Ask Steve
by Steven LaTulippe (with
apologies to Spengler)
by Steven LaTulippe (with apologies
to Spengler)
DIGG THIS
Since I started
writing for LRC, I’ve received a constant stream of emails from
readers around the world. Every so often, I come across a few interesting
ones that I feel obligated to share with the readership:
Dear Steve,
I’m the
highest-ranking woman in the American government, and I recently
took a trip to Syria. I had a wonderful time, but now I’m the target
of ugly accusations and calls for my prosecution (for violating
the "Logan Act").
Was I wrong
to go?
Sleepless
in San Francisco
Dear Sleepless,
Before we proceed
with the specifics of this allegation, I should make one point perfectly
clear: The Logan Act is a load of horse manure.
Specifically,
it states:
Any citizen
of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority
of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries
on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government
or any officer or agent thereof, with intent to influence the
measures or conduct of any foreign government or of any officer
or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies
with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United
States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more
than three years, or both.
When America
was a free country, a citizen had the right to go wherever he wished
and to say whatever he damned well pleased.
But those days
are long gone. The Logan Act directly impinges on our freedom of
speech and our freedom of travel, and it proscribes this speech
and travel for expressly political purposes. As such, it is an utterly
un-American law and is completely unconstitutional.
You are the
leader of a co-equal branch of government. The constitution grants
you numerous powers for the conduct of foreign policy (the Bush
Administration’s claims that only the executive branch is authorized
to conduct foreign policy are also a pile of horse manure).
The American
public is becoming impatient with a belligerent administration that
refuses to talk to its enemies or listen to its friends. Our country
is bogged down in two no-win wars and is teetering on the brink
of a third. The people have lost confidence in this president and
his cronies, and they desperately want someone to find better ways
to deal with the problems of the Middle East. By opening a channel
of communication with the Syrian government – a secular regime in
no way allied with Osama bin Laden – you have advanced the cause
of peace and helped to undermine the more Neanderthalic elements
inside this administration.
As for the
possibility of your being prosecuted, don’t worry. In the run-up
to the Iraq War, the president violated numerous statutes, disregarded
the Constitution, trampled the norms of international law, and flouted
the basic principles of the Christian religion he claims to embrace.
If he indicts
you, then you should impeach him.
We’ll see which
one sticks.
Steve
Dear Steve,
Just a few
short years ago, I was the highest-ranking African American in the
history of the United States military and the first African American
Secretary of State. The media loved me, the public loved me, and
I was everyone’s golden boy.
But nowadays,
I can’t get arrested.
What gives?
Woeful in
Washington
Dear Woeful,
Let’s start
with the positives. Over the course of your career, you did some
amazing things. You served with distinction in Vietnam and then
climbed the ladder of success to its very highest wrung. You occasionally
provided a voice of reason in the face of ignorant belligerence.
Along the way, you overcame many roadblocks and never stopped believing
yourself and in the American dream.
I mention these
things because I don’t want rest of my comments to minimize your
accomplishments.
But unfortunately,
the job of an advice columnist often requires "tough love."
You were inside
the corridors of power when the Iraq War was being planned. You
saw the scams, the lies, and the distortions. You knew from your
experience in Southeast Asia that a war of occupation usually ends
badly. You even accurately predicted this disaster with your "Pottery
Barn" analogy.
Nevertheless,
when the time came to make a decision, you sold out. You went to
the United Nations and gave a presentation
on Iraqi WMDs that you knew was complete twaddle. At that crucial
moment, when everything hung in the balance, you decided to be a
"team player" instead of standing up for what was right.
You are a good
man who was called upon by history to be a great one, and you didn’t
deliver. Now, everything you have accomplished will be overshadowed
by your complicity in the sordid run-up to the Iraq war.
I feel badly
for you, but not nearly as badly as I feel for those who have lost
their lives, their health, or their loved ones to this wretched
war.
Steve
Dear Steve,
I’m the
leader of the world’s largest jihadi organization. After our attack
on 9/11, I had a close brush with the US military at Tora Bora.
They had us surrounded and were moving in for the kill, but for
some strange reason they declared a cease-fire. During the lull,
I successfully slipped across the Pakistani border to plot my comeback.
While I
praise Allah for my luck, I still don’t understand what happened.
Why did the Americans do something so stupid?
Bewildered
in Baluchistan
Dear Bewildered,
As strange
as it may seem, your attack on 9/11 was seen in some quarters as
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Many powerful interest groups
used the shock and horror of the incident to their own advantage.
The military-industrial
complex, for instance, wanted a long, drawn-out "war on terror."
The decades-long Cold War had been an endless money machine for
them, and when it ended they were forced to suffer through years
of relative peace (and lower defense budgets).
AIPAC and various
groups of religious zealots saw Israel’s geopolitical situation
slipping badly in the 90’s. They knew that something had to be done
to "shake up the game board" and turn the situation in
a more advantageous direction.
The oil industry
wanted control of the Iraqi oil fields and pipeline routes through
the Middle East.
The imperialist
ideologues in our media and think-tanks wanted to construct an American
Empire – complete with "lily pad" bases across central
Asia – to facilitate American "full spectrum dominance."
The government’s
national security apparatus exploited the public’s fears and pushed
Congress into passing draconian new laws permitting the torture
of prisoners, warrantless wiretapping of American citizens, and
the suspension of habeas corpus.
None of this
would have been possible if you had been captured or killed in the
early days of the war. If you had been eliminated, the American
people would have rightly assumed that the war was over. They would
have taken a deep breath, thanked God you were gone, and expected
things to go back to the way they had been before 9/11.
That would
have been a disaster for those who harbored ulterior motives. How
could they have justified the invasion of Iraq? The suspension of
civil liberties? The doubling of the defense budget? The proliferation
of no-bid contracts?
Do you have
any idea how many hundreds of billions of dollars were at stake?
These groups
needed an endless "war on terror" to achieve their objectives,
and they required a poster boy/boogeyman to keep the people scared.
You can thank
Allah if you like, but the facts suggest a simpler explanation:
They
let you go.
Steve
April
16, 2007
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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