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© Hazel Henderson, September 2002
www.hazelhenderson.com
(1,056 words)
“WANTED:
REGIME CHANGE IN THE USA”
Popular US comedian Jon Stewart announced recently on his mock news
show’s headlines, that there were plans for a regime change in Florida.
After another botched election, Florida had become an embarrassment to
the nation. Bombing would begin with targeting the city of Pensacola. On
a more serious note, politics and elections in democracies are always
about regime change.How far will the Bush II Administration go with
its new preemptive strike policy, now officially spelled out in the
latest White House document? Few have any doubts about the Bushies’
go-it-alone unilateralism, since the US President’s September 12th
speech at the United Nations. It is now clear that Mr. Bush sees his
role as “Globocop” and the USA as the world’s self-appointed policeman.
Wherever Mr. Bush sees the need for regime change in other countries or
preemptive strikes to prevent terrorism, the US will act – with or
without the UN.
Needless to say, such policies reverse a good part of US history of
isolationism and reluctance to assume the role of world policeman. Polls
over the past decade show the US public firmly opposed by 68% to 70%
(Roper Center, University of Connecticut).
Domestic opposition is currently muted by the Administration’s media
blitz of fear and war mongering. The US public is now facing a $200
billion deficit in 2002 and a bill for the proposed war on Iraq of
another $200 billion. The economy is a mess. Even the Democrats – who
are supposed to be campaigning for a US regime change in the upcoming
mid-term elections – have rolled over under the media onslaught.
Democrats’ issues are drowned out: the tanking US economy; the
corporate crime wave and its undermining of US style capitalism; soaring
domestic and trade deficits; Bush’s budget-busting tax cuts for the
rich; unemployment hovering near 6%; rising corporate and personal
bankruptcies. The Republicans may win if they can keep the focus on
terrorism and the war. Such familiar political strategies are age-old.
But stakes are higher than in the past, when princes feuded over
territory.
Today, we live in a globalized world. Transmission belts of shocks
include $1.5 trillion daily currency trading; media-amplified
market-movements; globe-girdling technologies: jet travel, computer
networks and satellites. Reckless talk and intemperate policies can rock
oil and currency markets, affect elections in distant countries and
destabilize even well run democratic regimes.
Bush “preventive,” preemptive strike polices are already being cited
by Russia’s Vladimir Putin as his justification for sending troops into
Georgia to clean up terrorists there. How long before India uses the
same rationale for similar action against Pakistan – both nuclear
powers? Not only is the US poised on these slippery slopes – but it
could take many other countries with it. Meanwhile, the US public is
confused, 40% say they are not Republican or Democrat – but independent.
The two-party system is stalemated. Many call them “Republicrats” – two
football teams owned by the same corporate owners. Former SEC chief,
Arthur Levitt describes the corruption in his expose, Taking on Wall
Street.
Deeper moral critiques of the oil-driven Bush polices struggle for a
hearing in small journals. University of Maryland professor, William
Galston cites the dire consequences of preemptive war – on Iraq or any
other nation in The American Prospect. Richard Falk and David Krieger of
the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation add that a preemptive strike on Iraq is
not President Bush’s decision to make. These reminders that such a
strike preempts international law, flouts the UN charter and the US
Constitution, appeared in Japan’s Asahi Shimbun and in the International
Herald Tribune.
Meanwhile US mainstream media, including top news shows in 2001, were
found to use biased sources: 90% interviewed or quoted were white, 85%
were male and where party affiliations were identified, 75% were
Republican. Sixty-two percent of all partisan sources were
administration officials. President Bush alone accounted for 33% of this
total. Third party or independent sources accounted for 1% (www.fair.org).
The Christian Science Monitor, September 6, 2002, showed how truth is
the first casualty of war. In 1991, George Bush I claimed that up to
250,000 Iraqi troops and 1,500 tanks were massed on Iraq’s border with
Saudi Arabia. The St. Petersburg Times, Florida, countered Bush’s
top-secret Pentagon satellite images by showing 2 commercial Russian
satellite images of the same area, which showed only empty desert. John
MacArthur, publisher of Harper’s and author of “Second Front: Censorship
and Propaganda in the Gulf War” says that considering the number of
officials shared by the Bush I and Bush II administrations, the American
people should bear in mind these lessons of Gulf War propaganda.
Dick Cheney, Colin Powell and many other top officials in both Bush
administrations are today citing “top secret” evidence of Iraq’s buildup
of weapons of mass destruction. Meanwhile, former UN inspector Scott
Ritter challenges Bush to produce the evidence, he says is non-existent.
Ritter battles on talk shows against administration “hawks” who
challenge his reputation, motives and integrity. Ritter responds that he
is now a warrior for peace, who experienced the horrors of war in
military service – and has “maxed out” his credit cards and received
funds from US peace groups in his campaign to get UN inspectors back
into Iraq.
Many US baby-boomers remember the infamous Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
President Johnson used to get Congressional support during the Vietnam
War. In 2001, the Pentagon secretly created an “Office of Strategic
Influence” – since closed down after a chorus of opposition. The
Christian Science Monitor recalls that public relations firm Hill and
Knowlton, was hired by Kuwait for $10 million to make the case for the
Gulf War in 1991.
Despite the mounting media spin, oil politics and lack of evidence
that only a return to Iraq of US inspectors can provide – Vice President
Cheney is still saying, as he did with Gulf War disinformation: “Trust
us”. Bush II’s arguments that terrorism must be prevented – by war when
necessary to keep the US safe – will likely have the opposite effect,
and provoke more terrorist attacks.
The race for peace now focuses on how fast the UN can get inspectors
back into Iraq under the new unconditional terms – versus how fast
Globocop Bush can stampede his war resolution through Congress. If Bush
succeeds before the November 5th mid-term elections, the world may be
headed for open-ended war for a long time to come.
****
Hazel
Henderson is
author of Beyond Globalization, a contributor to the UNESCO
Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (www.eolss.org)
and co-creator of the Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life
Indicators – a deeper assessment of US national trends
(www.calvert-henderson.com) |