LONDON
– Two cheers to President Barack Obama for ordering the closure
of the US prison at Guantanamo, Cuba. But why is it to be done
over a year? Justice delayed is justice denied.
Obama also
ordered CIA’s network of secret, or "black," prisons
closed – we hope for good and the use of torture to cease,
ending one of the worst stains on America’s honor as well as
a grave violation of international and US law.
Guantanamo
is a double embarrassment. The US conquered Cuba in the 1898
Spanish American War. Washington then installed a US citizen
as puppet president who granted Washington base rights to Guantanamo
in perpetuity. Guantanamo was then considered a useful coaling
station for US warships.
The US
imposed a similar one-sided treaty on its new protectorate,
Panama, which it carved out of Colombia. A century later, the
US made similar base deals with occupied Afghanistan, and perhaps
with Iraq.
Obama should
shut the unneeded US base at Guantanamo, which has become a
white elephant, and return the enclave to Cuba. This would be
an excellent start to restoring US-Cuban relations.
President
Obama’s next step in returning America to its senses: ending
use of the propaganda terms, "terrorism," and "war
on terror."
Britain’s
youthful foreign secretary, David Miliband, is one of its most
interesting and brainy politicians. He could very well replace
Gordon Brown as prime minister if Britain’s rapidly worsening
financial crisis goes critical.
Rebuking
the Bush administration, the outspoken Miliband urged Washington
to cease using "war on terror," which he calls "misleading
and mistaken." This term implies a unified, international
enemy, when there is none in reality. It encourages war psychosis,
fear, and employing the military to deal with problems the West
"could not kill its way out of," writes Miliband.
But promoting
the canard of "terrorism" was the central ideology
and raison d’ętre of the Bush administration, a ship of fools
steered by crypto-fascist neoconservatives and Christian evangelical
fundamentalists. It failed at everything except one thing: propaganda.
Thanks
to White House domination of US media, brilliant news manipulation,
propaganda worthy of Dr. Goebbels, and a public largely ignorant
of world affairs, the White House fib factory marketed fear
of "terrorism" to win votes and justify colonial adventures
abroad.
As author
Kevin Phillips points out, some of Bush’s strongest supporters
were "security moms" in the Midwest and South. These
homemakers were terrified into believing Osama bin Laden and
his turbaned devils were coming to their hometowns to attack
their little Johnny’s. "Security moms" provided key
support for Republicans in key battleground states.
Proclaiming
"war on terrorism" – a logical and grammatical nonsense
– boosted the Pentagon’s budget by 50%, unleashed armies of
mercenaries run by big Republican donors, facilitated Dick Cheney’s
crusade to grab the world’s oil, and justified invading Iraq
and Afghanistan. Americans who opposed Bush’s phony global conflict
were branded traitors, appeasers, and anti-American. All who
dared oppose America or its allies were "terrorists."
The term
"terrorism" is designed not only to arouse potent
emotions of fear and loathing, but to dehumanize one’s foes
and deny them any legitimate motivations. Israel successfully
deployed this effective propaganda weapon against the Palestinians,
who all too often eagerly cooperated by staging murderous attacks
on civilians. The "terrorism" theme was then wholly
adopted by the Bush administration.
"Terrorists"
are sub-humans. Terrorists are a disease. One can never negotiate
with them. Only eradicate them. Even their children are legitimate
targets. The laws of humanity and war do not apply to "terrorists."
Slapping
this label on all who oppose the US and its allies proved highly
effective psy-war propaganda, but it totally distorted reality.
I always avoided using "terrorism," which became the
most cherished word in the Bush administration’s version of
George Orwell’s totalitarian "Doublespeak."
The
proper term we should use is "anti-western groups"
or "antigovernment forces," not "terrorists.
The US, which burned alive 100,000 Japanese civilians in one
night during the fire bomb raids against Tokyo on 9 March, 1945,
killed two million Vietnamese civilians, and is responsible
for 500,000 to one million Iraqi civilian deaths, is in no position
to brand others "terrorists."
After invading
Afghanistan, the Soviets used to brand the Afghan mujahidin
resisting them, "Islamic terrorists." The US hailed
them as "freedom fighters." Ironically, the US and
its Afghan Communist allies now label Taliban-led forces fighting
western occupation, "Islamic terrorists."
Iraqis
and Afghans who oppose US and/or NATO occupation should properly
be called "the resistance," not "insurgents"
or "terrorists." The US invaded both nations and overthrew
their recognized governments. One might as well have called
the French resistance in World War II, "insurgents."
I hope
President Obama will heed Miliband’s good advice and end Bush/Cheney’s
Orwellian lies. Americans need the truth about their foreign
wars. They need to know that al-Qaida was never more than a
handful of anti-western extremists. It has yet to be proved
that bin Laden was the author of 9/11. That these attacks on
the US were likely a one-off event. That crimes like Guantanamo,
torture, kidnappings and stomping small countries create more
enemies of the West than Osama bin Laden ever dreamed of.