Obama On The
Brink
By Robert
Scheer
23/07/08 "TruthDig"
-- -- Barack
Obama is
betraying
his promise
of change
and is in
danger of
becoming
just another
political
hack.
Yes, just
like former
maverick
John McCain,
who has
refashioned
himself as a
mindless
rubber stamp
for the most
inane
policies of
the
miserably
failed Bush
administration.
Both
candidates
are
embracing,
rather than
challenging,
the
fundamental
irrationality
of Bush’s
“war on
terror,”
which
substitutes
hysteria for
rational
analysis in
appraising
the dangers
the country
faces.
Terrorism is
a social
pathology
that needs
to be
excised with
the surgical
precision of
detective
work,
inspired by
a high level
of
international
cooperation,
the very
opposite of
the
unilateral
war metaphor
that
recruits new
generations
of
terrorists
in the wake
of the
massive
armies we
dispatch. At
a time when
we
desperately
need a
president to
remind us we
have nothing
to fear but
fear itself,
we are
increasingly
being
treated to a
presidential
campaign
driven by
fear.
Both
candidates
supported
the Foreign
Intelligence
Surveillance
Act, which
has
everything
to do with
violating
the basic
freedoms of
our citizens
and nothing
to do with
making them
safer. There
was no
shortage of
alarming
intelligence
warning the
Bush
administration
of the
impending
9/11
attacks, but
rather an
utter lack
of
competency
in
evaluating
the
abundance of
evidence.
To use the
failure of
the
president to
pay
attention to
his
daily-briefing
warning of
an impending
attack as an
excuse for
shredding
the
fundamental
rights of
our citizens
is
appallingly
illogical.
Providing
legal
protection
to the
government
and the
telecommunications
giants for
unfettered
spying on
the people
does not
represent
the change
we
desperately
need.
Nor does the
battle of
the
warmongers
that has
dominated
the
discussion
of foreign
policy in
the past
week. Obama
has
one-upped
McCain’s
bluff to win
in Iraq by
raising the
prospect of
an even more
deadly
quagmire in
Afghanistan.
If his goal
was to
remind us
that
Democrats
have been
more often
the party of
irrational
wars than
the
Republicans,
he has
succeeded
all too
well.
Whereas
Dwight
Eisenhower
refused to
wage war
against
Vietnam and
Cuba, it was
John
Kennedy,
that charmer
of change,
who launched
both of
those
military
disasters.
And then
there was
that crafty
“progressive”
Lyndon
Baines
Johnson, who
in order to
defeat Barry
Goldwater,
the
right-wing
menace of
his day,
lied about a
nonexistent
attack in
the Gulf of
Tonkin to
justify
escalating a
war that
killed
almost
59,000
Americans
and 3.4
million
Indochinese.
Even less
noticed is
the
responsibility
of Democrats
for the mess
in
Afghanistan,
which
provided the
incubator
for the 9/11
attacks. It
was under
Jimmy
Carter,
highly
admired as
an
ex-president,
that the
specter of
modern
Islamic
fanaticism
erupted,
largely as a
monster of
our own
creation
when we
supported
Muslim
fanatics in
Afghanistan
against the
Soviets.
Carter’s
national
security
adviser,
Zbigniew
Brzezinski,
when asked
in a January
1998
interview
with the
French
magazine Le
Nouvel
Observateur
whether he
regretted
“having
given arms
and advice
to future
terrorists,”
replied:
“What is
most
important to
the history
of the
world? The
Taliban or
the collapse
of the
Soviet
empire? Some
stirred-up
Moslems or
the
liberation
of Central
Europe and
the end of
the Cold
War?”
I was
reminded of
that horrid
stain on the
record of
Democratic
stewardship
of our
foreign
policy while
cleaning out
my garage
last week. I
came across
a 1996 press
release from
the
publisher of
“From the
Shadows -
The Ultimate
Insider’s
Story of
Five
Presidents
and How They
Won the Cold
War,”
written by
current
Defense
Secretary
Robert M.
Gates, the
ultimate
insider, who
was on
Carter’s
National
Security
Council
staff. The
publisher’s
book promo
boasts that
thanks to
Gates, who
ran the CIA
for many
years, we
learn of
“Carter’s
never-before-revealed
covert
support to
Afghan
mujahedeen-six
months
before the
Soviets
invaded.”
In short,
the
Democratic
president
baldly lied
to us when
he justified
support for
the Muslim
fanatics in
Afghanistan
who were
battling the
secular
government
in Kabul as
a necessary
Cold War
response to
a Soviet
invasion.
That Gates’
account is
accurate was
affirmed in
a blurb for
the book by
none other
than
Brzezinski,
hailing it
as “a most
impressive
achievement
… especially
pertaining
to the U.S.
policy on
Afghanistan.”
It is hardly
reassuring
that
Brzezinski
has
resurfaced
in
presidential
politics,
this time as
an
occasional
adviser to
Barack Obama,
or that
there is
talk that
Obama, in a
burst of
bipartisan
enthusiasm,
might ask
Gates to
stay on as
defense
secretary.
At this
point, I
throw up my
hands and
plead with
the
candidate
who I hoped
would be
that
much-needed
agent of
change:
Please prove
me wrong.
Robert
Scheer is
author of a
new book,
“The
Pornography
of Power:
How Defense
Hawks
Hijacked
9/11 and
Weakened
America.”
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2008
Truthdig,
L.L.C.
