Miscreants, Murderers and
Malefactors
Imperial Conquest, Torture and a Little Matter
of Genocide
March 3 2006
Counterbias.com
by Jason Miller
Acting with
impunity and wielding the moral authority of pedophiles, Bush and his
fellow Neocons have decimated what was left of America's good name while
severely crippling our nation’s capacity for advancing and protecting
human rights. Setting a sanguineous course in their reckless pursuit of
wealth and power, they have afflicted humankind with their perverse
agenda. With alarming consistency, these sociopaths have demonstrated
their utter disregard for humanity and the well-being of our planet.
While the US has a history of imperialism, deep cruelty, and mass
murder, including slaughtering one million civilians in the conquest of
the Philippines, legalizing the institution of slavery, and committing
the Native American genocide, by World War II America had arguably begun
to demonstrate a reasonable level of commitment to humanitarian ideals.
While it was a long, painful process, Abolitionists, Women Suffragists,
Populists, Labor Activists, Civil Rights Protestors, and the like forced
the United States to strive for truly noble causes. From the end of
World War II up until the 1960's, one could reasonably conclude that the
nation primarily responsible for the defeat of militaristic fascism in
both Europe and Asia had earned a degree of moral authority, in spite of
its remaining flaws.
Abandon all hope, ye who
enter here…
Vietnam marked the beginning of America's descent into a
fetid moral sewer, high-lighted (or more appropriately low-lighted) by
the deaths of 3,000,000 Vietnamese civilians and the devastating after
effects of Agent Orange (compliments of Monsanto). America's light as a
beacon of hope for humanity was rapidly extinguished. Ignoring
Eisenhower's prescient warning, his successors chose the sword over the
plowshare repeatedly. Funneling outrageous percentages of our precious
resources into the coffers of the bloated and malevolent military
industrial complex, they carried out murderous agendas through direct
military intervention, covert CIA operations, and proxies like the Shah
of Iran. Sadly, under the last 7-8 presidencies, Democrat and Republican
alike, the United States government has evolved into the most powerful
terrorist organization on the planet.
Bush and his criminal cohorts have assured US victory in its race to the
bottom. Dropping the cloak of altruism, they have come out of the closet
and revealed their wicked proclivities. In openly murdering innocent
civilians and torturing suspected terrorists under the pretenses of
"pre-emptive" military action and the nebulous “War on Terror”, Israel’s
Neocon operatives have secured America's place in the pantheon of
egregious violators of human rights. Despite having stolen the last two
elections, these depraved war criminals continue to act in the name of
the American people as they repeatedly urinate and defecate on virtually
everything that was truly virtuous in our nation.
Perhaps torture and
murder are the values of this “Christian nation”…
Human Rights
First recently released a particularly damning and extremely
well-researched report entitled
Command's
Responsibility. I spent several hours perusing this
disturbing analysis of homicides committed by our own government (to
further the cause of “spreading freedom and democracy”). A shocking
number of alleged enemy combatants have been murdered by the US military
and the CIA. Apparently justice vanishes without a trace if one is of
Middle Eastern descent and suspected of terrorism.
According to the report, 100 such individuals have died since August of
2002. By the US military’s own admission, 34 of those cases were
"suspected or confirmed homicides". Human Rights First determined that
the "facts suggest death as a result of physical abuse or harsh
conditions of detention" in 11 additional cases. The report also reveals
that 8 US detainees "were tortured to death".
How is the "bastion of human rights" policing itself? "Only 12 detainee
deaths have resulted in punishment of any kind for a US official." Human
Rights First also uncovered the facts that "while the CIA has been
implicated in several deaths, not one CIA agent has faced a criminal
charge". The harshest sentence issued for those responsible for
torture-related deaths? An unbelievable slap on the wrist: five months
in jail for homicide! Meanwhile, America's "justice system" eagerly
metes out the death penalty for murder, mostly to our poor and/or black
citizens. Just ask California’s “Terminator”.
Israeli peace of mind and
oil are worth the annihilation of millions of human beings, aren’t they?
Still high enough on hubris to believe the Bush Regime is righteous in
passing judgment and proclaiming that Iraq, Iran, and North Korea form
an "Axis of Evil"? While you are grabbing stones to cast at this trio
for their deplorable records on human rights, consider the acts of
barbarism, terrorism, and deceit the United States has committed against
the first member of the so-called "Axis" over the last two decades.
Since Reagan swaggered into office, America has been committing
genocide
against the Iraqi people in multiple ways. Bear in mind that these
"evil" Iraqis never attacked the United States or its citizens. Their
crime? Ostensibly it was that their tyrannical leader, Saddam Hussein,
needed to be deposed, they possessed weapons of mass destruction, they
were a threat to the United States, and eventually were complicit in
9/11. But for those who live in reality, the Iraqis’ true "sins" were
possessing vast quantities of oil, daring to sell their oil for Euros
instead of the almighty Dollar, and posing a "threat" to poor little
Israel, a nation bristling with military firepower and enjoying the
unflinching support of the most powerful military in the history of
humanity.
As an aside, if the “infinitely benevolent” United States bore the
responsibility of removing Hussein to “liberate the Iraqis”, a question
naturally arises. Which nation will liberate the world from Bush and his
team of despicable Neocons?
A Little Duplicity, a
little hypocrisy…whatever it takes, right?
In 1982, the Reagan Regime removed Iraq from the State Department's list
of nations sponsoring terrorism. This enabled US corporations, including
members of the military industrial complex, to capitalize on the
abundant profits to be had in the Iraqi marketplace. In 1983, Ronald
Reagan sent special envoy Donald
Rumsfeld to meet with US ally Saddam Hussein to
"normalize relations" which had been terminated during the Arab-Israeli
War of 1967. Despite full knowledge that Hussein used chemical weapons
against Iran and on the Kurds of his own nation, the United States
continued its cozy relationship with Saddam. The United States and its
allies in Western Europe provided Hussein with military helicopters and
the precursor agents necessary to manufacture the very weapons of mass
destruction which later became one of the pretexts for the Neocon
invasion of Iraq.
Former US Assistant Secretary of Defense Noel Koch said this about
American support of Hussein:
"No one had any doubts about the
Iraqis' continued involvement in terrorism....The real reason was to
help them succeed in the war against Iran."
Confirming the initial US acts of genocide against the Iraqi people
through its support of Hussein are some quick facts provided by the
US State Department.
Bear in mind that Hussein was an American ally when these atrocities
occurred:
-- Documented chemical attacks by
the regime, from 1983 to 1988, resulted in some 30,000 Iraqi and Iranian
deaths.
-- Human Rights Watch estimates that
Saddam's 1987-1988 campaign of terror against the Kurds killed at least
50,000 and possibly as many as 100,000 Kurds.
-- The Iraqi regime used chemical
agents to include mustard gas and nerve agents in attacks against at
least 40 Kurdish villages between 1987-1988. The largest was the attack
on Halabja which resulted in approximately 5,000 deaths.
-- 2,000 Kurdish villages were
destroyed during the campaign of terror.
Leave it to American
ingenuity to find a better way…
Ongoing US support of Hussein became virtually impossible when he
invaded Kuwait, a US ally which had slant-drilled $14 billion worth of
oil from Iraq (using equipment supplied by a United States corporation).
Despite United States Ambassador April Glaspie's assurances to Hussein
that the US "takes no position" in the conflict (just days before Iraq’s
invasion of Kuwait), Bush the elder unleashed the US military beast on
Hussein. The US war machine defeated Iraq by burying thousands of Iraqi
troops alive, employing
depleted uranium,
and murdering thousands of retreating Iraqis during the Basra Road
Massacre.
Research by Beth
Osborne Daponte, who ran afoul of "straight shooter"
and then Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney for "inflating" body counts
related to the Gulf War, and who has since been exonerated, published by
two scholarly journals, and awarded a teaching position at Carnegie
Mellon University, demonstrates that
205,500 Iraqis died as a result of the Gulf War. Perhaps the rulers of the American
Empire tired of committing genocide through their proxy, Hussein.
Recasting him as an enemy certainly increased their capacity to
eliminate the Iraqi people.
Keeping our hands clean
while “killing them softly”
Shortly after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait (on August 6, 1990), the
United Nations, under intense pressure from the US, imposed severe
economic sanctions on Iraq. A year later, with Iraq defeated, the
sanctions continued. From the initial implementation of these draconian
measures, the United States utilized its powerful influence within the
UN to ensure that the sanctions remained in place. The alleged targets
of the sanctions were Saddam Hussein and his government. However, the
people of Iraq were the ones brutally victimized by this twelve year
campaign of economic terror.
According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, by late 1995,
over a million Iraqis (including 567,000 children) had died as a direct
result of the economic sanctions. Based on UNICEF's research, 4,500
children were dying each month and 825,000 Iraqi children were at risk
of suffering acute malnutrition.
Demonstrating the Clinton Regime’s complicity in the Iraqi genocide,
Secretary of State Madeline Albright appeared on 60 Minutes in May of
1996. When asked about reports of the deaths of 500,000 Iraqi children
due to the sanctions, she stated:
"We think the price is worth it."
Even the Oil for Food Program implemented in 1996 (to enable Iraq to
exchange its oil on the world market for food and humanitarian supplies)
failed to stem the tide of suffering and death. Supporters of the
American Empire claim that corruption, inefficiency and abuse caused the
failure of this "noble rescue effort". However, despite the fact that
the program did not end the misery for Iraqi civilians (regardless of
the reasons), the US saw to it that the sanctions remained in place
until Bush II launched his illegal invasion. To protest the ongoing
sanctions, United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator
Dennis Halliday ended his 34 year career with the UN in 1998.
Noam Chomsky has postulated that the ultimate goal of US foreign policy
in Iraq is to reduce it to a sparsely populated nation, providing the
American Empire with a readily attainable, strategically located piece
of real estate sitting atop one of the largest oil reserves in the
world.
Evidence does exist to support Chomsky's speculations.
Slow Motion Holocaust by Stephanie Reich and
The Secret Behind the
Sanctions by Thomas Nagy both reference DIA
documents which expose US intent with respect to the economic sanctions:
Reich:
A series of recently revealed Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA) reports show that the US attack on Iraq's
civilian population was deliberate and calculated. A
DIA report of
January 1991 stated that
sanctions would prevent the import of chemicals and equipment required
for the provision of safe drinking water, resulting in epidemics.
A second DIA
report listed as likely causes of epidemics
in urban areas the
fact that US bombing had destroyed water, electrical and waste disposal
systems, and had largely ended distribution of preventive medicines. The
report itemized the predicted disease outbreaks, highlighting those that
strike children. A third DIA report dated March 1991 explicitly
connected outbreaks of gastrointestinal and respiratory diseases to the
war, stated that children in particular were affected, and noted that
potable water had been reduced to 5% of prewar supplies.
Nagy:
Over the last two years, I've discovered
documents of the Defense Intelligence Agency proving beyond a doubt
that, contrary to the Geneva Convention, the U.S. government
intentionally used sanctions against Iraq to degrade the country's water
supply after the Gulf War. The United States knew the cost that civilian
Iraqis, mostly children, would pay, and it went ahead anyway.
Patience is not a
Neocon virtue
Once the Bush
Regime seized power, the "slow motion holocaust" was no longer
satisfactory. In enabling or causing 9/11, they had the Pearl Harbor
they needed to launch ”full speed genocide". Spinning incredibly absurd
yarns linking Saddam Hussein to Osama bin Laden while "proving" that
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction (and the means to unleash them),
the nefarious ones whipped the American public into a "patriotic"
fervor. Driven by fear of the "terrorists" and the lies of the
mainstream media, the American public zealously supported the "Shock and
Awe" campaign.
Conveniently, the Neocons and their media handmaidens neglected to
inform the American public that as a former ally, the US had a degree of
complicity in Saddam's crimes against humanity. They also failed to
mention that our government had committed similar offenses during the
Gulf War and had
engaged in the passive mass murder of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis by
strong-arming the UN into maintaining the economic sanctions for 12
years. Or perhaps by Neocon moral reckoning, two wrongs do make a right
and they decided it would be frivolous to rehash America's "heroic
efforts" to end Hussein's tyranny.
In December 2005, George Bush himself publicly admitted that his Regime
bears responsibility
for at least 30,000 Iraqi civilian deaths since the
start of the illegal Occupation in 2003. The
Lancet Journal
released a study in October 2004 which concluded
that the number was close to 100,000 at that time. A more recent study
referenced in an article in
The Canadian
places the number at 250,000. The Neocons certainly have
accelerated the pace of the Iraqi genocide.
“Collateral Damage” in
the Homeland
Iraqis are not
the only victims of the Empire's most recent efforts to exterminate
them. Americans are reaping the wages of Bush's sins against the Iraqi
people. Over 2300 Americans have died carrying out the twisted bidding
of Rumsfeld and company. Hundreds of billions of wasted US taxpayer
dollars, virtually certain federal bankruptcy, and the steady
asphyxiation of domestic programs which benefit the poor, the sick, the
elderly, the working people, and most importantly, our children, closely
parallel the passive mass murder perpetrated through the US-driven UN
economic sanctions against Iraq. Want evidence? Look to New Orleans.
In light of the
Downing Street Memo,
which clearly demonstrates that Bush
constructed a false
case to justify the invasion of a country that posed
no real threat to the United States, based on the accompanying needless
deaths of American soldiers, and considering the resulting economic
sanctions placed upon the American people, Congress has a sacred
obligation to truly represent the interests of its constituents and
remove Bush and his fellow criminals from office. It is time to impeach
Bush and Cheney.
Once removed from office, these two and the rest of the cabal need to
face trial at the International Criminal Court for war crimes, genocide
and crimes against humanity.
We the People and the
Iraqis deserve better
Click
the link below to take action:
"Congressman John
Conyers has introduced three new pieces of legislation aimed at
censuring President Bush and Vice President Cheney, and at creating a
fact-finding committee that could be a first step toward impeachment."
Americans are not an evil lot, but we are culpable for having allowed a
string of truly despicable human beings to perpetrate the Iraqi genocide
that has been taking place since the Reagan Regime. The monstrous
psychopaths now infesting the White House have taken malevolence to a
whole new level. Let us remind ourselves that The White House belongs to
us and that Bush serves us.
Bush and his rotten associates are guests in
our home and ultimately, mere public servants. One simple
step that you can take toward evicting and firing them is to click on
the linked paragraph above to email your Congress Member with a demand
that they support Conyers’ courageous initiatives. Remember, removal
from the White House will put these scoundrels one step closer to the
Big House and to suffering the consequences they so richly deserve.
==
Jason Miller is writer whose affiliations include Amnesty International
and the ACLU. He welcomes responses at
willpowerful@hotmail.com
or comments on his blog,
Thomas Paine's Corner.