Niagara Falls Reporter Opinion
BUSH MENDACITY WILL SHOCK HISTORIANS
By Bill Gallagher
DETROIT -- When historians write about our times,
they'll shake their heads and wonder how so many people could believe so
many lies for so long. They might actually write two parallel books --
one describing the cascading lies and deceptions George W. Bush and the
Republicans sold and the other telling the truth.
We're told, in effect, that trampling on civil liberties and eroding
freedom are a sure way to protect us from terrorists who envy our
freedom. That colossal lie will be one of the lasting stains on this
era, and I fear the day coming when the Busheviks or their political
heirs, gripped in fascist fever, will silence those who expose the
fraud.
The latest assault on liberty cloaked as protection is the Republican
campaign in Congress for national identity cards. Of course, they don't
call them that. Such candor sparks opposition. It's much more benevolent
sounding to call the measure the Real ID Act.
The plan is to impose national standards for driver's licenses and
require four pieces of identification before states issue them. The
House Republicans attached the proposed law to the bill for
appropriating funds for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The proposal is really aimed at immigrants and has nothing to do with
terrorism. It would create a bureaucratic nightmare, impose an unfunded
mandate on state governments and do nothing to protect us from al-Qaeda.
What it means is that many laborers in California and Texas will no
longer have a driver's license.
While the ignorant are licking up the lie that national ID cards will
make us safer, the Bush administration is making it easier for Saudis to
get visitor visas. That's right. The same folks who brought us 15 of the
19 hijackers on Sept 11, bin Laden himself, and the hateful Wahhabi sect
will now have their tightened visa restrictions lifted.
While the American media devoted enormous resources covering Paula
Abdul's fling with an "American Idol" contestant, an announcement last
week from the U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia was buried. We should be
following Abdullah, not Abdul.
On the heels of Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah's visit to Bush's ranch
in Crawford, Texas, we now know the prince and the president were doing
more than holding hands in public. They were privately playing footsie
to make it much easier for Saudis to enter the United States.
After Sept. 11, Bush reluctantly allowed the State Department to
impose some tightened restrictions on Saudi visitors attempting to enter
the United States. Up until then, all a Saudi citizen had to do was fill
out a form at a travel agent's office and they were here in a jiffy.
That's just what the 15 Saudi hijackers did.
But the tighter restrictions required security reviews and sometimes
long waits. Saudi businessmen whined about the inconvenience, and after
a few of them were denied visas, they went to the prince. He carried
their complaints to the president, who listened.
In a remarkably under-reported story, the Arab News carried an
announcement from James C. Oberwetter, the U.S. Ambassador to Saudi
Arabia, declaring that visa restrictions for Saudi visitors would be
eased.
"Last week's visit by Crown Prince Abdullah to the United States has
given a major boost to bilateral relations," the ambassador said.
The Saudis were surely miffed when one of the members of their own
delegation was denied a U.S. visa because his name appeared on a watch
list for alleged terrorists. Both the Dallas Morning News and the
Agence France-Press (AFP) wire service reported the incident, in which
the name of one of Prince Abdullah's minions popped up on a government
no-fly list.
"The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, in a routine check of the
delegation passenger manifest, found that one traveler was on a
government list meant to screen out possible terrorists," an official
said on condition of anonymity to the AFP.
The Dallas Morning News confirmed the report and quoted an
administration official saying, "We're not going to discuss the
individual because the information is classified."
So let's get this straight. We're going to make it harder for
Mexicans to drive cabs in Los Angeles and send them packing if they're
caught without a driver's license and make it easier for Saudis --
proven producers of mass murderers -- to enter the country. That's just
what George W. Bush is doing. The more ignorant and oblivious the
American people are, the more the Busheviks and their lies thrive.
The horrible carnage in Iraq is getting worse. The insurgents are
hitting targets in most areas of the country and over the last 10 days
more than 300 people have died in bombings and ambushes. But we're being
offered the lie that the violence is sputtering out and the new
government will bring stability.
Marine Corps Lt. Gen. James T. Conway, director of operations for the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and former commander in Iraq, says the insurgent
forces are desperate and they can't sustain these attacks.
"We do know that some of the insurgent Web sites have called this the
jihad Super Bowl, if you will, and now's the time to come fight and try
to kick the Americans out of the region," Conway told reporters. "How
much people are responding to that, we're just not certain at this
point, but we continue to seek that answer." The answer is bloody
obvious.
Two years after the chicken-hawk in chief made his cocky flight-deck
strut and proclaimed victory under the Mission Accomplished banner, Iraq
is in turmoil and the continued U.S. occupation there is a terrorist
recruiter's dream.
The two supreme lies about the war of choice in Iraq that future historians will marvel at are:
- Saddam was a serious and imminent threat to the United States because he had or planned to build terrible weapons.
- George W. Bush sought peace and did everything he could to prevent war that would only happen "as a last resort."
The weapons of mass destruction lies are thoroughly documented. UN
weapons inspectors came up empty-handed and our own multibillion dollar
search yielded nothing. It's abundantly clear intelligence was shaped
and distorted to create the myth of Saddam's weapons. No serious person
believes otherwise.
Now, we have the first document proving Bush had Iraq in his
crosshairs and was committed to "regime change" removed from any factual
findings. His public posture that he longed for peace was a damnable
lie.
The most important item coming from Britain in recent days was not
Tony Blair's re-election but the publication of a "smoking gun" memo
proving the Bush administration had no intention of dealing with Iraq
peacefully and diplomatically.
The Sunday Times of London got hold of the minutes of a 2002
meeting Blair had with members of his cabinet to discuss consultations
with the Bush people on U.S. intentions toward Iraq.
A Blair foreign police adviser, Matthew Rycroft, incorporated the
minutes of the meeting in a memorandum described as "extremely
sensitive." The document shows Bush and Blair had already decided to go
to war in Iraq a year before the invasion.
All the subsequent moves -- asking for a UN Security Council
resolution, more weapons inspections, Bush's speeches to Congress and
the case he presented to the American people -- were all ruses, hollow
lies. He and his buddy Blair were already committed to war and their
words in public were meaningless. The die was cast.
The words of Sir Richard Dearlove, the head of the British Secret
Intelligence Service, blow the lid off the lies. Known as "C" in spy
talk, his read on the U.S. position contained in the memo tells all.
It states, "C reported on his recent talks in Washington. There was a
perceptible shift in attitude. Military action was now seen as
inevitable. Bush wants to remove Saddam, through military action,
justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. The NSC (National
Security Council) has no patience with the UN route. There is little
discussion in Washington of the aftermath after military action."
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw buttresses Sir Richard's views
at the same meeting. "The Foreign Secretary said he will discuss this
with Colin Powell this week. It seemed clear that Bush made up his mind
to take military action, even if the timing was not yet decided. But the
case was thin. Saddam was not threatening his neighbours, and his WMD
capability was less than that of Libya, North Korea or Iran," the
meeting minutes note.
This document is dynamite. As Joe Conason writes in "Salon" online
magazine, it has received little notice outside the U.K. "Are Americans
so jaded about the deceptions perpetrated by our own government to lead
us into war in Iraq that we are no longer interested in fresh and
damming evidence of those lies?"
George W. Bush lied to the world when he said he sought peace in Iraq
and war was a "last resort." That's what historians will write and they
now have a document proving it.
Journalism is often called the first draft of history. For the most
part, America's big corporate media's first draft of Bush's war has been
devoted to his propagating lies. That's very dangerous in a fragile
democracy.
Bill Gallagher, a Peabody Award winner, is a former Niagara
Falls city councilman who now covers Detroit for Fox2 News. His e-mail
address is
HREF="mailto:gallaghernewsman@sbcglobal.net">gallaghernewsman@sbcglobal.
net.
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