Tool Time: Rove Goes But the Malevolent Machine Rolls On
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
I.
Karl
Rove has resigned, and for the moment that seems like good news
although given the history and M.O. of the Bush gang, it
will probably lead to something worse in one way or another. For
example, look how much better things are now that Don Rumsfeld has
gone! We've progressed from his last-days, panicky memos about curtailing
the war (while spinning it as a victory) to a full-bore, wide-open
escalation of the conflict which the chief surger, Gen. David Petraeus,
tells us could
last for 10 more years. Or for another, even more glaring example,
look how things improved at the Justice Department after John Ashcroft
was replaced by Alberto Gonzales. Colin Powell was a weak
and pathetic bagman, whoring his media-inflated prestige to
sell a war he didn't believe in but aren't things so much
better with Condi Rice in charge at State?
No, if there's
one rule of thumb that consistently applies to the Bush Gang, it's
this: every move they make whether by choice or forced by
events makes matters worse. So while we all wait for the
other shoe to drop on Rove's resignation i.e., the real reason
behind his sudden bug-out the Bush Gang will doubtless be
putting the boot in somewhere else.
II.
But of course,
for all the media oxygen it has consumed and will continue
to consume Rove's departure is small potatoes. Despite his
vaunted "genius" for political skulduggery, in the end
Rove too is a drab factotum, a bagman, a greasy cog in a vast machine
that will keep grinding on, killing and corrupting, without him.
(Assuming that Rove is actually stepping away from the machine,
which is most unlikely.) Stories of far greater significance than
the slinking exit of a dirt-smeared toady have appeared in the last
two days items far more revelatory of the hellish world that
the porcine minion has helped make on behalf of his masters.
The boiling
core of this hell is Iraq. Stories breaking while Rove and Bush
were puddling up on the White House lawn revealed a new abyss of
criminality in the war crime that the tearful tyrant and his henchman
have engendered: the
Mafia running guns to Bush's favored extremist factions in Iraq.
As the Guardian reports, Italian anti-Mafia police, tracking down
a drug deal, instead came across shipment of 105,000 AK-47s procured
by the underworld for their paying client: the Iraqi Interior Ministry.
The Ministry said the guns were intended for its security forces
i.e., extremist sectarian militias in government drag. The
Pentagon denied knowledge of the Mafia guns, but the middleman for
the deal was a Dubai company with "scores of supply and service
contracts for the U.S. occupation," the Guardian reported.
The company, "citing the names of 'friends' in top U.S. military
ranks in Iraq," said it had written approval from the Pentagon
authorizing it "to do all kinds of business."
On the same
day, Newsweek's
Christopher Dickey wrote of how thousands of American weapons
ostensibly intended for Iraqi security forces have been flooding
the Middle East, often ending up in the hands of extremist groups
or violent loners. As Dickey notes, this influx of deadly
weapons on the streets is tied to last week's revelations about
the vast arsenal of weapons that have disappeared from American
training programs for Iraqi forces:
At least
three U.S. government agencies are now investigating the massive
"disappearance" and diversion of weapons Washington
intended for Iraqi government forces that instead have spread
to militants and organized gangs across the region. The potential
size of the traffic is stunning. A report by the U.S. Government
Accountability Office last month showed that since 2004, some
190,000 AK-47 assault rifles and pistols, bought with U.S. money
for Iraqi security forces, have gone missing.
And looming
behind all of these deals and disappearances involving small arms
is a far more deadly and far-reaching dereliction of duty: the scarcely-reported
failure of the U.S. military to secure the vast dumps of weapons
and explosives left behind by Saddam's army in 2003. As
David Gardner reminds us in the Financial Times:
This discovery
[the missing 190,000 weapons] might be considered the mother of
all known unknowns, were it not that in March this year the GAO
published a drily damning report on the coalitions failure
to secure scores upon scores of arms dumps abandoned by the Iraqi
army after the 2003 invasion and that by October last year
it had still failed to secure this giant toolbox that keeps the
daily slaughter going in Iraq.
All of this
sounds like rank incompetence: "Whoa, we didn't even notice
that Interior Ministry deal with the Mob! Goodness me, we just plumb
forgot to track those 190,000 AK-47s! Golly gee, we were just too
busy to get around to those arms dumps. Been meaning to do it forever,
but something always came up."
But it isn't
incompetence. Certainly, the decision not to find and secure the
weapons dumps was a matter of deliberate policy. The decision not
to track the vast store of American arms being given to Iraqi security
forces was also deliberate policy perhaps devised by the
general in charge of arming and training Iraqi security forces at
the time: one David Petraeus. And the arms trafficking with the
underworld by factions in the Bush-installed Iraqi government is
almost certainly deliberate policy as well, either with the direct
connivance of Washington, or else with the usual wink and a nod
and a looking-away.
The Mafia arms
deal is one of those glimpses we get from time to time into how
the world really works, in the finely meshed intertwining between
the underworld and the "upperworld" "respectable"
Establishment society, "legitimate" governments led by
"honorable" officials. The BCCI affair in the 1980s was
another such glimpse. BCCI was an international bank that fronted
for what the U.S. Senate later called "one of the largest criminal
enterprises in history." Backed by Establishment grandees and
national governments around the world, BCCI "laundered money
on a global scale, intimidated witnesses and law officers, engaged
in extortion and blackmail. It supplied the financing for illegal
arms trafficking and global terrorism. It financed and facilitated
income tax evasion, smuggling and prostitution," as journalist
Christopher Bryon, who first exposed the operation, put it.
The George
Bushes, father and son, were hip deep in BCCI sleaze. Bush I used
the bank to secretly fund Saddam Hussein's war machine then
intervened to quash federal investigations of the scam. George II
was bailed out of one of his many business failures with a $25 million
honeypot from a BCCI bank, brokered by the mysterious money-man
Jackson Stephens, who in the 1992 presidential election had the
signal distinction of being a top contributor to both Bush I and
Bill Clinton. Bill has since been "adopted" by the elder
George as an honorary son. And why not? When he took office, Clinton
killed off the ongoing probes into his predecessor's entanglements
with BCCI, and even killed a lot of Iraqis over an almost certainly
bogus attempt on his future "dad's" life. (For more on
the cozy Bush-Clinton connection, see A
Tale of Two Houses. For more on the Bushes and BCCI, see Scar
Tissue.)
The chaotic
nexus where organized crime, terrorism, drug-running, covert ops
and government policy churn and thrash together is where the business
of the world gets done. It fuels the machine serviced by tools like
Rove, the machine that has brought so much death and anguish to
Iraq and is slowly devouring the entrails of America as well.
August
16, 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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