Good Ol'
Bill, The Liberal Hero
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger
looks forward to the arrival of Bill Clinton in London where
an "audience" with him will cost up to £799 a head. In
examining Clinton's liberal credentials and comparing them
to George W. Bush's record, Pilger illuminates what Hillary
Clinton might offer America and the world as the first
female president.
By John Pilger
08/09/07 "ICH"
-- --On 14 August, you are invited to "an audience" with
Bill Clinton in London. You have a choice. You can attend
the "breakfast and speech" or the "brunch buffet and
speech". These will take place in the white elephantine
Millennium Dome, where a place in the "Kings' Row" will cost
you £799. Last year, Clinton made more than £5m granting
"audiences". Not only the usual corporate types attend. A
few years ago, I watched a conga line of writers,
journalists, publishers and others of liberal reputation
shuffling towards his grotesquely paid presence at the
Guardian Hay Festival.
The Clinton scam is symptomatic of the death of liberalism –
not its narcissistic, war-loving wing ("humanitarian
intervention"), which is ascendant, but the liberalism that
speaks against crimes committed in its name, while extending
rungs of the economic ladder to those below. It was
Clinton's promotion of the former and crushing of the latter
that so inspired new Labour's "project". Clinton, not Bush,
was Cool Britannia's true Mafia godfather. Keen observers of
Tony Blair will recall that during one of his many farewell
speeches, the sociopath did a weird impersonation of
Clinton's head wiggle.
Clinton is able to make a shedload a money because he is
contrasted with the despised Bush as the flawed good guy who
did his best for the world and brought economic boom to the
US – the fabled American dream no less. Both notions are
finely spun lies. What Clinton and Blair have most in common
is that they are the most violent leaders of their countries
in the modern era; that includes Bush. Consider Clinton's
true record.
In 1993, he pursued George H W Bush's invasion of Somalia.
He invaded Haiti in 1994. He bombed Bosnia in 1995 and
Serbia in 1999. In 1998, he bombed Afghanistan; and, at the
height of his Monica Lewinsky troubles, he momentarily
diverted the headline writers to a major "terrorist target"
in Sudan that he ordered destroyed with an onslaught of
missiles. It turned out to be sub-Saharan Africa's largest
pharmaceutical plant, the only source of chloroquine, the
treatment for malaria, and other drugs that were lifelines
to hundreds of thousands. As a result, wrote Jonathan Belke,
then of the Near East Foundation, "tens of thousands of
people – many of them children – have suffered and died from
malaria, tuberculosis and other treatable diseases".
Long before Shock and Awe, Clinton was destroying and
killing in Iraq. Under the lawless pretence of a "no-fly
zone", he oversaw the longest allied aerial bombardment
since the Second World War. This was hardly reported. At the
same time, he imposed and tightened a Washington-led
economic siege estimated to have killed a million civilians.
"We think the price is worth it," said his secretary of
state, Madeleine Albright, in an exquisite moment of
honesty.
Clinton's economic "legacy" – like Blair's – is the most
unequal society Americans have known. In his last
presidential year, 1999, I walked along the ocean front at
Santa Monica in California and was struck by the number of
middle-class homeless, "bag gents" who had lost executive
jobs and families thanks largely to Clinton's North American
Free Trade treaty. As for working Americans, the boasted
high employment figures concealed a reversion to real wage
levels of the 1970s. It was Clinton, not Bush, who wiped out
the last of Roosevelt's New Deal. Back in Santa Monica the
other day, I noted the bag gents had multiplied.
These days, you see Good Ol' Bill, or the Comeback Kid, as
he is variously known, wiggling his head on the TV news,
campaigning for his wife, Hillary, among Americans who,
terminally naive, still believe the Democratic Party is
theirs and that "it's time to vote a woman into the White
House". Together, the Clintons are known as "Billary" and
rightly so. Like Good Ol' Bill, his wife has no plans to
address the divisions of a society that allows 130,000
Americans to claim the wealth of millions of their fellow
citizens. Like GOB, she wants to continue Iraq's torment for
perhaps a decade. And she has not "ruled out" attacking
Iran.
Those settling down in the Kings' Row at the Millennium Dome
on 14 August for breakfast or brunch with GOB, having
transferred another swag to the Clinton bank account, are
unlikely to reflect on the blood spilt and the epic
suffering caused, or on the moral corruption of the liberal
ideology that courted and acclaimed Clinton, along with the
criminal Blair.
But we should.
This article was first published at the New Statesman
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