Appealing to the United States is not very appealing
By William Blum
05/15/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- With his recent letter to President Bush,
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has become part of a long
tradition of Third-World leaders who, under imminent military or
political threat from the United States, communicated with
Washington officials in the hope of removing that threat. Let us
hope that Ahmadinejad's effort doesn't result in the equally
traditional outright US rejection.
Under the apparently hopeful belief that it was all a
misunderstanding, that the United States was not really intent
upon crushing them and their movements for social change, the
Guatemalan foreign minister in 1954, President Cheddi Jagan of
British Guiana in 1961, and Maurice Bishop, leader of Grenada,
in 1983 all made their appeals to be left in peace, Jagan doing
so at the White House in a talk with President John F.
Kennedy.(1) All were crushed anyhow. In 1961, Che Guevara
offered a Kennedy aide several important Cuban concessions if
Washington would call off the dogs of war. To no avail.(2)
In 2002, before the coup in Venezuela that ousted Hugo Chavez,
some of the plotters went to Washington to get a green light
from the Bush administration. Chavez learned of this visit and
was so distressed by it that he sent officials from his
government to plead his own case in Washington. The success of
this endeavor can be judged by the fact that the coup took place
soon thereafter.(3)
Shortly before the US invasion of Iraq in March 2003, Iraqi
officials, including the chief of the Iraqi Intelligence
Service, informed Washington, through a Lebanese-American
businessman, that they wanted the United States to know that
Iraq no longer had weapons of mass destruction, and they offered
to allow American troops and experts and "2000 FBI agents" to
conduct a search. The Iraqis also offered to hand over a man
accused of being involved in the World Trade Center bombing in
1993 who was being held in Baghdad. The Iraqis, moreover,
pledged to hold UN-supervised free elections; surely free
elections is something the United States believes in, the Iraqis
reasoned, and will be moved by. They also offered full support
for any US plan in the Arab-Israeli peace process. "If this is
about oil," said the intelligence official, "we will talk about
US oil concessions." These proposals were portrayed by the Iraqi
officials as having the approval of President Saddam
Hussein.(NYT 11-6-03) The United States completely ignored these
overtures.
The above incidents reflect Third World leaders apparent belief
that the United States was open to negotiation, to discussion,
to being reasonable. Undoubtedly, fear and desperation played a
major role in producing this mental state, but also perhaps the
mystique of America, which has captured the world's heart and
imagination for two centuries. In 1945 and 1946, Vietnamese
leader Ho Chi Minh wrote at least eight letters to US President
Harry Truman and the State Department asking for America's help
in winning Vietnamese independence from the French. He wrote
that world peace was being endangered by French efforts to
reconquer Indochina and he requested that "the four powers" (US,
Soviet Union, China, and Great Britain) intervene in order to
mediate a fair settlement and bring the Indochinese issue before
the United Nations.(4) This was a remarkable repeat of history.
In 1919, at the Versailles Peace Conference following the First
World War, Ho Chi Minh had appealed to US Secretary of State
Robert Lansing (uncle of Allen Dulles and John Foster Dulles,
whom Lansing appointed to the US delegation) for America's help
in achieving basic civil liberties and an improvement in the
living conditions for the colonial subjects of French Indochina.
His plea was ignored.(5)
His pleas following the Second World War were likewise ignored,
with consequences for Vietnam, the rest of Indochina, and the
United States we all know only too well. Ho Chi Minh's pleas
were ignored because he was, after all, some sort of communist;
yet he and his Vietminh followers had in fact been long-time
admirers of the United States. Ho trusted the United States more
than he did the Soviet Union and reportedly had a picture of
George Washington and a copy of the American Declaration of
Independence on his desk. According to a former American
intelligence officer, Ho sought his advice on framing the
Vietminh's own declaration of independence. The actual
declaration of 1945 begins: "All men are created equal. They are
endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, among
these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."(6)
Now comes the president of Iran with a lengthy personal letter
to President Bush. It has the same purpose as the communications
mentioned above: to dissuade the American pit bull from
attacking and destroying, from adding to the level of suffering
in this sad old world. But if the White House has already
decided upon an attack, Ahmadinejad's letter will have no
effect. Was there anything Czechoslovakia could have done to
prevent a Nazi invasion in 1938? Or Poland in 1939?
NOTES
(1) Guatemala: Stephen Schlesinger and Stephen Kinzer, "Bitter
Fruit: The Untold Story of the American Coup in Guatemala"
(1982), p.183; Jagan: Arthur Schlesinger, "A Thousand Days"
(1965), pp.774-9; Bishop: Associated Press, May 29, 1983,
“Leftist Government Officials Visit United States”
(2) Miami Herald, April 29, 1996, p.1
(3) New York Times, April 16, 2002
(4) "The Pentagon Papers" (NY Times edition, Bantam Books,
1971), pp.4, 5, 8, 26.
(5) Washington Post, September 14, 1969, p.25
(6) Archimedes L.A. Patti, "Why Vietnam? Prelude to America's
Albatross" (1980). Patti is the former intelligence officer
(OSS) consulted by Ho; Chester Cooper, "The Lost Crusade: The
Full Story of US Involvement in Vietnam from Roosevelt to Nixon"
(1971) pp.22, 25-7, 40.
William Blum is the author of "Killing
Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
" and "Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower".
< www.killinghope.org >
He publishes a free monthly newsletter, Anti-Empire Report,
which can be subscribed to by sending an email to <
bblum6@aol.com >
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