Nominees for the 1st Annual Tomdispatch Political Comedy Awards
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
Thursday
the news came in. The position of Director of National Intelligence
(DNI), insisted upon by the 9/11 Commission, was finally filled.
Shopped around for weeks unsuccessfully, it had already been rejected
by former CIA Director Robert Gates, former Senator Sam Nunn, and
former Attorney General William Barr because, though the DNI will
officially preside over the American "Intelligence Community" and
coordinate a $40 billion-plus budget, the position was considered
a
potential bureaucratic quagmire and almost totally lacking in
real power.
The Bush administration was evidently desperate before it hit on
what was clearly a brilliant scheme: Just look for someone who had
a post already so nightmarish, hopeless, and targeted for failure
that DNI would look like a dream. With that job description in hand,
of course, who better fit the bill than the viceroy in… er, ambassador
to Baghdad, John Negroponte. Though Negroponte declared DNI "the
most challenging assignment I have undertaken in more than 40
years of government service," it's hard to believe it wasn't a matter
of anything-that-gets-me-home. (Undoubtedly a feeling a lot of National
Guard and Reserve troops have right now.)
So, faster than you could snap your fingers, he was in Washington
preparing to be intelligence "tsar" to our
boy emperor. The former ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to
1985, a key post during our Contra wars in Central America, he had
long been charged with presiding over major human-rights violations.
As a Los
Angeles Times piece put it back in 2001 when Bush nominated
him as UN ambassador where he would preside over the distribution
of the famed set of intelligence lies and manipulations that got
us into the Iraqi War he may have been "overlooking if not
actually overseeing a CIA-backed Honduran death squad during
his tenure." His response then: The Honduras accusations were "old
hat." ("I want to say to those people: Haven't you moved on?")
Of course, little of this was dwelled upon in
the early media reports on his nomination for DNI. Instead,
as Senate Democrats jumped on board, he was treated with the usual
kid gloves. In some ways, Negroponte, a quiet man quite capable
of carrying a big stick behind his sizeable back, is a surprising
choice for the DNI job. After all, he's a strong figure being slotted
into a weak job. Nonetheless, he now becomes the fourth grim face
in the national security line-up the second Bush administration
is turning to face the world.
Remember when American administrations used to talk about "rogue
states" back in the good ol' days before the Axis of Evil and
Outposts of Tyranny took center stage. Well, it's time to revive
the term and personalize it. Maybe we should start talking about
"rogue guys." After all, the three top dogs fronting for our new
Homeland Security State Gonzales, Chertoff, and Rumsfeld (Justice,
Homeland Security, and Defense) were all intimately involved
in creating and/or parsing pretzled definitions of torture meant
to free our "commander-in-chief" to order more or less anything
he wanted done to anyone he wanted it done to out there in the imperium.
Now, standing proudly at their side will be a man whose name is,
however
quietly these days, linked to a dark past and heinous
acts, and who was quietly, without any Paul-Bremer-style showboating,
overseeing god-knows-what from our embassy in Iraq. (It's a miracle
by the way that former viceroy Bremer, returning home in his signature
desert boots and blazer, didn't in the style of basketball players
giving the nod to sneakers or JLo to clothes lines endorse an
array of sandy-colored designer boots. Maybe that was because his
team didn't win the championship and the movie he was making – Occupation
Iraq: Desert Triumph hit more than a few bumps along the way
and ended up being shelved.)
Oh, there's a fifth face to consider that of Porter Goss, CIA
Director as well as former Agency spy, congressman, and Bush partisan,
who, just before the election, was sent to Langley, VA, on a leash
to put the Agency and its various angry whistleblowers in a cage.
Just Thursday he appeared before the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence for the first time since becoming
the Agency's Director and spoke with the kind of bravery you expect
from the rogue members of an administration that means to make every
schoolchild but not a single leader "accountable" for what they
do.
Goss looked far into the future; assured the senators that "tough
decisions" needed to be made "about which haystacks deserve to be
scrutinized for the needles that can hurt us most"; added that,
in his testimony, he would "not attempt to cover everything that
could go wrong in the year ahead" (whew!); and then, summoning every
ounce of wisdom he possessed, passed the buck and covered his butt.
His predictions more or less took in anything he could imagine that
might conceivably happen on his watch including the possibility
that "[i]t may be only a matter of time before al-Qa'ida or another
group attempts to use chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear
weapons." (Note the wonderful "may" in that sentence. In other words,
it may or may not be only a matter of time.)
Oh, he did at least manage to say that George Bush's Iraq was now
a terrorist-producing machine:
"The
Iraq conflict, while not a cause of extremism, has become a cause
for extremists… These jihadists who survive will leave Iraq experienced
in and focused on acts of urban terrorism. They represent a potential
pool of contacts to build transnational terrorist cells, groups,
and networks in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other countries."
Our rogue guys, you gotta hand it to 'em, don't you? And they look
so darn pleasant to most of us. I tell you, if there were political
comedy awards, Jon Stewart would be swept by the second Bush administration
hands down. (It's everyone else who'd better put their hands up.)
With that in mind, and because our devolving world is just too grim
not to laugh at, I thought I might, as one of our local New York
sportscasters likes to say, "span the world," offering a glimpse
of some early nominees being designated by an expert panel for the
first annual Tomdispatch Political Comedy Awards:
Best
chuckle among torturers, or the You-First-on-the-Waterboarding-Alphonse;
no-you-Gaston Award of 2005
This week Douglas Jehl reported in a piece of pure black comedy
on the inside pages of the New York Times (C.I.A.
Is Seen as Seeking New Role on Detainees) that the Central Intelligence
Agency is "seeking to scale back its role as interrogator and custodian
of terrorist leaders who are being held without charges in secret
sites around the world." It seems torture is now turning into a
Bush administration version of hot potato. Just before the Senate
hearings on White House Legal Counsel Alberto Gonzales's nomination
to be Attorney General, the administration officially repudiated
an August 2002 legal opinion sought by the CIA "to protect its employees
from liability." That memo (from the Justice Department's Office
of Legal Counsel to Gonzales) essentially redefined acts of torture
as not acts of torture. CIA officials now worry that the repudiation
may undercut the Agency's "authority to use coercive methods in
interrogations." It didn't help that second-term nominees Gonzales
and Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff stepped up to the plate
in their nomination hearings and firmly as well as forthrightly
"sidestep[ped] responsibility for shaping interrogation policies…
Both suggested… that others might have played a greater role in
deciding how interrogations would be conducted."
Now, the CIA has been left "holding the bag" and overseeing for
an undefined eternity what Jehl politely says "amounts to a secret
prison system overseas." CIA officials are reportedly thinking about
trying to "enlist" another agency, possibly the FBI, in the interrogation
process now that, after so long in captivity, the prisoners no longer
have information worth offering and the FBI, for reasons hard
to imagine, is evidently refusing. Who wouldn't want to take over
a secret prison system overseas filled with top al-Qaeda detainees
who can never be charged or released, and live with the possibility
that someday criminal charges may be filled against you? A second
possibility the CIA is considering would involve handing the prisoners
over to "third countries" (assumedly along with oodles of make
no mistake about it unconnected aid).
This new tortured game of who-will-take-responsibility-for-this-mess
is certainly an early favorite in the race for one of the top Political
Comedy Awards in 2005. In the meantime, though the most recent book
of collected insider documents on the subject of torture and the
Bush Administration, Karen J. Greenberg's and Joshua Dratel's The
Torture Papers, runs to a mere 1,249 pages, the Jehl article
assures us that many key administration documents on the subject
still remain out of sight ("most still highly classified")
possibly banished to one of our outer prison colonies.
[A subsidiary Torture as Comedy Awardlet nomination for 2005 is
likely to go to David
Passaro, an interrogator under contract to the CIA, charged
with assault for beating an Afghan prisoner (who subsequently died)
with hands, feet and flashlight. This nomination, the first of what
will undoubtedly be many to come this year, is for the creative
use of new torture defenses first pioneered by the Bush administration
and now coming home to roost: Passaro, being tried in Raleigh, North
Carolina, is threatening in his defense to "cite top officials'
written legal justifications for harsh interrogation techniques
and a Congressional resolution passed after the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks on New York and the Pentagon calling on the president 'to
use all necessary and appropriate force' to thwart further terrorism."]
Best
humorous explanation of 2005 (in the Best Comic Use of Language
category domestic)
In response to a question from a woman in an audience in Tampa,
Florida on February 4, our President offered the
following explanation of his social security plan:
"Q:
How is the new plan going to fix [the] problem? "THE PRESIDENT:
Because the all which is on the table begins to address the
big cost drivers. For example, how benefits are calculate, for
example, is on the table; whether or not benefits rise based upon
wage increases or price increases. There's a series of parts of
the formula that are being considered. And when you couple that,
those different cost drivers, affecting those changing those
with personal accounts, the idea is to get what has been promised
more likely to be or closer delivered to what has been promised.
"Does
that make any sense to you? It's kind of muddled .... There is
a reform that would help solve the red if that were put into effect.
In other words, how fast benefits grow, how fast the promised
benefits grow, if those if that growth is affected, it will
help on the red.
"Okay, better? I'll keep working on it. (Laughter.)"
We're all laughing, these being comedy-award nominations. Perhaps
the clarity of this explanation also explains the following polling
results, as reported by Tim
McCahill of the Associated Press: "A poll for the Concord
Monitor published last weekend showed 55 percent support for
allowing workers to invest a portion of their Social Security taxes
in stocks and bonds, as Bush proposes. But support dropped to 19
percent when those in favor were asked if they would back the plan
if it meant losing benefits when the stock market dropped."
Best
humorous flashcards of 2005 (in the Best Comic Use of Language category
foreign) [Nomination and text contributed by panelist and Tomdispatch
regular Nick Turse]
If you can remember back to America's last great occupation debacle
no, not Afghanistan, Haiti, or Somalia, I mean Vietnam you
might recall U.S. military commander William Westmoreland's "9 rules"
pocket card. It was basically a flash card reminding soldiers not
to mistreat noncombatants. This time around, the U.S. Marine Corps
Intelligence Activity has gone one better, or more correctly 16
times better with a 16-panel folding card offering all sorts of
helpful hints to the corpsman entering sunny Iraq about native clothes,
customs, ethnic groups, and history.
Last November, the Marines issued a newly updated Iraq Culture Smart
Card, but an earlier version, from
February 2004 (pdf file), is more reliable for viewing purposes
as well as indicative of the thrust of the American effort in that
country. In addition to its simple cartoons of "insurgent tactics"
(e.g. hiding a stick of dynamite under a dead goat), the Smart Card
has a number of panels devoted to essential language skills. While
its unclear exactly how the card is meant to be folded, it appears
that the first language panel a Marine would read (devoted to "Command
and Control") contains not translations for "hello" or "thank you,"
but far more useful greetings like "hands up," "no talking," "do
not resist," "lie on your stomach," and "do not move." Only many
panels later do we get to "hello" along with other "Helpful Words/Phrases."
Actually, another word shares the same line with "hello" "weapon,"
of course. With sixteen full pages, the mix-and-match possibilities
("Lie on your stomach. Hello!") are plentiful.
The cards have a cautionary aspect as well, painting the Iraqi people
as uniformly dishonest. If you ask a direct question, an Iraqi's
first answer is likely to be "the answer they think you want to
hear, rather than an honest response." Of course, that's what you're
likely to get once you ask anyone, no matter how nicely, to get
down on their stomach and cut down on the idle chatter. But the
panels do note that pointing
with fingers and the thumbs-up
sign are considered offensive in Iraq, where customs are surely
strange indeed. Too bad the Army folks at Abu Ghraib never got these
cards. Then again, the cards say nothing about torture being taboo.
But then again, you can't squeeze everything on a card, even though
the Marines did manage to condense Iraq's history, from the 18th
century B.C. until today, into one lone panel.
It's good to see that the weak planning that went into the occupation
of Iraq hasn't continued. This 16-panel folding card may be simple,
but when you're an American visitor invading another land, how much
more than "Hands up!" and "Shut up!" do you need to know?
Funniest
Election of 2005 (domestic)
A recent poll conducted by the
Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience, highlighted
at the History News Network
website (which is always filled with provocative pieces as well
as the latest news on history, recent and ancient), sent George
Washington up against George W. Bush in a run for the presidency.
While the first George W beat the present George W in the overall
race (due to a Democratic anything-but-George-the-recent vote),
he lost to our President among Republicans (those traditionalists!)
by a staggering 2-to-1 margin.
Ya gotta love it! And it makes sense. After all, how many years
(including that miserable, cold, ill-planned winter at Valley Forge)
did it take the first George W to win his little revolution on the
pathetic East Coast of our future nation, while the newest George
W is taking (and making) jihadis on a planetary scale? Oh, and bad
news for FF (Founding Father) George. He's slipping as an American
icon too. "Only 46 percent of the 800 adult Americans surveyed could
identify him as the general who led the Continental Army to victory
in the Revolutionary War." Am I mistaken or wasn't that the war
that began when our British Allies in Basra charged up Baghdad Hill?
Funniest
Figures (Federal Budget) for 2005, or the Smoke-and-Mirrors Award
This is a tough, competitive category what with the new Bush
social security proposals out there wandering the highways and byways
of America but our panel of pros has agreed that the conservative
thing to do is nominate that old surefire, the military budget.
The new Defense Department budget request comes in officially at
a modest $419 billion; a mere 41% increase over the 2001 budget,
if you take the word of the Pentagon, 47% if a person with a calculator
actually does the figures, as conservative scholar Robert Higgs
did (in a superb piece, Bush's
New Defense Budget, from the Independent Institute).
Of
course, just as a starter, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are
being funded to the tune of $4-5 billion a month via "emergency"
supplemental appropriations, of which the latest for $81.9 billion
just arrived on the congressional doorstep. When
this one passes, it will push total war costs past $300 billion
(approximately half the cost of the Vietnam War in far less time)
and just about none of it has touched the regular budget. While
about $77 billion of the present request is for the two wars, the
administration has also slipped in "aid" money for various allies
in the "coalition of the willing" in Iraq, not to speak of $658
million for our new embassy in Baghdad. (Well, let's be honest,
that's just the bare minimum when you're planning to house a skeleton
staff estimated at 1,000 and sure to give you tons of diplomatic
bang for the buck.) Then there's that thoroughly modest $4.8 million
slipped in there "to enhance U.S.-backed broadcasting to Arabs,
including new television broadcasts aimed at Muslims living in Europe."
(This undoubtedly includes money to purchase episodes of Law
and Order, Hope and Faith, and Six
Feet Under, though not Cheers
for obvious reasons.)
None
of that, of course, is in the new DoD budget, but then again, as
Higgs informs us, neither are:
"the
costs of nuclear warheads, which the Department of Energy produces;
the defense-related activities of the Department of State, including
'foreign military financing'; the past military services being
compensated currently by benefits provided through the Department
of Veterans Affairs; the defense-related activities of the Homeland
Security Department, such as the Coast Guard's defense activities;
various defense-related activities of several other federal departments;
or the current interest costs of previous, debt-financed military
activities. Applying my rule of thumb, I estimate that the government's
total military-related outlays in fiscal year 2006 will be in
the neighborhood of $840 billion or, approximately a third
of the total budget, as opposed to the 16 percent that one calculates
by comparing the Pentagon's $419 billion request to the administration's
total request, $2.57 trillion."
Note
that the date for the First Annual Tomdispatch Political Comedy
Awards has yet to be set, though the full extravaganza will come
to you via a live webcast (to be followed by a gala party in a small
apartment still to be chosen in a distant suburb of Washington).
The problem the organizers of the event face is that possible 2005
nominees may build up too quickly, forcing us to move up the projected
end-of-the-year date for the event. Stay tuned for updates on this.
Tom.
February
22, 2005
Tom Engelhardt [send him
mail] is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture.
Copyright
© 2005 Tom Engelhardt
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