[Mb-civic] The American body politic laid low - Henry Porter -
Observer
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Nov 13 17:22:38 PST 2005
*The American body politic laid low*
Washington (George) led the way in political rhetoric. Now Washington
(DC) leads the way in crises and scandals
*Henry Porter*
*Sunday November 13, 2005*
*Observer*
Watching Dick Cheney on US TV, I tried to remember a quote from George
Washington's farewell address in which he outlined all the dangers which
might encircle the new republic. So I looked up the speech and found
myself captivated by the beauty of the language and by Washington's
wisdom and knowledge of human nature. It is right to call it one of the
great works of civilisation.
Language is the man. Washington's virtue, his learning, courage and
experience shine in every phrase of that address, just as President
Bush's inadequacy is laid bare whenever he tries to explain his
policies. If a politician cannot write or speak fluently, you can bet he
or she is not thinking fluently, perhaps not even thinking at all.
I would guess Bush falls into the latter category. He has plenty of
reflexes, of the loony patriotic and religious kind, but no reflection.
When you listen to him stumbling at the microphone, there is no sense of
anything but the most average of intellects. It is not that he is
lacking Washington's powers of expression; it is that he has nothing to
say, for, in truth, the interior dialogue of George W Bush is little
more than random flares of static.
Vice President Dick Cheney doesn't speak much but when he does, he is
clear-headed to a point of chilliness. He knows where he's going and how
to get there. He is one of the more terrifying figures ever to ascend to
a position of power in America.
The quotation I was trying to remember comes when Washington warns of
the dangers of parties and factionalism. 'They are likely to become
potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will
be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for
themselves the reins of government; destroying afterwards the very
engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.'
No one can yet claim that Washington's grim prediction has been
realised, but controversies surrounding the Vice President should alert
us to the danger of at least the perception of conflicts of interest.
Cheney represents an administration that stands accused of barbaric
capitalism, unflinching greed for oil, the exploitation of nature, the
violation of the American wilderness, the torture of untried prisoners,
the bombing of innocent civilians and the lies that preceded the war in
Iraq. He is seen as the heartless embodiment of the military-industrial
complex, a phrase, incidentally, invented by President Eisenhower in his
valedictory address in 1961, at just about the time a young Cheney
flunked Yale and went to work as a power lineman.
It is worth remembering what Eisenhower said, because he also saw the
dangers of potential conflicts of interest, but more specifically than
Washington. 'This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a
large arms industry is new in the American experience... in the councils
of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial
complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists
and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination
endanger our liberties or democratic processes.'
Cheney has been around a long time. He embedded early, serving under
Donald Rumsfeld in the Nixon and Ford administrations, as a congressman
for Wyoming, Secretary of Defence under the first Bush and finally Vice
President to the second Bush. This relentless political and technocratic
career was interrupted once when he went off in the Nineties to head
Halliburton, the products and service provider to the oil industry and
military, and made himself $60-$70 million, in what could be perceived
as an advance payment for the billions Halliburton has earned during
George W's presidency.
Eisenhower was right. The weight of the power of the combination does
endanger liberty. In its focus on profit and military might, it could be
seen as careless of all humane considerations. To know this, you only
have to look at last week's statements from the White House after the
Washington Post revealed the existence of a secret network of facilities
in eastern Europe in which terror suspects were being interrogated.
After a week almost as bad as Tony Blair's, the President assured the US
public that his government had not authorised the use of the torture in
this re-purposed gulag.
The Vice President has laid himself open to criticism. Lewis Libby, his
chief of staff, stands indicted for leaking Valerie Plame's name to the
New York Times and then lying about it.
Cheney cannot rid himself of claims that contracts have been steered
Halliburton's way. And it is widely assumed that his membership of the
National Petroleum Council, an oil- man's club, is responsible for the
administration's resistance to energy conservation and the general
hostility to climate scientists.
But it is Cheney's campaign to go to war against America's former ally
and armaments customer, Saddam Hussein, which might be the undoing of
him. There is a new, rigorous standard being applied in Congress, almost
totally absent in the last four years. Senator Harry Reid, the Democrat
minority leader, ambushed the Republicans with a demand to go into
closed session, having made a speech about the Republican's
prevarication on the investigation of the intelligence which led to war.
How did the Bush administration set out its case for war? he demanded in
the name of the American people. Who did it listen to and who did it
ignore? How did senior administration officials manipulate and
manufacture intelligence presented to Congress? How did the
administration co-ordinate its efforts to attack individuals who dared
to challenge its assertions? Did this come from Cheney's office?
Blair survived similar probes, but here the anger is more intense
because most Americans trusted and believed Bush when he said Iraq
harboured al-Qaeda terrorists. They could barely credit his brass neck
when, wearing his goofiest expression, he admitted: 'We have no evidence
Saddam was involved in 9/11.' He looked like a juvenile offender unable
to comprehend his crime or the pain it had caused.
The mood has swung since I was last here in May. The mainstream media
then were so in awe of the White House's vindictiveness and Teutonic
discipline that few dared step out of line. But journalists have taken
heart from the polls which are registering a deep concern in the
American people, even among some Republicans, who have finally grasped
the unwholesome nature of their government: 57 per cent of Americans
believe Bush deliberately misled the public before the war; 70 per cent
believe Cheney was responsible. And 79 per cent believe the indictment
of 'Scooter' Libby is a serious matter. At the height of Lewinsky
affair, only 65 per cent thought it was serious matter.
There is a long way to go. It is impossible to predict the outcome of
the multiple crises and scandals gripping the administration. But the
fact remains that there is almost no greater crime for a President than
taking the country to war on falsified evidence. That penny has dropped
with the American people and they want answers to Senator Reid's questions.
George Washington's ideals can still be heard in the speeches of men
like Reid and his fellow Democrat, Robert Byrd, who made the most moving
appeal in the Senate before the invasion. 'To contemplate war,' he said,
'is to think about the most horrible of human experiences. Yet, this
chamber is, for the most part, silent - ominously, dreadfully silent.
There is no debate, no discussion, no attempt to lay out for the nation
the pros and cons of this particular war. There is nothing.'
At least that is no longer true.
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