The Anti-Empire
Report
Some things you need to know before the world ends
August 18, 2006
by William
Blum
Saved again, thank the Lord, saved
again
"Our government has kept us in a perpetual state of fear -- kept us in a
continuous
stampede of patriotic fervor -- with the cry of grave national emergency.
Always
there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power
that was
going to gobble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it by furnishing
the exorbitant
funds demanded. Yet, in retrospect, these disasters seem never to have happened,
seem never to have been quite real."
General Douglas MacArthur, 1957[1]
So now we've (choke) just been (gasp) saved from the simultaneous blowing
up of as many as ten airplanes headed toward the United States from the UK.
Wow, thank you Brits, thank you Homeland Security. Well done, lads. And thanks
for preventing the destruction of the Sears Tower in Chicago, saving lower
Manhattan from a terrorist-unleashed flood, smashing the frightful Canadian
"terror plot" with 17 arrested, ditto the three Toledo terrorists, and squashing
the Los Angeles al Qaeda plot to fly a hijacked airliner into a skyscraper.
The Los Angeles plot of 2002 was proudly announced by
George W. early this year. It has since been totally discredited. Declared
one senior counterterrorism official: "There was no definitive plot. It never
materialized or got past the thought stage."[2]
And the scare about ricin in the UK, which our own Mr.
Cheney used as part of the buildup for the invasion of Iraq, telling an audience
on January 10, 2003: "The gravity of the threat we face was underscored in
recent days when British police arrested ... suspected terrorists in London
and discovered a small quantity of ricin, one of the world's deadliest
poisons."
It turned out there was not only no plot, there was
no ricin. The Brits discovered almost immediately that the substance wasn't
ricin but kept that secret for more than two years.[3]
From what is typical in terrorist scares, it is likely
that the individuals arrested in the UK August 10 are guilty of what George
Orwell, in 1984, called "thoughtcrimes". That is to say, they haven't
actually DONE anything. At most, they've THOUGHT about doing something the
government would label "terrorism". Perhaps not even very serious thoughts,
perhaps just venting their anger at the exceptionally violent role played
by the UK and the US in the Mideast and thinking out loud how nice it would
be to throw some of that violence back in the face of Blair and Bush. And
then, the fatal moment for them that ruins their lives forever ... their
angry words are heard by the wrong person, who reports them to the authorities.
(In the Manhattan flood case the formidable, dangerous "terrorists" made
mention on an Internet chat room about blowing something up.)[4]
Soon a government agent provocateur appears, infiltrates
the group, and then actually encourages the individuals to think and
talk further about terrorist acts, to develop real plans instead of youthful
fantasizing, and even provides the individuals with some of the actual means
for carrying out these terrorist acts, like explosive material and technical
know-how, money and transportation, whatever is needed to advance the plot.
It's known as "entrapment", and it's supposed to be illegal, it's supposed
to be a powerful defense for the accused, but the authorities get away with
it all the time; and the accused get put away for very long stretches. And
because of the role played by the agent provocateur, we may never know whether
any of the accused, on their own, would have gone much further, if at all,
like actually making a bomb, or, in the present case, even making transatlantic
flight reservations since many of the accused reportedly did not even have
passports. Government infiltrating and monitoring is one thing; encouragement,
pushing the plot forward, and scaring the public to make political capital
from it is quite something else.
Prosecutors have said that the seven men in Miami charged
with conspiring to blow up the Sears Tower in Chicago and FBI buildings in
other cities had sworn allegiance to al-Qaeda. This came after meeting with
a confidential government informant who was posing as a representative of
the terrorist group. Did they swear or hold such allegiance, one must wonder,
before meeting with the informant? "In essence," reported The Independent
of London, "the entire case rests upon conversations between Narseal Batiste,
the apparent ringleader of the group, with the informant, who was posing
as a member of al-Qaeda but in fact belonged to the [FBI] South Florida Terrorist
Task Force." Batiste told the informant that "he was organizing a mission
to build an 'Islamic army' in order to wage jihad." He provided a list of
things he needed: boots, uniforms, machine guns, radios, vehicles, binoculars,
bullet proof vests, firearms, and $50,000 in cash. Oddly enough, one thing
that was not asked for was any kind of explosives material. After sweeps
of various locations in Miami, government agents found no explosives or weapons.
"This group was more aspirational than operational," said the FBI's deputy
director, while one FBI agent described them as "social misfits". And, added
the New York Times, investigators openly acknowledged that the suspects "had
only the most preliminary discussions about an attack." Yet Cheney
later hailed the arrests at a political fundraiser, calling the group a "very
real threat".[5]
Perhaps as great a threat as the suspects in the plot
to unleash a catastrophic flood in lower Manhattan by destroying a huge
underground wall that holds back the Hudson River. That was the story first
released by the authorities; after a while it was replaced by the claim that
the suspects were actually plotting something aimed at the subway tunnels
that run under the river.[6]
Which is more reliable, one must wonder, information
on Internet chat rooms or WMD tips provided by CIA Iraqi informers? Or
information obtained, as in the current case in the UK, from Pakistani
interrogators of the suspects, none of the interrogators being known to be
ardent supporters of Amnesty International.
And the three men arrested in Toledo, Ohio in February
were accused of -- are you ready? -- plotting to recruit and train terrorists
to attack US and allied troops overseas. For saving us from this horror we
have a paid FBI witness to thank. He had been an informer with the FBI for
four years, and most likely was paid for each new lead he brought in. In
the Sears case, the FBI paid almost $56,000 to two confidential informants
and government officials also granted one of them immigration parole so he
could remain in the country.[7]
There must be millions of people in the United States
and elsewhere who have thoughts about "terrorist acts". I might well be one
of them when I read about a gathering of Bush, Cheney, and assorted neocons
that's going to take place. Given the daily horror of Iraq, Afghanistan,
Lebanon and Palestine in recent times, little of which would occur if not
for the government of the United States of America and its allies, the numbers
of people having such thoughts must be rapidly multiplying. If I had been
at an American or British airport as the latest scare story unfolded, waiting
in an interminable line, having my flight canceled, or being told I can't
have any carry-on luggage, I may have found it irresistible at some point
to declare loudly to my fellow suffering passengers: "Y'know, folks, this
security crap is only gonna get worse and worse as long as the United States
and Britain continue to invade, bomb, overthrow, occupy, and torture the
world!"
How long before I was pulled out of line and thrown
into some kind of custody?
If MacArthur were alive today would he dare to publicly
express the thoughts of his cited above?
Policy makers and security experts, reports the Associated
Press, say that "Law enforcers are now willing to act swiftly against al-Qaeda
sympathizers, even if it means grabbing wannabe terrorists whose plots may
be only pipe dreams."[8]
Commonly, the "terrorists" are watched for many months,
then the police pounce on them at a politically opportune time. The reasons
in the current case may stem from some aspect of the Blair and Bush
administrations being under attack from all sides, including the defeat of
super war-supporter Senator Joseph Lieberman (just 36 hours before the British
announcement), and the upcoming November elections, when the Republicans
will be running on the War on Terrorism issue. "Weeks before September 11th,
this is going to play big," said a White House official, adding that "some
Democratic candidates won't 'look as appealing' under the
circumstances."[9]
Referring to the alleged UK terrorism plot, the New
York Times reported that: "The White House and the Republican Party had pounced
on that news, along with the defeat of Senator Joseph I. Lieberman in the
Connecticut Democratic primary by an antiwar candidate, Ned Lamont, to paint
the Democrats as weak on national security. Mr. Cheney had gone so far as
to imply that the defeat of Mr. Lieberman, a strong backer of the war, would
embolden 'Al Qaeda types'."[10]
Vote Republican or the terrorists win!
The announcement of this particular terrorist threat
may also be explained by this news item:
"Much of the televised discussion yesterday concerned
the investigative tools available in Britain that U.S. officials credit with
allowing authorities to get ahead of the plot before it proved catastrophic.
[Homeland Security Secretary Michael] Chertoff said the ability to monitor
monetary transactions and communications and to arrest suspects for a period
of 28 days on an emergency basis made a significant difference in the case."[11]
We should be hearing further from the administration as it tries to
take advantage of these tactics. But as of yet neither the US nor the UK
authorities have been able to provide any concrete evidence to back up the
story that the police raids and mass arrests in Britain thwarted an imminent
attack that would have taken the lives of thousands of transatlantic travelers.
The American Empire for Dummies (an excerpt from
an unwritten book)
1. The United States is determined to dominate the world, not to mention
outer space. This is not a left-wing cliché, the empire's leading
lights trumpet Washington's desire, means, and intention for domination,
while assuring the world of the noble purposes behind this crusade. Since
the demise of the Soviet Union, these declarations have been regularly put
forth in policy papers emanating from the White House, the Pentagon, and
think tanks closely associated with the national security establishment.
They make it perfectly clear that any potential rival to the world's only
superpower must be, and will be, seriously challenged. Here is the first
of these warnings, from 1992: "We must maintain the mechanisms for deterring
potential competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional
or global role."[12]
2. World domination includes dominating the Middle East; one might say
particularly the Middle East. (See chapter 3, "Oil", and chapter 6,
"Israel". Please note that there is no chapter on "Democracy and Freedom".)
3. In recent times only Iraq, Syria and Iran have stood in the way of US
Middle East domination ("remaking the Middle East" is the usual euphemism).
Iraq is now a basket case.
The basketizing of Syria awaits only a quasi-plausible
excuse, which it was hoped Israel would provide by provoking a hostile Syrian
reaction in the recent Israeli-Lebanon war.
The US-Israeli assault on Lebanon was aimed at basketizing
Hezbollah so that it couldn't come to the aid of Iran by attacking Israel
during the basketizing of Iran; the latter may begin with sanctions, approved
by a pliant Security Council. This was one of the key ways the basketizing
of Iraq began. Do not believe the canard that France is hostile to US foreign
policy. Time and again, both in and out of the Security Council, France has
raised a little objection to this point or that point of Washington's policy
because it needs to pretend and feel that it's still a great power and has
a significant role to play in world affairs, but in the end it smooths the
way for the empire.
And Germany against the US war in Iraq? Hardly. Germany
has helped the American war effort in half a dozen important ways, including
on the ground in Iraq, even while German politicians ran on an anti-Iraq
War platform.
Carlos Romulo, former president of the UN General Assembly:
"If there is a problem between a weak nation and another weak nation and
the UN takes action, the problem disappears. If there is a problem between
a strong nation and a weak nation and the UN takes action, the weak nation
disappears. If there is a problem between a strong nation and a strong nation
and the UN takes action, the UN disappears."
4. World domination also includes Central Asia and its massive oil and gas
reserves. Afghanistan with its pipelines and US military bases is vital to
this undertaking. Through one war or another in recent years, the United
States has managed to establish military bases/facilities throughout the
region, including in Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Georgia,
vital to protecting the pipelines to the eastern Mediterranean; one of the
pipelines will extend to Israel, which, along with Turkey, is expected to
play a role in the protection of the area.
The Cuban punching bag ad infinitum
I could scarcely contain my surprise. A National Public Radio (NPR) newscaster
was speaking, August 1, with an NPR correspondent who had just left a White
House press conference and was reporting that the president, in response
to a question, had stated that the United States had nothing whatsoever to
do with Israeli policies in Lebanon and Gaza. The newscaster, Alex Chadwick,
then asked the reporter: "How do you know what to believe from the White
House?"
Was this a sign of the long-awaited breath of skepticism
blowing in the mainstream media? No, it wasn't. I made the story up. What
really happened was that the correspondent reported that the Cuban government
had announced that Fidel Castro was going to have an operation and that his
brother, Raul Castro, would be replacing him temporarily. Chadwick then asked:
"How do you know what to believe in Cuba?"[13]
This also really happened: Jay Leno on his August 7
program: "There's news of a major medical crisis from Cuba concerning Fidel
Castro. It looks like he's getting better."
Think of a US president battling a serious ailment and
a broadcaster on Cuban TV making such a remark.
Can anyone find a message hidden
here?
The following quotations all come from the same article in the Washington
Post of August 4 by Ann Scott Tyson concerning the Iraqi town of Hit:
"Residents are quick to argue that the American presence
incites those attacks, and they blame the U.S. military rather than insurgents
for turning their town into a combat zone. The Americans should pull out,
they say, and let them solve their own problems."
"We want the same thing. I want to go home to my wife,"
said an American soldier.
"Another U.S. officer put it more bluntly: 'Nobody wants
us here, so why are we here? That's the big question.'"
"If we leave, all the attacks would stop, because we'd
be gone."
"The problem is with the Americans. They only bring
problems," said watermelon vendor Sefuab
Ganiydum, 35. "Closing the bridge, the curfew, the hospital. It's better
for U.S. forces to leave the city."
"What did we do to have all this suffering?" asked Ramsey
Abdullah Hindi, 60, sitting outside a tea shop. Ignoring U.S. troops within
earshot, he said Iraqis were justified to attack them. "They have a right
to fight against the Americans because of their religion and the bad treatment.
We will stand until the last," he said somberly.
"City officials, too, are adamant that U.S. troops leave
Hit."
"I'm the guy doing the good stuff and I get shot at
all the time! Nobody is pro-American in this city. They either tolerate us
or all-out hate us," said a US Marine major.
"If we do leave, the city will be a lot better and they'll
build it a lot better."
This just in: Dubya has just read this article and says
the hidden message is that the United States is bringing freedom and democracy
to Iraq.
NOTES
1. Vorin Whan, ed. "A Soldier Speaks: Public Papers and Speeches of General
of the Army
Douglas MacArthur" (1965)
2. The Daily News (New York), February 10, 2006
3. Washington Post, April 14, 2005; United Press International, April 18,
2005
4. Time, July 7, 2006, article by Joshua Marshall; Associated Press, July
14, 2006
5. Sears case: Knight Ridder Newspapers, June 23, 2006; The Independent (London),
June 25, 2006;
St. Petersburg Times (Florida), June 24, 2006; New York Times, August 13,
2006
6. Associated Press, July 14, 2006
7. Toledo: Associated Press, April 18, 2006; Sears: South Florida Sun Sentinel,
July 26, 2006
8. Associated Press, July 8, 2006
9. Agence France Presse, August 11, 2006
10. New York Times, August 17, 2006. p.23
11. Washington Post, August 14, 2006, p.9
12. "Defense Planning Guidance for the Fiscal Years 1994-1999", as quoted
in New York Times,
March 8, 1992, p.14, emphasis added
13. NPR, Day to Day, August 1, 2006, 12:08 pm
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Anti-Empire Report you can use the following address. Thanks.
William Blum
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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
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