During this lull in the fighting between the 2002 election cycle Iraq
conflict and the soon-to-come 2004 election cycle conflict, it's a good
time to (anonymously) sit in a library or bookstore and browse "The
Turner Diaries" and Gore Vidal's "Perpetual War For Perpetual
Peace."
The former was the inspiration for Timothy McVeigh; the latter includes
his self-written eulogy. Together, they show how terrorist McVeigh choose
the wrong administration - and terrorist Osama bin Laden, by luck of the
draw, chose the right one - to harm American democracy.
The Turner Diaries is an apocalyptic novel that opens with a
convenience store robbery and ends with an Armageddon-style worldwide
holocaust leaving only white Anglo-Saxon Protestants standing. The
government of the United States responds to a terrorist attack (the
bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma) by cracking down on dissent,
expanding the power of the Executive Branch, and shredding constitutional
civil rights protections. White "patriots" respond by declaring
war against the government that had once tried to take away their guns.
Thus begins the cycle of violence that ends with the ultimate worldwide
war, a vision straight out of the Book of Revelation.
But Tim McVeigh's expectation of a repressive federal reaction to his
right-wing terrorism ran into a snag: Bill Clinton knew the difference
between a rogue nation and a rogue criminal.
Like every President since George Washington, Bill Clinton knew that
nations only declare war against nations. While armies deal with rogue
states, police deal with criminals, be they domestic or international.
Like Germany's response to the Red Army Faction, Italy's response to
The Red Brigades, and Greece's response to the 17 November terrorist group
(among others), Clinton brought the full force of the criminal justice
system against McVeigh, and even had Interpol and overseas police agencies
looking for possible McVeigh affiliates. The result was that the trauma of
the Oklahoma City terrorist bombing was limited, closure was achieved for
its victims, the civil rights of all Americans were largely left intact,
and the United States government was able to get back to it's
constitutionally-defined job of ensuring life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness for its citizens.
Every President from Washington to Clinton understood the logic
expressed by our founders when James Madison, on April 20, 1795, wrote:
"Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be
dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is
the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes. And armies, and
debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the
domination of the few.
"In war, too," Madison continued, "the discretionary
power of the Executive [Branch of Government] is extended. Its influence
in dealing out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and all the
means of seducing the minds are added to those of subduing the force of
the people. The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced in
the inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of
a state of war...and in the degeneracy of manners and morals, engendered
by both. No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual
warfare."
Although numerous recent presidents have declared "wars" on
abstractions like poverty, illiteracy, drugs, and a variety of other
social ills, all were well aware that these so-called "wars"
were, in truth, just politically useful rhetoric. Real war can only be
declared by one nation against another: it's not possible to declare a war
against an abstraction.
The crime of 911 has been often cited to rationalize the loss of civil
liberties and the ongoing traumatizing of the American people with daily
"Terror Alerts" and a never-ending "war on terror."
But 911 wasn't an act of war, because it wasn't done against us by a
nation. It was, instead, a crime, perpetrated by a criminal and his
followers.
It was a horrific crime, certainly. A crime that required strong,
swift, and sure response. A crime that other nations, corporations, and
individuals may have abetted and must be held accountable for both
domestically and in the international venues of the United Nations and the
International Criminal Court. A crime deserving a thorough investigation
(which has yet to begin).
But Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda are not nations. Bin Laden was a
criminal, and his group was a Middle Eastern sort of mafia with terrorist
ambitions, initially funded by Poppy bin Laden, who was coincidentally a
business partner with Poppy Bush. And, according to most of the world's
police and intelligence agencies, Osama is dead (or dying) and his
organization is in tatters.
To continue using our military against a criminal organization will
only compound the horrific crime of 911, because armies aren't
particularly good at police work.
It's time to restore civil liberties to Americans; reign in an
Executive Branch intoxicated by warfare; and hand over to American and
international police agencies the very real and very big job of dealing
with the remnants of al Qaeda around the world, and prevent a recurrence
of 911 by investigating who was involved and how they pulled it off in the
first place.
Anything less will simply perpetuate this crime of the century.
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is the author of
"Unequal Protection: The Rise Of Corporate Dominance And The Theft Of
Human Rights" and hosts a nationally syndicated daily radio talk show
on the i.e. America Radio Network. www.thomhartmann.com
and www.ieamericaradio.com
This article is copyright by Thom Hartmann, but permission is granted for
reprint in print, email, blog, or web media so long as this credit is
attached. originally published in Common Dreams
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