| VIVA ZAPATERO!
John Chuckman
OpEdNews.Com
There are a few special moments now and then in world affairs that lift
your spirit.
One of these came with the fall of Romania's Ceausescu, former chum of
Richard Nixon, known appropriately to his own countrymen as "the
Dracula." His fall was, for me, the most poignant symbol of
totalitarianism's collapse in Eastern Europe. When Romanian
revolutionaries waved their national flag with its center torn out, I made
a small copy and posted it on my office bulletin board.
Another such moment came with a speech at the United Nations just over
a year ago by France's Dominique de Villepin. Behind the scenes, the U.S.
had been using powerful dirty tactics to exert pressure on every member of
the Security Council to approve and legitimize its threatened invasion of
Iraq - a loan forgiven here, another called there, a project promised, a
project withdrawn, and the Secretary General's office bugged. It did not
seem possible the pressure could be resisted. But M. de Villepin spoke
eloquently for the great majority of the world's people opposed to an
illegal war. So when Bush started blowing up civilians in Baghdad, he was
uncomfortably alone (Tony Blair counting for little either at home or
abroad), and his acts were seen for what they were, a violent tantrum by
America's neocons, serving no worthy purpose and loaded with unpredictable
consequences.
Now we have the Spanish election and newly-elected Prime
Minister Zapatero's words about the
Iraq invasion, words like "lies" and "stupid" that are
inspiring for their honesty and directness. Truth in world affairs is
rare, and Zapatero's comes after three solid years of numbing,
depressingly-obvious dishonesty from Bush.
Zapatero has made the very reasonable demand, if Spanish troops are to
remain in Iraq, that the United Nations must assume responsibility there.
This is not only reasonable, it would serve the best interests of all
involved in the mess the United States has made of the country - all, that
is, but the madmen who created the mess.
Those Americans now busy building heated, Olympic-sized swimming pools
with the proceeds of new defense contracts and their political allies of
convenience, evangelical illiterates who hold that a fifteen-billion year
old universe was created six thousand years ago - two pillars of Bush
support - will now start their voodoo imprecations about Spain's giving in
to terror. Democratic nominee Kerry, almost pathetically, has joined the
mumbo jumbo, asking Spain's new government "to reconsider [its]
decision [to withdraw troops] to send a message that terrorists cannot win
by their acts of terror."
Nothing could be less accurate or demonstrate more backward logic. The
appalling act of terror in Madrid rather has focused Spain on the simple,
irreducible truth that the key place to fight terror is in your own
country and its policies towards the world. It has brought Spain's people
back to where they were before the previous government betrayed their
interests to Bush.
What do I mean by "in your own country"? Few Americans recall
that the nineteen men responsible for 9/11 entered their country on
American visas. Little stealth was involved. A twentieth man with a visa
was stopped by a single alert INS man suspicious of his frightening
manner.
Americans forget that their 30-billion-dollar-a-year-plus intelligence
apparatus failed to detect what these men were up to, even though there
was some awareness of their presence. The failure is thrown into strong
relief by the discovery that a large group of Israeli spies in the United
States were on to the nineteen conspirators, and these Israeli spies
should themselves have aroused American interest.
Americans seem unaware that such simple measures as re-inforced cockpit
doors and/or upgraded security inspection at airports would have made 9/11
impossible. Saying this is not hindsight on my part. After years of new
threats from Western Asia and after America's hurling a whole fleet of
cruise missiles at Afghanistan, these changes were modest precautions
advocated at the time. A quibbling, petty Republican Congress bears no
small responsibility for the terrorists' success on 9/11.
No, for America's right wing, a pound of cure always is worth more than
an ounce of prevention, especially where the cure involves blowing people
up abroad. Chests swelled like bull walruses in mating season, they relish
a demonstration of America's capacity for destruction, and, when you
combine that with an exciting new opportunity for local defense
contractors, it makes an irresistible legislative package. I recall a
comedy skit by the late John Candy with Toronto's Second City before his
success in films in which he and another comedian played backwoods types
watching explosions and exchanging comments like, "That blowed up
real good!" "Yeah, real good!" The skit brutally sums up
the response to 9/11.
You don't learn a lot by blowing people up. After killing thousands of
people and destroying the livelihoods of millions of others, what has Bush
learned about the perpetrators of 9/11? Not much. To this day, there is no
proof that bin Laden was even involved in 9/11. His guilt has been assumed
and repeated, over and over, in the American press to the point where it
is taken for granted by the public. I don't deny the possibility or even
the likelihood, I just remind readers that we genuinely do not know more
than two years on.
As for Saddam Hussein's dealings with 9/11 terrorists, we know to a
certainty he never had any. His secular outlook on the world was utterly
incompatible with religious fundamentalists like bin Laden. They hated
each other, just as the Muslim clerics of Iran's revolution and the
secular Shah hated each other. Bush and his grotesque band of armchair
killers know this as well as I do, yet they have lied countless times
suggesting otherwise.
So I am heartened by Zapatero's step onto the world scene speaking
truth. I know the silk-suited Christian warriors in the White House will
do everything they can to discredit him, because his words starkly reveal
the nakedness of their emperor. He can be sure the CIA will pour resources
into Spain's opposition party. No niceties about democracy will hold them
back, any more than they did in Haiti.
John Chuckman chuckman@yellowtimes.org
is former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He has
many interests and is a lifelong student of history. He writes with a
passionate desire for honesty, the rule of reason, and concern for human
decency. He is a member of no political party and takes exception to what
has been called America's "culture of complaint" with its habit
of reducing every important issue to an unproductive argument between two
simplistically-defined groups. John regards it as a badge of honor to have
left the United States as a poor young man from the South Side of Chicago
when the country embarked on the pointless murder of something like 3
million Vietnamese in their own land because they happened to embrace the
wrong economic loyalties. He lives in Canada, which he is fond of calling
"the peaceable kingdom." John's columns appear regularly on
Counterpunch, Media Monitors, Online Journal, Scoop (New Zealand), Liberal
Slant, Yellow Times, Dissident Voice, Jeff Rense, and many other Internet
sites. He is regularly translated into Italian (Utopia) and Spanish (Rebelion) |