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© Hazel Henderson, March 2003
www.hazelhenderson.com
(1,463 words)
THE
NEW BI –POLAR WORLD
George W. Bush and the band
of reckless hawks that captured his presidency have created a new
bi-polar world: the USA versus the United Nations and most of its
members states. Apart from Britain, the “coalition of the willing”
represents a motley group of states unwilling or unable to commit troops
or resources, and in some cases, whose support has been coerced or
bought.
The unjustified US war on
Iraq must be brought to an end before more innocent lives are lost. As a
patriotic US citizen, I have long spoken out and written against the
misguided ideologies that led to this unjust war. I join the many
millions in the USA and around the world protesting and asking how the
USA—once a beacon to those seeking a better world, democracy, the rule
of law, economic opportunity and individual self-realization—could have
turned into a self-appointed, over-militarized globocop claiming the
preemptive right to bomb and attack other nations it deems “evil"?
Of course, there is much
evil in the world and there are many dictators, including Saddam
Hussein, Kim Jong Il of North Korea and others. Terrorism is also a
threat, which has now increased enormously as a result of the war, as
some Bush cabinet members now admit.
But how did an educated,
developed, democratic nation like the USA, come to be led by a misguided
administration whose president sees our complex world through a prism of
simple-minded slogans? Other nations are “with us or against us.” Iraq,
which could have been disarmed peacefully, is just the first domino in
Bush’s “axis of evil” in the “war to rid the world of evil”. Like many
politicians throughout history, war has increased Bush’s popularity.
Some of the reasons my
beloved country has strayed from its former role as champion of
multilateralism and the rule of international law include:
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The US
democracy has been gradually undermined by the rise of corporate
power. Today, the Congress is dominated by powerful lobbies,
well-heeled special interests and thereby corrupted by money. Both
Republicans and Democrats are minority parties – each garnering
about 30% of votes cast – while the other 40% of voters register as
“independents” but without a third party. After the disastrous
stalemated election of 2000, Bush, who had lost the popular vote,
was “selected” by the Republican-dominated Supreme Court.
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The
corporate takeover in the USA and its culture of “winner-take-all”,
revealed following the collapse of Enron, has been the subject of
endless press coverage, public hearings, lawsuits and public
outrage. Yet few reforms, watered down by intense lobbying by
interested industries, have been achieved. The administration’s deep
corporate connections, initially a boast of George W. Bush, are now
a source of embarrassment and covered up with media “spin”. For
example, the lawsuit brought by Congress’s General Accounting Office
demanding the records of Vice President Dick Cheney (former CEO of
Halliburton) of his many closed meetings with Enron and other energy
companies in devising Bush’s National Energy Plan, was quashed.
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The conglomeration of
mass media in giant corporations, which is accelerating under
Republican control of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC),
chaired by free-marketeer Michael Powell, son of Secretary of State
Colin Powell. Media deregulation, pushed further by corporate owners
since their Telecommunications Act of 1996, has narrowed choice and
further trivialized news and content. This “commercial censorship”
reduced coverage of public affairs and news unfavorable to
advertisers’ interests and their goals of reaching the lowest common
denominator audiences with sports, shopping channels, infomercials,
“reality” and game shows. The Pentagon controls the coverage of the
war on Iraq via training and “embedding” journalists within the
Defense Department’s force structure, frequent press briefings and
repeated gory re-runs of Saddam Hussein’s many atrocities. The war
is ubiquitously covered as ceaseless images of explosions, racing
tanks, heroic soldiers—almost a video game of “good guys and bad
guys”. For overviews and analyses, one must find BBC radio on the
Internet and a smattering of independent websites, such as
www.globalvision.org, www.indymedia.org, www.vaiw.org, and others
run by US veterans groups opposed to the war on Iraq. Dissent
against Bush’s war is relegated to comedy shows and call-in programs
on C-SPAN (a network covering Congress run by the cable TV
industry).
The Center for Public
Integrity (www.publicintegrity.org) broke the story of widespread
conflicts of interest and war profiteering within the Pentagon’s Defense
Policy Board (DPB). This led Richard Perle, longtime Bush advisor and
“hawk” to resign as its chair. DPB’s 30 members who advise Donald
Rumsfeld include nine with ties to companies that have won over $76
billion in defense contracts in 2001 and 2002.Perle advises (for a
$600.000 fee) the bankrupt Global Crossing Ltd; clients of Goldman Sachs
on investment opportunities in post-war Iraq and has ties with other
Pentagon contractors. So far, Rumsfeld has not asked Perle to step down
from the DPB. Other DPB members with ties to Pentagon contractors
include Rear Admiral David Jeremiah, Rear Admiral Ronald Fogelman;
former CIA Director James Woolsey, now a V.P. of Booz Allen Hamilton;
former defense secretaries Harold Brown and James Slesinger and four
registered lobbyists. These include Chris Williams, former aide to
Rumsfeld and Senator Trent Lott, who now lobbies for Johnston &
Associates whose clients include Lockheed Martin, Northrup Grumman, TRW
and Boeing. Other DPB members are Henry Kissinger, Newt Gingrich, Dan
Quayle, former US Vice President and other well-known conservatives.
No wonder the US public is
confused, divided and misinformed. The people were also kept in the dark
about the cost of the war on Iraq until after it started. Bush, facing
growing deficits due in part to his tax cuts, tried to force his FY 2004
budget (with another $600 billion in tax cuts for investors) through
Congress before divulging his request for an additional $75 billion for
the first six months of the war. People were assured that Bush’s global
war would require no sacrifices on their part; told to continue
shopping, traveling, going to ballgames and living the American way of
life.
Now most states are facing
budget crises and are cutting education, health and human services, with
no help from the now deficit-ridden federal government. Far from the
promised “guns and butter,” middle-class families are now facing a new “
guns versus bread” scenario, as unemployment levels rise and the economy
continues to sag. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz (architect
with Richard Perle of the administration’s September, 2002 doctrine of
preemptive strike) also misinformed the public. Wolfowitz claimed, along
with Bush’s official view, that an Iraq war would be swift and that “The
Iraqi people understand what this crisis is about. Like the people of
France in the 1940s, they view us as their hoped-for liberation”.
Bush’s Iraq war is now
revealed by events and a growing number of critics as contradictory to
his demands that the UN return inspectors to Iraq, and further confused
with his ever-changing rationales and short-sighted, hamfisted
diplomacy. The group of “hawks” that many believe hijacked Bush’s
foreign policy, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Perle and less-well known
members, Elliott Abrams, Richard Bolton, Ken Adelman and others are
becoming visible and discredited. Bush fired his economic advisors
Lawrence Lindsay (for revealing in 2002 that a war on Iraq might cost up
to $200 billion) and Paul O’Niell, former Treasury Secretary (who
dismissed the enormous US trade deficit as a “meaningless concept”). Now
Bush needs to fire Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, whose advice has
proved so misguided and inaccurate.
All these tragic
circumstances reveal the flaws in US-style democracy, which relies so
heavily on a free press to act as the Fourth Estate, to balance and
check the power of the President, the Congress and the Courts. If a free
mass media does not, as Thomas Jefferson warned, "inform the consent of
the governed”, democracy fails. The new Patriot Act, along with the new
Homeland Security bureaucracy, continue to erode press freedom and
individual civil liberties with more surveillance, secrecy, arbitrary
arrests and detentions.
Furthermore, the US economy
remains in dire straits with a still-falling dollar, a trade deficit of
5.2% of GDP; heavily-indebted corporate and consumer sectors, vulnerable
to $30 a barrel oil and OPEC’s big retaliatory card: redenominating its
oil in euros. The best way to restore the widespread global goodwill
toward the USA demonstrated after 9/11 is to bring the war on Iraq to a
swift end, re-commit the US to its historic multilateralist role and its
support of the UN; assure that constituting popular governance and
reconstruction of Iraq are under a UN mandate and that no US
corporations or oil interests, such as Halliburton and others with
administration ties, are allowed any preferential access to contracts.
All this may take a regime change in the USA in the elections of 2004.
****
Hazel
Henderson is
author of Beyond Globalization, Building a Win-Win
World and other books (see
www.hazelhenderson.com).
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