Power, Paranoia and Presidential Tyranny
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
That the United
States, once touted as the "world's greatest democracy,"
is now ruled by
a presidential dictatorship is a fact beyond any serious dispute.
Indeed, the nation's political establishment seems to have accepted
this revolutionary system with remarkable docility, even as its
lineaments are further exposed week by week. The Bush Administration
no longer bothers to hide the novel theory of government upon which
its rule is based, but declares it openly, in court, in Congress,
everywhere.
The theory
holds that the president has the arbitrary right to ignore any law
that he feels is an unconstitutional infringement of his power
and a law is automatically unconstitutional if the president feels
it infringes on his power. This
neatly-squared circle makes Congress irrelevant and removes
the judiciary from the loop altogether. Thus the only effective
power left in the land is the
"unitary executive" the fancy modern name that
the legal minions of President George W. Bush have given to the
ancient concept of "tyranny."
The
true nature of this presidential dictatorship has been laid bare
in a harrowing new book from reporter Ron Suskind: The
One-Percent Doctrine. Suskind, who had earlier coaxed the
Regime's defining ethos from an arrogant Bushist "We're
an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality"
has painted the portrait of an administration drunk on lawless
power, a junta operated
from the shadows by the grim and literally heart-dead husk called
Dick Cheney and his longtime companion in skullduggery, Don Rumsfeld.
As Suskind
notes, it was Cheney who enunciated the certifiably paranoid principle
that governs the regime's behavior: If there is even a one-percent
chance that some state or group might do serious harm to the United
States, then America must respond as if that threat were a certainty
with full force, pre-emptively, disregarding any law or institution
that might hinder what Bush likes to call the "path of action."
Facts and truth are unimportant; the only thing that matters is
the projection of unchallengeable power: "It's not about our
analysis, or finding a preponderance of evidence," said Cheney.
"It's about our response."
This is plainly
madness. Whether the insanity of the "doctrine" is genuine
i.e., a pathological panic reaction by gutless, pampered
fat-cats scared of the slightest murmur from the dusky tribes out
there beyond the iron gates and razor wire of privilege or
if, more likely, it is simply the chosen rationalization for a gang
of predators tired of the few restraints that constitutional government
has placed on their lust for loot and domination, the end result
is the same: the most powerful country in the history of the world
is being run by moral degenerates in thrall to a lunatic policy.
Suskind's book
is full of chilling passages such as the vicious and pointless
tortures inflicted, at Bush's explicit suggestion, on a mentally
ill al Qaeda flunky whom the Regime had, with knowing deceit, declared
a top terrorist operative. When Abu Zubaydah was seized in Pakistan
in March 2002, the White House trumpeted it as a "major victory"
in the War on Terror. Bush declared that Zubaydah was one of al
Qaeda's "top operatives," a mastermind "plotting
death and destruction to the United States." Bushist minions
and the ever-credulous press identified Zubaydah as
"chief of operations" for the terrorist organization,
even "bin Laden's potential heir," as Kurt Nimmo notes.
All of this
was a lie. As interrogators quickly realized, Zubaydah was a lowly
factotum "al Qaeda's travel agent" who helped
arrange journeys for the group's members and families, and picked
up people at the airport. He was also certifiably insane, suffering
from a serious multiple personality disorder, displayed in the years
of obsessively detailed diaries Zubaydah kept on his various fractured
selves. He was virtually worthless as an intelligence asset.
But the White
House wouldn't accept this; they set out to "create their own
reality." Told that Zubaydah had revealed nothing of value
under ordinary interrogation, Bush first whined to CIA boss George
Tenet "You're not gonna make me lose face on this, are
ya?" then pointedly asked: "So, do these harsh
techniques work?" He was referring to the "torture memos"
drawn up at his order in 2002 by the White House legal team: Machiavellian
documents which declared that anything less than deliberate murder
or permanent maiming should no longer be regarded as torture.
Bush's sinister
nod and wink were clearly understood. The wretched Zubaydah was
then subjected to a series of tortures. As Suskind writes, he "was
water-hooded, a technique in which a captive's face is covered with
a towel as water is poured atop, creating the sensation of drowning.
He was beaten. He was repeatedly threatened with and made certain
of his impending death. His medication was withheld. He was bombarded
with deafening, continuing noise and harsh lights." His broken
mind snapped completely. He began spewing out whatever his tormentors
wanted to hear: fantastic tales of plots targeting "shopping
malls, banks, supermarkets, public water systems, nuclear plants,
apartment buildings, the Brooklyn Bridge and the Statue of Liberty"
meat for countless "terror alerts" whenever the
political situation called for a nice, juicy scare to goose the
rubes.
But perhaps
the most revealing moment in Suskind's book is a brief vignette
that captures the quintessence of Bush's callous disregard for the
American people and the Regime's strange, preternatural calm
in the face of imminent attack. In August 2001, while Bush dawdled
on his Texas dude ranch, the entire national security system was,
in Tenet's words, "blinking red" in expectation of a major
terrorist strike; indeed, Tenet later said that the threat was so
imminent that his "hair was on fire."
On Aug. 6,
a CIA official brought the infamous "Bin Laden Determined to
Strike in US" memo to Crawford, to read it out personally to
the President and make sure he got the warning. Bush sat in silence
as the briefer delivered his fell message. Duty done, the agent
awaited the president's orders, or the president's guidance, or
the president's questions. He got nothing but a curt, snide dismissal:
"All right, you've covered your ass now."
That was it.
Bush had nothing else to say about this stark threat of impending
slaughter. He had no questions, no advice; the "Commander-in-Chief"
had no commands. Just smirking contempt. "You've covered your
ass." You've gone through the motions, you've played your part
in the charade, just like me now get lost.
Even if you
give Bush every benefit of the doubt here, even if you put the most
charitable construction possible on his behavior although
his proven record of duplicity and malevolence deserves no such
charity even with all this, the very best you could
say of his reaction is that it represents a blood-curdling degree
of depraved indifference and criminal negligence, worthy of Nero.
Beyond this
"best-case" scenario, you tumble into an abyss of ever-darker
implications, a murk that may never be dispelled "that
dark maw where high politics and low murder feast on the same lies,
the same flesh." But what we already know, what is plain as
day, is bad enough: tyranny has come aggressive, remorseless,
murderous, mad.
June
30, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail],
Global Eye columnist for the Moscow Times, is the author
of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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