9/11 Commission Chairmen
Admit Whitewashing the Cause of the Attacks
By
Ivan Eland08/08/06 "Independent
Institute" -- -- As both the Bush administration
and its client government in Israel, with their invasions of
Arab states in Iraq and Lebanon respectively, make the United
States ever more hated in the Islamic world, a new book by the
Chairmen of the 9/11 commission admits that the commission
whitewashed the root cause of the 9/11 attacks—that same
interventionist U.S. foreign policy.
Former Governor Tom Kean and former Congressman Lee Hamilton,
chairmen of the 9/11 Commission—the publicity hounds that they
are—want to keep the long retired, but much celebrated, panel in
the public mind. They have written a tell-all book about the
trials and tribulations of the panel’s work. Despite the
commission’s disastrous recommendations—which led to a
reorganization of the U.S. intelligence community that worsened
its original defect prior to 9/11 (a severe coordination problem
caused by bureaucratic bloat)—and apparent whitewashing of the
most important single issue that it examined, the chairmen are
trying their best to write another best seller. The book
usefully details the administration’s willful misrepresentation
of its incompetent actions that day, but makes the shocking
admission that some commission members deliberately wanted to
distort an even more important issue. Apparently, unidentified
commissioners wanted to cover up the fact that U.S. support for
Israel was one of the motivating factors behind al Qaeda’s 9/11
attack. Although to his credit, Hamilton argued for saying that
al Qaeda committed the heinous strike because of the U.S.
military presence in the Middle East and American support for
Israel, the panel watered down that frank conclusion to state
that U.S. policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Iraq
are “dominant staples of popular commentary across the Arab and
Muslim world.”
Some commissioners wanted to cover up the link between the
9/11 attack and U.S. support for Israel because this might imply
that the United States should alter policy and lessen its
support for Israeli actions. How right they were. The question
is simple: If the vast bulk of Americans would be safer if U.S.
politicians moderated their slavish support of Israel, designed
to win the support of key pressure groups at home, wouldn’t it
be a good idea to make this change in course? Average U.S.
citizens might attenuate their support for Israel if the link
between the 9/11 attacks and unquestioning U.S. favoritism for
Israeli excesses were more widely known. Similarly, if American
taxpayers knew that the expensive and unnecessary U.S. policy of
intervening in the affairs of countries all over the
world—including the U.S. military presence in the Middle
East—made them less secure from terrorist attacks at home,
pressure would likely build for an abrupt change to a more
restrained U.S. foreign policy. But like the original 9/11
Commission report, President Bush regularly obscures this
important reality by saying that America was attacked on 9/11
because of its freedoms, making no mention of U.S.
interventionist foreign policy as the root cause.
Yet numerous public opinion polls in the Islamic world
repeatedly prove the president wrong. The surveys show that
people in Muslim countries admire American political and
economic freedoms, culture, and technology. But the numbers go
through the floor when Islamic people are asked about their
approval of U.S. foreign policy. Much of this negative attitude
derives from mindless U.S. backing of anything Israel does. In
addition, Osama bin Laden has repeatedly written or stated that
he attacks the United States because of its military presence in
the Persian Gulf and its support for Israel and corrupt regimes
in the Arab world.
The Bush administration has worsened the anti-U.S. hatred in
Islamic countries, which drives this blowback terrorism, by its
invasion of Iraq and its support of Israel’s excessive military
response in Lebanon. Unfortunately, innocent Iraqis and Lebanese
are unlikely to be the only ones afflicted with the damage from
U.S. interventionism. Innocent Israelis and Americans have been,
and will likely continue to be, the victims of policies that
have been sold by President Bush on the basis of making the
citizens of both countries safer and more secure, while the 9/11
Commission obediently has covered the administration’s tracks.
Ivan Eland is a Senior Fellow at The Independent
Institute, Director of the Institute’s
Center on Peace
& Liberty, and author of the books
The Empire Has No Clothes, and
Putting “Defense” Back into U.S. Defense Policy.
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