November 02, 2006
First, They Came For Khatami…Is Bush Next?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Compared to the current Iranian
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s former president
Muhammad Khatami is regarded in Western foreign affairs
circles as a moderate. When Khatami visited the US in
September, he called on the US and Iran to stop verbally
assaulting each other in the interest of dialogue that
could build trust and eliminate the frictions between
the two countries. Khatami said that the precondition
for dialogue was
"to eliminate the language of threat."
In an attempt to
"resolve conflicts by talking, rather than by
aggression," the venerable Scottish University
of St. Andrews invited Khatami to the United Kingdom for
an honorary degree, followed by a speech at the Royal
Institute of International Affairs in London.
However, a spanner was thrown into
the works by two Iranian exiles, who claim to have been
unlawfully imprisoned and tortured in Iran during the
period of Khatami’s presidency. Under Section 134 of
Britain’s Criminal Justice Act of 1988, torture wherever
committed in the world is criminal under British law and
triable in the UK. Thus, Khatami might still be arrested
as he tours the UK in the interest of opening
communication.
If Khatami can be arrested in the
UK for torture, how does British Prime Minister Tony
Blair escape arrest for the torture of Afghans and
Iraqis by coalition forces?
Why are not US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
Vice President Richard Cheney, and President George W.
Bush arrested when they visit the UK?
Does the British law excuse
Anglo-Americans from its reach? Does it exclude
government officials while they are in office and pursue
them only when they have become private citizens?
Or are we witnessing the operation
of the
neoconservative assumption that there is one rule of
law for the US and its allies and another rule for
countries that do not support the neocon agenda? Neocons
maintain that whatever the US and its allies or puppets
do in the interest of US hegemony is defensible and
permissible but is a crime if any other country does it.
When the president and vice
president of the United States publicly defend and
advocate torture and ram torture legislation through the
US Congress, it is hypocrisy for the US to condemn
others for torture.
Perhaps Americans don’t notice, but
the rest of the world does see the double standard
applied when Saddam Hussein is put on trial for war
crimes and crimes against humanity, while US, UK, and
Israeli government officials commit far greater crimes
by illegally invading countries, targeting civilian
populations, and torturing detainees.
Considering the enormous bloodshed
and destruction of civilian lives and infrastructure in
Afghanistan and Iraq by US and UK troops, why do British
left-wing academics and human rights activists want to
help the neoconservatives in the US and UK spread the
war to Iran? Helping to spread war is what the British
left is doing when they agitate for the arrest of
Khatami while leaving Labour Party PM Tony Blair free to
commit more crimes against humanity.
Could it be that the two Iranian
exiles are acting as neoconservative agents to block any
possible rapprochement with Iran? This is not a wild
speculation in view of the role Iraqi exiles played in
deceiving the American public and making false
accusations against Iraq that Bush used to justify his
invasion.
The Iraq and Afghanistan invasions
have turned out to be a catastrophe for the US and UK as
well as for the Iraqis and Afghans. Only a totally
deranged political leadership would want to spread the
catastrophe to Iran.
According to a BBC news report
(October 30), British private security firm
personnel--mercenaries to some--outnumber British
soldiers in Iraq six to one. A British charity group
accuses PM Tony Blair of
"allowing mercenary armies to operate completely outside
the law." In Britain it is no longer permissible
to hunt foxes, because it is "cruel and inhumane,"
but it is perfectly alright for private mercenaries and
British soldiers to murder Iraqi and Afghan men, women,
and children for the sake of Anglo-American-Israeli
hegemony in the Middle East.
Saddam Hussein was overthrown and
indicted, and Iraq largely destroyed, in part because
Saddam is "an evil man who tortured political
opponents." Evidence of US torture of Iraqis is all
over the Internet in vivid photos. According to
Amnesty International, "Adequate safeguards
against torture and ill-treatment are not in place in
Multinational Force detention facilities, and thousands
continue to be held without charge or trial." The
president and vice president of the US advocate torture
not only of Iraqis but also of everyone declared,
correctly or incorrectly, by some US government official
to be a "terrorist suspect."
Why are not Bush, Cheney and Blair
on trial? Their crimes dwarf any that could possibly be
attributed to Khatami.
The only possible answer is that
"might makes right." Yet, Bush, Cheney and Blair
parade around draping themselves in moral justifications
for their inhumane deeds and despicable acts.
The fact that Americans tolerate
crimes against humanity by their own leaders is evidence
that Americans are exceptional only in their hubris.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.