Bush’s America
By Paul Craig Roberts
08/15/07 "ICH" -- -- “No
American President can stand up to Israel.”
These words came from feisty
Admiral Thomas Moorer, Chief of Naval Operations (1967-1970)
and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1970-1974).
Moorer was, perhaps, the last independent-minded American
military leader.
Admiral Moorer knew what he was
talking about. On June 8, 1967, Israel attacked the
American intelligence ship, USS Liberty, killing 34 American
sailors and wounding 173. The Israelis even strafed the
life rafts, machine-gunning the American sailors leaving the
stricken ship.
Apparently, the USS Liberty had
picked up Israeli communications that revealed Israel’s
responsibility for the Six Day War. Even today, history
books and the majority of Americans blame the conflict on
the Arabs.
The United States Navy knew the
truth, but the President of the United States took Israel’s
side against the American military and ordered the United
States Navy to shut its mouth. President Lyndon Johnson
said it was all just a mistake. Later in life, Admiral
Moorer formed a commission and presented the unvarnished
truth to Americans.
http://www.ussliberty.org/moorerfindings.htm
[see also
http://www.usslibertyinquiry.com/evidence/usreports/moorer.html
] and [http://www.counterpunch.org/weir06232007.html
] and [http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20070608/news_lz1e8boston.html
]
The power of the Israel Lobby
over American foreign policy is considerable. In March 2006,
two distinguished American scholars, John Mearsheimer and
Stephen Walt, expressed concern in the London Review of
Books [ http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n06/mear01_.html
] that the power of the Israel Lobby was bending US foreign
policy in directions that serve neither US nor Israeli
interests. The two experts were hoping to start a debate
that might rescue the US and Israel from unsuccessful
policies of coercion that are intensifying Muslim hatred of
Israel and America. The Israel lobby was opposed to any such
reassessment, and attempted to close it off with epithets:
“Jew-baiter,” “anti-semitic,” and even “anti-American.”
Today Israeli citizens who oppose Zionist plans for greater
Israel are denounced as “anti-Semites.”
Many Americans are unaware of
the influence of the Israel lobby. Instead they think of
the US as “the world’s sole superpower,” a macho new Roman
Empire whose orders are obeyed without question or the
insolent nonentity is “bombed back to the stone age.” [
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article647188.ece
] Many Americans are convinced that military coercion
serves our interest. They cite Libya, Serbia, Afghanistan,
Iraq, and now they are ready to bring Iran and Pakistan to
heel with bombs.
This arrogance results in the
murder of tens of thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands,
of men, women and children, a fate that many Americans seem
to believe is appropriate for countries that do not accept
US hegemony.
Coercion is what American
foreign policy has become. Macho superpatriots love it.
Many of these superpatriots derive vicarious pleasure from
their delusions that America is “kicking those sand
niggers’ asses.”
This is the America of the Bush
Regime. If some of these superpatriots had their way every
“unpatriotic, terrorist supporter” who dares to criticize
the war against “the Islamofacists” would be sent to Gitmo,
if not shot on the spot.
These Bush supporters have
morphed the Republican Party into the Brownshirt Party. They
cannot wait to attack Iran, preferably with nuclear
weapons. Impatient for Armageddon, some are so full of
hubris and self-righteousness that they actually believe
that their support for evil means they will be “wafted up to
heaven.” [see
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18165.htm
]
It has come as a crippling blow
to Democrats that “their” political party is comfortable
with Bush’s America, and will do nothing to stop the Bush
regime’s aggression against the Iraqi people or to prevent
the Bush regime’s attack on Iran.
The Democrats could easily
impeach both Bush and Cheney in the House, as impeachment
only requires a majority vote. They could not convict in
the Senate without Republican support, as conviction
requires ratification by two-thirds of Senators present.
Nevertheless, a House vote for impeachment would take the
wind out of the sails of war, save countless lives and
perhaps even save humanity from nuclear holocaust.
Various rationales or excuses
have been constructed for the Democrats’ complicity in
aggression that does not serve America. Perhaps the most
popular rationale is that the Democrats are letting the
Republicans have all the rope they want with which to
produce such a high disapproval rating that the Democrats
will sweep the 2008 election.
It is doubtful that the
Democrats would assume that men as cunning as Karl Rove and
Dick Cheney do not understand the electoral consequences of
a low public approval rating and are walking blindly into an
electoral wipeout. Rove’s departure does not mean that no
strategy is in place.
So what does explain the
complicity of the Democratic Party in a policy that the
American public, and especially Democratic constituencies,
reject? Perhaps a clue is offered from the Minneapolis-St.
Paul Star Tribune news report (August 1, 2007) that
Democratic Congressman Keith Ellison will spend a week in
Israel on “a privately funded trip sponsored by the American
Israel Education Federation. The AIEF--the charitable arm of
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)--is
sending 19 members of Congress to meet with Israeli leaders.
The group, made up mostly of freshman Democrats, has plans
to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and [puppet]
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The senior Democratic
member on the trip is House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, who
has gone three times. . . . The trip to Israel is Ellison’s
second as a congressman.”
According to the Star-Tribune,
a Republican group, which includes Rep. Michele Bachmann (R,
Minn), led by Rep. Eric Cantor (R, Va) is already in
Israel. According to news reports, another 40 are following
these two groups during the August recess, and “by the time
the year is out every single member of Congress will have
made their rounds in Israel.” This claim is probably
overstated, but it does show careful Israeli management of
US policy in the Middle East.
Elsewhere on earth and
especially among Muslims, the suspicion is rife that the
reason the war against Iraq cannot end, and the reason Iran
and Syria must be attacked, is that the US must destroy all
Muslim opposition to Israel’s theft of Palestine, turning an
entire people into refugees driven from their homes and from
the lands on which they have lived for many centuries.
Americans might think that they are merely grabbing control
over oil, keeping it out of the hands of terrorists, but
that is not the way the rest of the world views the
conflict.
Jimmy Carter was the last
American president who stood up to Israel and demanded that
US diplomacy be, at least officially if not in practice,
even-handed in its approach to Israel and Palestine. Since
Carter’s presidency, even-handedness has slowly drained from
US policy in the Middle East. The neoconservative
Bush/Cheney regime has abandoned even the pretense of
even-handedness.
This is unfortunate, because
military coercion has proven to be unsuccessful. Exhausted
from the conflict, the US military, according to former
Secretary of State and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, Colin Powell, is “nearly broken.” Demoralized
elite West Point graduates are leaving the army at the
fastest clip in 30 years. [
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2147052,00.html
] Desertions are rapidly rising. A friend, a US Marine
officer who served in combat in Vietnam, recently wrote to
me that his son’s Marine unit, currently training for its
third deployment to Iraq in September, is short 12-16 men in
every platoon and expects to be hit with more AWOLs prior to
deployment.
Instead of re-evaluating a
failed policy, Bush’s “war tsar,” General Douglas Lute, has
called for the reinstitution of the draft. Gen. Lute
doesn’t see why Americans should not be returned to military
servitude in order to save the Bush administration the
embarrassment of having to correct a mistaken Middle East
policy that commits the US to more aggression and to
debilitating long-term military conflict in the Middle East.
It is difficult to see how this
policy serves any interest other than the very narrow one of
the armaments industry. Apparently, nothing can be done to
change this disastrous policy until the Israel Lobby comes
to the realization that Israel’s interest is not being
served by the current policy of military coercion.
Paul Craig Roberts was
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan
administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street
Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.