November 08, 2006
Will the Democrats Become Part of the Problem?
By Paul Craig Roberts
It only took six years for Americans to comprehend
George Bush and the Republican Party and to realize that
the Republicans were not leading America in any
promising directions.
Exit polls and interviews with voters across the
country by CNN political analyst Bill Schneider show
that the November 2006 election was a vote against both
Bush and the war in Iraq. Schneider reports that voters
did not even know the name of the Democrats for whom
they voted. Voters said: "I am going to vote
Democrat, because I don't like Bush, I don't like the
war. I want to make a statement."
I believe that voters recognized that the peril of
one-party rule is that political accountability exists
no where except at the ballot box. With the Republican
built and programmed electronic voting machines, even
accountability at the ballot box was disappearing.
Americans realized that they had made a serious mistake
giving power to one party, and they rectified it.
With Republican control of the legislative branch
ended, Pentagon Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was
immediately swept from power. With the troops, generals,
and the service newspapers calling for Rumsfeld's head,
only the delusional warmonger, Vice President Richard
Cheney, wanted to keep Rumsfeld in power.
It was a battle that Cheney lost. Cheney's defeat is
an indication that reality has elbowed its way back into
Republican consciousness, pushing hubris and delusion
away from the control they have exercised over political
power.
The lust for unbridled power proved to be too strong
a temptation for normally cautious Republicans. The
Republicans waved the flag and shouted "terrorist
sympathizer" at every civil libertarian who
attempted to defend the US Constitution, the separation
of powers, the Bill of Rights, the Geneva Conventions'
proscriptions against torture, and America's reputation
from a Nazified US Dept of Justice (sic)
and a president who behaved—with the approval of
Republicans—as if he were above the law. In violation of
his oath of office, Bush used signing statements to
negate laws passed by Congress, not with a veto, but
with his personal opinion. Bush, thus, elevated himself
above the rule of law that has protected America from
becoming a tyranny and made a mockery of the separation
of powers that are a foundation of American liberty.
Americans may not have understood this as clearly as
the Founding Fathers did, but the people recognized,
however dimly, a problem and exercised corrective
action. The question now is: what will the Democrats do?
The Democrats clearly have no mandate for their pet
issues of
gun control,
homosexual marriage, and
higher taxes—especially at a time when the average
American is deeper in personal debt than at any other
time in history and jobs are being offshored at a rapid
rate destroying the economic prospects of the American
people.
After the years of illegal war and the overnight
destruction of civil liberties that were 800 years in
their creation, the United States stands at a watershed.
If the legislation that has been put on the books
permitting spying on Americans without a court warrant,
legalizing torture and self-incrimination, and repealing
habeas corpus and the right to an attorney remains on
the books, the United States will be a police state
regardless of which party is in power.
If the Democrats are to make a real difference, their
first task is to repeal the Orwellian-named "Patriot
Acts," the torture legislation, the detention
without court evidence legislation, and the right-to-spy
and invade privacy without court warrant legislation.
The White House tyrant needs to be quickly told that one
more "signing statement" and he will be
impeached, convicted, and turned over to the War Crimes
Tribunal at the Hague.
The notion that Americans can be protected from
"terror" by giving up the Bill of Rights is absurd.
Democrats are complicit in this absurd notion. Many were
intimidated into voting for police state legislation,
because they lacked the intestinal fortitude to call
police state legislation by its own name. The
legislation that has been passed during the Bush regime
is far more dangerous to Americans than Muslim
terrorists.
Indeed, the prime cause of Muslim terrorism is the US
interference in the internal affairs of Muslim countries
and America's one-sided stance in favor of Israel in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. When Jimmy Carter was
president, his even-handed approach made the US
respected throughout the Muslim world. 9/11, if it was
actually an act of Muslim terrorism, was the direct
consequence of US one-sided meddling in Middle Eastern
affairs.
When, and only when, the Democrats have erased the
Bush administration's police state legislation from the
books, thus restoring the Constitution, they should
clear the air on two other issues of major importance.
The Democrats must convene a commission of independent
experts to investigate 9/11. The 9/11 Commission Report
has too many problems and shortcomings to be believable.
Recent polls show that 36 percent of the American people
do not believe the report. Such a deficient report is
unacceptable. 9/11 became the excuse for the
neoconservative Bush regime to launch illegal wars of
aggression in the Middle East. The
9/11 Commission Report is nothing but a public
relations justification for the "war on terror,"
which in truth is a war on American liberty. As long as
politicians with a police state mentality can cling to
the cover of the 9/11 Commission Report, the Bill of
Rights will remain endangered.
The other issue is the blatant corruption in the Bush
regime's contract practices. So many contracts are
tainted with their connections to Republican power
brokers, including Vice President Richard Cheney, that
the taxpayers are being fleeced on the level of the
Grant Administration. Indictments and long prison
sentences are in order.
This leaves the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Both
are lost. Both invasions were illegal. Those responsible
must be held accountable. The American prosecutors of
the Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg emphasized, as
Robert Jackson put it, that Germany's crime was not in
losing the war but in starting it. Under the Nuremberg
standard, to launch a war of aggression is a war crime.
It is punishable with a death sentence.
As the wars are crimes, they must be stopped. Having
overthrown a stable secular regime in Iraq, the US and
its craven allies have no recourse but to accept that
Iraq will break into three states: In the north the
Kurds will unite with the Turkish Kurds, and Turkey will
have to deal with the situation without US interference.
In the south, the Shiites will have an Islamic regime
similar to the government in Iran, with whom the Iraqi
Shiites will be allied. The Sunnis will be isolated in
the middle without any oil.
The US and Britain no longer have any role to play in
the Middle East. As the King of Jordan predicted, there
is now a Shiite crescent that runs from Iran through
Iraq into Lebanon. This Shiite crescent is the most
powerful force in the Middle East.
The Iraqi Sunnis can come to terms with Shiite power
or be destroyed. The American puppet states of Egypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the oil emirates are faced with
the instability that comes from being allied with the
"hegemonic" West against their own people. It is up
to their own wits whether they can make the
transformation. The US has neither the resources, the
finances, nor the credibility to intervene.
The Israelis have isolated themselves with their
genocidal policies against the Palestinians. Intelligent
Israelis are already sending their children out of the
country. Israeli peace groups have thrown up their hands
in the face of the persistent intransigence of the
Israeli government and the disregard of common sense. It
remains to be seen if the Israelis can learn to care
about anyone but their own kind. Israel can save itself
if its political leaders will stop pushing Palestinians
off of their own land by destroying their homes and
orchards and murdering their children, thus turning more
Palestinians into refugees. It would be easy for the
economically talented Israelis to pull the Palestinians
into prosperity, thereby ending the conflict. Are
Israelis capable of the humane leadership required to
create a place for themselves in the Middle East or are
they forever wed to Mao's dictum that "power comes
out of the barrel of a gun"?
Republican rule in the 21st century has devastated
American civil liberties and American prestige and
leadership capability. Can Democrats restore American
liberties and leadership, or will a lust for power
corrupt them, too, and cause Democrats to retain the
police state powers Bush has created?
If the Bush regime's police state legislation is
still law in 2008, the Democrats will have failed.
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.