A Tale of Two Houses: How the Clintons and Bushes Took Us to Hell
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
Scott
Ritter is back, telling the same truths he's been telling for
almost a decade, about the rank deception and violent aggression
that has driven the bipartisan American effort to conquer and plunder
Iraq. (It Doesn't
Matter If Hillary Apologizes for Her Iraq War Vote, AlterNet.)
Ritter has been forced into this Sisyphean labor because these self-evident
truths lying in plain sight for many years are still
ruthlessly suppressed by the corporate media and forever removed
from the public "debate" over U.S. policy.
The
need for this reiteration is even more urgent now, as the early
architects of the war crime in Iraq are now "surging"
toward power in the White House once again the Clinton machine.
If they shimmy back to the top of the greasy pole, they will simply
do what they did before: put a little lipstick on the great stonking
pig of American militarism, dressing up the brutal drive for global
dominance with earnest, pursed-lipped liberal rhetoric. That's what
happened in the last Clinton administration; that's what will happen
in the next Clinton administration.
Ritter knows
this; Ritter was there. In the piece excerpted below, he tells
once again of his direct, eyewitness experience of the deception
and aggression practiced by the Clinton White House toward Iraq,
practices that were, in miniature, the precise model of the depredations
of his successor.
The House of
Clinton and the House of Bush are deeply intertwined, in their policies,
their philosophies, their politics, even their personal lives: witness
the extraordinary "adoption" of Bill Clinton as a surrogate
son by the elder George Bush and his wife. This rapprochement is
usually attributed to the respect and friendliness that Clinton
showed Bush during their goodwill trip to aid the tsunami victims,
and perhaps this did spark a more personal affection between the
men. But their relationship began much earlier, in a mysterious
circumstance that still cries out for further explication: the fact
that during their contest for the presidency in 1992, both Clinton
and Bush shared the same major Arkansas financier Jackson Stephens.
(More
on this fascinating éminence grise here.)
After his narrow
victory, Clinton then proceeded to shut down the still on-going
investigations into the corruption and crimes of his predecessor.
Iran-Contra, BCCI,
and especially Bush's massive, secret and often illegal
efforts to arm Saddam Hussein and supply him with material for
chemical weapons all of these probes were cut off, starved
or shunted aside by the Clinton Administration. (For more, see Robert
Parry on "The
Clintons' Real Trouble With the Truth.")
Also thwarted
were probes into the "October Surprise" the 1980
negotiations between the Reagan campaign camp, including Bush, with
the Iranians who were holding American hostages. Direct intelligence
from several credible sources emerged in the early 1990s about those
meetings, in which Bush was almost certainly a personal participant,
where the Reagan-Bush team secretly agreed to free up frozen Iranian
assets and supply the extremist regime with military hardware in
exchange for Tehran holding onto the hostages until after Jimmy
Carter was defeated. These negotiations were, of course, high treason,
a capital crime. The Clinton Administration helped quash these investigations
too. Is it any wonder that the old man feels such affection for
Big Bill? (For an overview of the Reagan-Bush machinations with
the mullahs, see Speak,
Memory; for an in-depth look, see the remarkable series by Robert
Parry, The
October Surprise Mystery.)
So now we face
the distinct possibility of the continued rule of these intertwined
Houses for the next four or even eight years, which would give us
almost a quarter-century of Clinton-Bush corruption, deception,
aggression and incompetence. Ritter is right to speak out, to remind
us once again of the role that the Clinton Machine played in dragging
us into the hell of our present day.
It
Doesn't Matter If Hillary Apologizes for Her Iraq War Vote (Scott
Ritter, Alternet)
Excerpts:
(In her 2002 vote authorizing Bush to use military force against
Iraq, Hillary Clinton cited "Operation Desert Fox,"
the blitzkrieg of airstrikes launched against Iraq by Bill Clinton
in 1998.) Hillary would have done well to leave out that last
part, the one where her husband, the former President of the United
States, used military force as part of a 72-hour bombing campaign
ostensibly deemed as a punitive strike in defense of disarmament,
but in actuality proved to be a blatant attempt at regime change
which used the hyped-up threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
as an excuse for action. Sound familiar? While many Americans
today condemn the Bush administration for misleading them with
false claims of unsubstantiated threats which resulted in the
ongoing debacle we face today in Iraq (count Hillary among this
crowd), few have reflected back on the day when the man from Hope,
Arkansas sat in the Oval Office and initiated the policies of
economic sanctionsbased containment and regime change which
President Bush later brought to fruition when he ordered the invasion
of Iraq in March 2003
From January
1993 until my resignation from the United Nations in August 1998,
I witnessed first hand the duplicitous Iraq policies of the administration
of Bill Clinton, the implementation of which saw a President lie
to the American people about a threat he knew was hyped, lie to
Congress about his support of a disarmament process his administration
wanted nothing to do with, and lie to the world about American
intent, which turned its back on the very multilateral embrace
of diplomacy as reflected in the resolutions of the Security Council
Hillary Clinton so piously refers to in her speech, and instead
pursued a policy defined by the unilateral interests of the Clinton
administration to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
I personally
witnessed the Director of the CIA under Bill Clinton, James Woolsey,
fabricate a case for the continued existence of Iraqi ballistic
missiles in November 1993 after I had provided a detailed briefing
which articulated the UN inspector's findings that Iraq's missile
program had been fundamentally disarmed. I led the UN inspector's
investigation into the defection of Saddam Hussein's son-in-law,
Hussein Kamal, in August 1995, and saw how the Clinton administration
twisted his words to make a case for the continued existence of
a nuclear program the weapons inspectors knew to be nothing more
than scrap and old paper. I was in Baghdad at the head of an inspection
team in the summer of 1996 as the Clinton administration used
the inspection process as a vehicle for a covert action program
run by the CIA intending to assassinate Saddam Hussein
.
I sat in
the office of thenUS Ambassador to the United Nations, Bill
Richardson, as the United States cut a deal with thenUnited
Nations Special Commission Executive Chairman Richard Butler,
where the timing and actions of an inspection team led by myself
(a decision which was personally approved by Bill Clinton) would
be closely linked to a massive US aerial bombardment of Iraq triggered
by my inspection. I was supposed to facilitate a war by prompting
Iraqi non-compliance. Instead, I did my job and facilitated an
inspection that pushed the world closer to a recognition that
Iraq was complying with its disarmament obligation. As a reward,
I was shunned from the inspection process by the Clinton administration
"So
it is with conviction," Hillary said at the moment of her
vote (on AUMF in 2002), "that I support this resolution as
being in the best interests of our Nation. A vote for it is not
a vote to rush to war; it is a vote that puts awesome responsibility
in the hands of our President and we say to him use these
powers wisely and as a last resort. And it is a vote that says
clearly to Saddam Hussein this is your last chance
disarm or be disarmed."
It turned
out Saddam was in fact already disarmed. And it turned out that
Hillary's husband, President Bill Clinton, knew this when he ordered
the bombing of Iraq in 1998. Hillary can try to twist and turn
the facts as she defends the words she spoke when casting her
fateful vote in favor of a war with Iraq. But no amount of re-writing
history can shield her from the failed policies of her very own
husband, policies she embraced willingly and wholeheartedly when
endorsing war.
March
6, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
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