BUSH
STONEWALLS 9/11 COMMISSION, LEAVING THE FAMILIES TO WONDER WHY
By
Bill Gallagher
OpEdNews.Com
DETROIT
-- George W. Bush and his gang control, influence or spin all they can and
ignore the difficult, disturbing and embarrassing issues and events they
can't dominate and direct.
Karl
Rove, the president's political brain, has his Christian soldiers in full
campaign armor now, marching under the banner of incumbency, a powerful
force, but also with a vulnerable flank.
The
independent commission investigating the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks is a
case where incumbency works both ways. Remember the salient facts. George
W. Bush vehemently opposed the creation of the commission in the first
place. Under pressure from the families of the victims, he reluctantly
agreed to it and then has done everything in his power to delay, frustrate
and scuttle its work.
First,
Dubya appointed Henry Kissinger the panel's first chairman. Kissinger, the
mortician of openness, is the kind of person you appoint to bury the
truth. He had to bow out when he learned he'd have to reveal the names of
the clients of his international consulting firm.
Do
you smell Saudi royals, too? And certainly the scent of China and a few
other murderous dictatorships and nations that torture and murder their
own people and either have or flirt with weapons of mass destruction.
Kissinger will do the bidding of all kinds of loathsome scum, as long as
they pay his handsome fees.
Following
the Kissinger embarrassment, Bush chose as chairman Thomas Kean, the
former Republican governor of New Jersey. He is a decent and honorable
man, and he heard the president and his handlers say, "Sure, Tom,
we're with you 100 percent. Get to the bottom of this thing. What did we
know and when did we know it? Find out what went wrong with our
intelligence. How'd those guys get here anyhow? And how can we prevent
future attacks? We'll help you out and cooperate in any way." Kean
quickly learned they didn't mean a word of it.
Kean
points out that this is the most extensive examination of the U.S.
government's own operation ever undertaken. But, from the start, nearly
every federal agency Kean and the commission have dealt with has delayed
and balked at requests for information, documents and interviews. Several
agencies only complied in the face of subpoenas, and the deliberate
stonewalling pushed the commission's work way back.
The
commission requested a two-month extension beyond its May 27 report
deadline. Any reasonable person would understand why. But then House
Speaker Dennis Hastert jumped in and said no. He said the commission
didn't need any more time and he feared the extension would make the
commission's findings "a political issue" during the
presidential campaign.
Hastert
is a former high school wresting coach who was hand-picked for the job by
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who really runs the House. Even DeLay
knows his political dealings and personality are so vile he can't be the
public face for the House Republicans. So he has Hastert in a choke-hold
and Hastert does whatever DeLay wants.
The
White House pretended to try to pressure Hastert to change his mind, but
he wouldn't, to Karl Rove's private delight. Then, Democratic Sen. Joe
Lieberman and Republican Sen. John McCain did what the Bush crowd could
have if they really wanted to change Hastert's (DeLay's) mind.
Lieberman
and McCain said that, if the House did not give the commission an
extension, they would hold up a highway bill needed to avoid layoffs for
thousands of Department of Transportation workers. Some of them are
working on the pork-laden highway construction bill the House is still
working on.
Hastert
suddenly saw the light, did a complete flip-flop and agreed to give the
Sept. 11 commission a little more time. He and his master, DeLay, live,
breathe and die pork. What's telling here is that George W. could have
played hardball with Hastert and achieved the same result. Why didn't he?
Let's
see. The president has deigned to take one hour out of his busy schedule
of campaigning and attending political fund-raisers to sit down with the
Sept. 11 commission to discuss what he did or didn't know before the
terrorist attacks.
National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice has already rejected a request to
testify publicly in front of the panel. What does the glib Dr. Rice fear?
Too many pointed questions, obviously.
The
president certainly doesn't want to be questioned by commission members
like Richard Ben-Viniste, the former Watergate prosecutor. Too dangerous.
So Bush is insisting that only his two hand-picked members of the
commission be allowed to question him, and he's promising only one hour of
his precious time for the interrogation.
That
is a brazen insult to the victims of Sept. 11, their loved ones and people
in the United States and around the world who deserve the truth.
This
week alone, Bush will be spending at least 10 hours traveling to and
attending fund-raisers around the country. In the 30 months since Sept.
11, figuring at only 30 hours a month, which is a great underestimate,
George W. has spent more than 900 hours of his post-Sept. 11 presidency
raking in hundreds of millions of dollars from his corporate sponsors to
keep power to serve their interests.
And
yet he will devote just one single hour to discuss the worst domestic
assault on the nation that happened to occur during his presidency. No
serious person not drunk with partisanship believes George W. Bush wants
the American people to know the full truth about what our government did
and did not do about intelligence and warnings prior to the Sept. 11
attacks.
I
am not suggesting any grand conspiracy, but when terrible things happen on
your watch, there has to be some accountability. That is political poison
for George W. Bush. Did our great "war president" fail to feel
the winds of war?
If
the terrorist attacks occurred during Bill Clinton's presidency and he was
stonewalling a commission investigating the events, every right-wing wacko
on the planet would be howling like a stuck pig.
The
corporate media would be all over the issue like a cheap suit -- lead
stories, special reports, hundreds of hours of nonstop coverage on the
cable news channels, magazine covers with screaming headlines: "What
is the President Hiding?" "We Deserve the Truth Now,"
"Stop the Cover-up."
Consider
the time, effort and money put into Ken Starr's Whitewater and Lewinsky
affair investigations and what they meant for our nation and the world.
How
do those endless witch-hunts stack up with a serious inquiry into the
Sept. 11 attacks and the resources and public attention spent on the
respective investigations? It's a national disgrace.
The
families of the Sept. 11 victims are already onto Bush's deviousness and
duplicity, and their anger will only grow when the commission report,
however hampered by cover-up and time restraints, is finally released.
As
you can often find in this space, here's the news before it happens.
Fast
forward to the Republican National Convention in New York City late this
summer.
The
Secret Service, under orders from Karl Rove, has arranged for the outraged
families of the Sept. 11 victims to hold their demonstration in the Bronx
in one of those Orwellian "free speech zones."
Rove
actually preferred Yonkers, but that was already reserved for the families
of the Iraq war dead and maimed.
The
unemployed are assigned to Albany, and Americans without medical insurance
will hold their anti-Bush rally in Syracuse.
Gays
are being relegated to Buffalo, and the Michael Moore-Tim Robbins-Sean
Penn-organized anti-war protest will be held in Niagara Falls, Ont.
Meanwhile,
this great man of the people will shamelessly use Ground Zero for the
dramatic backdrop of a political speech.
Those
who oppose him -- common, concerned people -- will be kept far away.
Their
distance, however, forms its own backdrop, reminding us how far away from
him George W. Bush insists on keeping the truth.
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 gallaghernewsman@aol.com.
Niagara
Falls Reporte r www.niagarafallsreporter.com
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