Blood
and money
By John Pilger
11/03/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- On 17 October, President
Bush signed a bill that legalised torture and kidnapping and in
effect repealed the Bill of Rights and habeas corpus. The CIA
can now legally abduct people and "render" them to secret
prisons in countries where they are likely to be tortured.
Evidence extracted under torture is now permissible in "military
commissions"; people can be sentenced to death based on
testimony beaten out of witnesses. You are now guilty until
confirmed guilty. And you are a "terrorist" if you commit what
George Orwell, in Nineteen Eighty-Four, called "thoughtcrimes".
Bush has revived the prerogatives of the Tudor and Stuart
monarchs: the power of unrestricted lawlessness. "America can be
proud," said Senator Lindsey Graham, one of the bill's
promoters, who stood with other congressmen, clapping as Bush
signed away the American constitution and the essence of
American democracy.
The historic significance of this was barely acknowledged in
Britain, the source of these abandoned ancient rights, no doubt
because the same barbarians' law is taking hold here. The great
crime of Iraq is a moral tsunami that has left new Labour's
vassals floundering and shouting their hopeless inversions of
the truth as they await rescue by Washington. "At a deeper
ideological level," wrote the American historian Alfred McCoy,
"[what is happening] is a contest of power versus justice . . .
Viewed historically, it is a fight over fundamental principles
reaching back nearly 400 years." Not long ago, I interviewed
Dianna Ortiz, an American nun tortured in 1989 by a Guatemalan
death squad whose leader she identified as a fellow American.
This was the time of Ronald Reagan, who was as murderous in
central America as Bush is in the Middle East. "You can't claim
to be a democracy if you practise or condone torture," she said.
"It is the ultimate test."
The United States promised a democracy when the Civil Rights Act
became law in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act the following year
finally ended slavery. For the next decade, the civil-rights
movement joined the great popular movement to end the slaughter
in Vietnam, and Congress legislated to restrain the CIA's
secretive parallel power. It was a fleeting intermission. Under
Reagan, the mythology of American democracy and "pride" was
restored, perversely, when his corrupt executive ignited a
lawless war in impoverished central America, causing hundreds of
thousands of deaths, which the United Nations called genocide.
The United States became the only country ever to have been
condemned by the International Court of Justice for terrorism
(against Nicaragua). "Let's drop the bullshit," a former senior
CIA officer told me recently. "What matters is our national
security interests, OK?"
"National security" is a euphemism for the forbidden word,
imperialism, whose despotic power has accelerated under George W
Bush. Secret presidential "signing decrees" that can overturn
the rare opposition of an otherwise supine Congress are now
normal practice, along with a Gulag of secret prisons, described
approvingly by Bush as "the CIA programme". The United States
today is an extension of the totalitarianism it has long sought
to impose abroad. That unpalatable truth is unspoken, of course;
in spite of his current "difficulties" over Iraq, corporate
propaganda remains on Bush's side. The search for an "exit
strategy" may make "embarrassing" headlines, but the deliberate,
systematic looting of billions of dollars of Iraq's resources
has been quietly achieved, with an estimated $20bn "missing".
The same silence applies to the class and race war at home, as
the Bush gang kicks away the ladder that once led to the
American middle class. Last January, 25,000 people applied for
325 jobs at a Wal-Mart in Chicago.
Constitutional rights are formidable American myths. The
American press is often put forward as constitutionally having
the freest speech on earth; and it does, theoretically. Yet
during every period of internal repression, the press and
broadcast journalism have played a compliant, "Pravda" role,
backing imperial wars, indulging the lies of the "red baiter"
Joe McCarthy, promoting phoney debates about phoney threats
(Cuba, Nicaragua, the nuclear arms race) and the supercult of
"anti-communism". Bush's lies about Iraq and Afghanistan were
merely amplified and promoted. Seymour Hersh and a handful of
others stand out as honourable exceptions.
In 1991, at the end of the one-sided slaughter known as the Gulf
war, the celebrated American TV anchorman Dan Rather told his
national audience, "There's one thing we can all agree on. It's
the heroism of the 148 Americans who gave their lives so that
freedom could live." In fact, a quarter of them had been killed
by other Americans. Most of the British casualties were caused
by the same "friendly fire". Moreover, official citations
describing how Americans had died heroically in hand-to-hand
combat were fake. The hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who died
during and in the aftermath of that "war" remain unmentionable -
like hundreds of thousands who died as a result of the
decade-long embargo; like the 655,000 Iraqi "excess deaths"
since the invasion of 2003.
The war on democracy has been successfully exported. In Britain,
and in other western countries, such as Australia, journalism
and scholarship have been systematically appropriated as the new
order's management class, and democratic ideas have been emptied
and refilled beyond all recognition. Unlike the 1930s, there is
a silence of writers, with Harold Pinter almost the lone voice
raised in Britain. The promoters of an extreme form of
capitalism known as neo liberalism, the supercult responsible
for the greatest inequalities in history, are described as
"reformers" and "revolutionaries". The noble words "freedom" and
"liberty" now refer to the divine right of this extremism to
"prevail", the jargon for dominate and control. This vocabulary,
which contaminates the news and the pronouncements of the state
and its bureaucracy, is from the same lexicon as Arbeit macht
frei - "Work makes you free" - the words over the gates at
Auschwitz.
Fake democracy
For the British under Blair, the influence of this fake
democracy has been catastrophic. Even if the convergence of the
Labour Party and the Tories was historically inevitable, it was
Tony Blair, the most extreme British political figure in living
memory, who returned Britain to a full-time violent, imperial
role, converting a fictional notion, "the clash of civilisations",
into a possibility. Blair has destroyed the power of parliament
and politicised those sections of the civil service and the
security and intelligence services that saw themselves as
impartial. He is Britain's president, lacking only the
accompanying strains of "Hail to the Chief". Last installed by
little more than a fifth of the eligible population, he is the
most undemocratically elected leader in British history. Poll
after poll tells us he is also the most reviled.
Under President Blair, parliament has become like Congress under
Bush: an ineffectual, craven talking shop that has debated Iraq
only twice in two and a half years. With one important
exception, regressive measure after measure has been waved
through: from the Criminal Justice Act 2003 to the Prevention of
Terrorism Act 2005, with their mandatory sentences and house
arrests ("control orders"). A "bill to abolish parliament", as
the innocuous-sounding Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill
2006 might be known, removed parliamentary scrutiny of
government legislation, giving ministers arbitrary powers and
Downing Street the absolute power of decree. There was no public
debate. How ironic that the bill stalled in the House of Lords,
which, together with the judiciary, is now the loyal opposition.
In 2003, Blair worked the secretive royal prerogative - Orders
in Council - to order an unprovoked, illegal attack on a
defenceless country, Iraq. The following year, he used the same
archaic powers to prevent the Chagos Islanders from returning to
their homeland in the Indian Ocean, from which they were
secretly expelled so that the Americans could build a huge
military base there. Last May, the high court described the
treatment of these British citizens as "repugnant, illegal and
irrational".
On 16 October 2005, Bush claimed that al-Qaeda was seeking to
"establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to
Indonesia". This deeply cynical, calculated exaggeration -
reminiscent of Washington's warning of "mushroom clouds"
following 11 September 2001 - was repeated by Blair fresh from
the embrace of Rupert Murdoch, the likely source of his future
enrichment. This is the message of liberal warmongers who have
sought to be Tonier-than-thou and who salvage their spent
reputations by using big, specious words such as "Islamo
fascism". They suppress the truth that al-Qaeda is minuscule
compared with the state terrorism that kills and maims
industrially, and whose cost distorts all our lives. British
state terrorism in Iraq has cost more than £7bn. The real cost
of Trident is said to be £76bn. The premises of the best of
British life that survived Margaret Thatcher have no place in
this accounting. The National Health Service and what was once
the best postal service in the world are denied subsidies
uncorrupted by a rigged "free market". Whether it is the
accretions of the freeloading Blairs or the sale of 72
Eurofighters to the medieval regime in Saudi Arabia, complete
with "commissions", or the government's refusal to ban highly
profitable cluster bombs, whose victims are mostly children -
blood and money are the essence of Blairism and its mutant
liberalism.
In their 1996 new Labour manual, The Blair Revolution: can new
Labour deliver?, Peter Mandelson and Roger Liddle highlighted
Britain's "strengths" under a Blair regime. These were
multinational corporations and "aerospace" (the arms industry)
and the "pre-eminence of the City of London". Blood and money.
Of course, as in any colonial era, blood spilled is invisible;
one's faraway victims are Untermenschen - that is to say, they
are less than human and have no presence in our lives. On 11
June, the BBC newsreader Fiona Bruce announced that prisoners in
Guantanamo Bay were committing suicide. She asked, "How damaging
is it to the Bush administration?" At the recent Labour party
conference, a cringe-making presidential occasion, Blair, wrote
Jon Snow, demonstrated "oratorical mastery and matey finesse".
Indeed, he was "a leader for his time, in a time when Britain
needed exactly such leadership".
Public morality
Those who have peeled back the façades of the Blair and Bush
gangs ought not to be des pondent. The inspiring demonstration
on 15 February 2003 may not have stopped an invasion, but the
same universal power of public morality has, I believe, stalled
attacks on Iran and North Korea, probably with "tactical"
nuclear weapons. This moral force is undoubtedly stirring again
all over the world, including the United States, and is feared
by those who would contrive an "endless war". However, if I have
learned nothing else from witnessing numerous bloody
contrivances, it is never to underestimate the stamina of
rampant, rapacious empire and the dishonesty of its
"humanitarian interventions". Millions of us, who are the
majority, need to raise our voices again, more urgently now than
ever.
[http://www.johnpilger.com]
This article first appeared in the New Statesman