The Enduring Legacy of Gerald R. Ford
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
I believe
that the picture below tells us all we need to know about the lasting
impact the presidency of Gerald R. Ford has had on the United States
of America, the nation he so proudly led for a couple of years after
pardoning the man who was at that time the biggest criminal ever
to occupy the Oval Office.

Yes, it was
Gerald R. Ford who took those famously amoral and criminally incompetent
backroom operators, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, out of the
lower quadrants of the twisted bowels of the Nixon White House and
raised them to the highest levels of American government, where,
in one form or another, overtly and covertly, they have inflicted
their primitive ideology and violent psychodramas on the nation,
and the world, for more than three decades.
But Ford's
enduring legacy is in no way exhausted by the glories of his bloodthirsty
political progeny. For the sad occasion of the statesman's death
is certainly a most appropriate time to recall what is probably
his greatest geopolitical masterstroke: the green-lighting of Indonesia's
1975 invasion of East Timor an act of state-sponsored terrorism
that killed more than 200,000 people. True, George W. Bush has now
far surpassed that genocidal benchmark, setting new standards of
pointless and barbaric mass murder in Iraq but only with
the help of Fordians Cheney and Rumsfeld!
I first wrote
about the pivotal role that Ford, along with Henry Kissinger (currently
the chief outside adviser to the White House, according to Cheney
hey, it's like the Nixon-Ford era never ended!), back
in 2001, just after the release of declassified documents which
had been gathered and published by the invaluable National Security
Archive (see their report East
Timor Revisited for more). As I noted in a follow-up
report in May 2006:
...The documents
were obtained through the Freedom of Information Act in
June 2001, before George W. Bush gutted the law but only
reported in December of that year by the Washington Post. Kissinger
and Ford had long denied any prior knowledge of the murderous
assault, even though they'd been feasting with the genocidal Indonesian
tyrant Suharto the day before the troops went in. However, in
a secret State Department cable, Ford and Kissinger actually told
Suharto before the attack that "we understand the problem
you have and the intentions you have" and "we will not
press you on the issue."
Kissinger,
ever mindful of the media angle, added in another love note: "We
understand your problem and the need to move quickly but I am
only saying that it would be better if it were done after we returned."
The murders
were carried out with U.S. weaponry. Congress had restricted their
use to defensive purposes only, but Kissinger blithely brushed
this aside, assuring Suharto that America would "construe"
the invasion as "self-defense rather than a foreign operation."
Kinda like Hitler did with Poland.
Naturally,
the December 2001 story was buried by the usual bull-roaring of
Bush praise in the media. In fact, in the same issue of the Post
in which news of the declassification first appeared, you might
have been diverted from its revelations by a fascinating piece
on the editorial page, a long disquisition on the new ordering
of the world, penned by one of our most revered elder statesmen:
Henry Kissinger.
I also noted
in the May post that on September 21, 1999, Sander Thoenes, a former
colleague of mine at The Moscow Times, was
murdered in East Timor, almost certainly by Indonesian military
forces, while covering the last throes of Jakarta's fury before
East Timor won its independence another fact to be recorded
with the high and mighty deeds of Gerald R. Ford.
[For more on
how the enduring legacy of Gerald R. Ford in Indonesia has been
erased from history, see this post from Dennis Perrin: Airbrushing
the Dead.]
It's unlikely
that we will hear very much about these aspects of Gerald R. Ford's
enduring legacy in the innumerable encomiums that will fill the
corporate media in the coming days. There the focus will undoubtedly
be on the way Ford "healed the nation" by thwarting the
course of justice and keeping the most depraved operators of the
Nixon gang in power. But as a public service, we thought it only
fitting to recall these triumphs of the 38th President of the United
States.
December
28, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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