and abject identification with her master leaves
Rice with nothing of her own to claim.
“Don’t
write her political
epitaph yet,” says commentator Earl Ofari
Hutchinson. If Hutchinson means that Rice will
always have a job with the Bush family (she served the father,
too) or with Chevron-Texaco
Oil (where she worked between
Bushes), then we agree. Rice’s selfless renderings to the white
and wealthy have earned her a lifetime of…more of the same. Should
she crack under the weight of her own and her masters’ lies – as
sometimes seems imminent – there is a commodious attic in one of
the Bush domiciles where “Condi” can be safely stored.
However,
gone are the heady days when rich rightwing society floated cocktail
dreams of Condoleezza for the Senate or
Vice President in
2004, and even Condi
for President in ’08. "Hollywood
couldn't come up with a candidate as good as she is," said
California GOP Chairman Shawn Steele, back in May
2001. "She's
emerging as the most popular and most admired woman in America
right now." Rice has since rumpled
in the heat, no longer Best In Show, so to speak.
Outlived usefulness
In
the false glow of their delusions, Republicans truly believed that
Condoleezza Rice was the ultimate political asset – a Black woman
who could by her presence wash them clean of racist stench,
and then perform the same ablution the next day, and the next.
Rice made it easy for the super-privileged to love themselves.
Unlike coy Colin Powell, Rice did not bargain or seek her own space,
but settled into the very fabric of Bushness. In so doing, however,
Rice lost all power of personal agency. Having surrendered everything
to the Bushes, her Blackness gradually lost its value as
a cloak for her patrons’ racism. The affirmative action opinions
of a loyal Black servant carry little weight, as Rice discovered
in January of last year when Colin Powell’s pronouncements on the
subject totally eclipsed her own. Her benefactors noticed that,
too. That’s when the talk of high office, stopped.
Rice’s
rich white admirers hugged and squeezed her too tightly – until
there was nothing left but them all over her. It is common
in African American circles to speak of “lost” Black souls, but
in Rice’s case it is almost literally true that she doesn’t know
where she stands and to whom she is speaking.
“[K]nowing
what we know about the difficulties of our own history, knowing what
we know about how hard it is to build democracy, we need to be humble
in singing freedom's praises,” Rice told the convention of the National
Association of Black Journalists, last August. “We” need to be humble
about singing freedom’s praises? We Black people, who still tingle
to Dr. Martin Luther King’s joyous, boundlessly exuberant “Free at
last…thank God Almighty, we’re free at last!” are supposed to be
humble about freedoms so dearly won? Rice’s speech was an appropriately
cautionary message to privileged white Americans, that they should
not so boastfully lecture other nations on America’s democratic credentials.
But for a Black gathering, Rice’s words were more than strange – they
were evidence of profound personal disorientation. A Black woman
who doesn’t know how to talk to Black people is of limited political
use to an administration that has few African American allies.
Rice has mused aloud that
segregation would have faded away in time without the intervention
of the Civil Rights Movement. This is no doubt what rich racists
say over drinks in Texas – and what George Bush might have said to
Rice back at the ranch in the days when they were both young and
he still drank – but it is not what the “most powerful” Black woman
in the world says in public if she has a brain in her head.
But Rice is brilliant, we
were told. Millions of Black people fervently wished that were true,
that Bush’s tenure would at least provide an icon or role model or
two, as a consolation prize. Then the esteemed Dr. Rice revealed
that she is as stupid as anyone in the White House – with the possible
exception of George. "I don't think anybody could have predicted
... that they would try to use an airplane as a missile," said
the National Security Advisor in the spring
of 2002, when Congress
finally began delving into how 9/11 could have happened.
Two years later, even Fox
news viewers know that al-Qaida’s martyrdom-seekers talked and plotted
about little else than using airplanes as weapons against the United
States in the years and months before
9/11 – facts known at
the time even to serious newspaper readers as well as the world’s
intelligence services. Rice marinates in the putrid stew, and even
the helping hands of the 9/11 Commissioners – who have repeatedly
said they are not seeking to assign blame to
anyone – cannot
save the last threads of her reputation as an intellect. Politically,
Rice is burnt.
The bitter end
We
know that Rice was, by virtue of her position, the person most
culpable for dismissing the threat from al-Qaida:
And, thanks to former Treasury
Secretary Paul O’Neill and others, we know that Rice and the rest
of the oil-slicks at the White House chose to spend their pre-9/11
quality time studying petro-maps of Iraq.
When Rice faces the
9/11 Commission, as early as next
week, she will hold
the administration
in her not too capable hands. Unlike George Bush and Vice President
Cheney, who will have each
other for company, Rice will
speak alone and under oath. In ways that she never expected, “Dr.
Rice’s
appearance before the commission will set the stage for the most
dramatic testimony since the Senate confirmation hearings for
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas,” said the March 30 issue
of NorthStar Network.
There is a big difference, however. The Senate enabled the
gruesome Justice Thomas to plague Black people for the rest
of his lifetime. Condoleezza Rice’s 9/11 testimony
will seal her political fate. Whether she sticks around for
the remainder
of the Bush term(s) or not, there will never again be websites
and bumper stickers promoting “Condi” for high office. After
her testimony is done, she will have outlived her public usefulness
to her adopted
household. Rice’s “political epitaph” is all but written.
History will judge
Rice infinitely more harshly than the 9/11 Commission, which
is concerned only with harms done to Americans.
Rice, Colin Powell and a cellblock full of Bush Pirates deserve
to be tried for the highest crimes yet delineated by mankind:
crimes against peace (i.e., waging a "war of aggression"),
war crimes and crimes against humanity. So, let’s hear
no more about Condoleezza Rice being unfairly made a scapegoat.
The last thing a pirate
should wish for is justice.