Is the Military Our Last Hope?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
Is the high
command of the US military breaking ranks with the Bush Regime?
With the "mainstream
media," that is, the government’s propaganda ministry, bombarding
the American public with "news reports" from unidentified
sources that the US government has proof that "the highest
reaches of the Iranian government" is supplying weapons to
the Iraqi insurgency, Marine General Peter Pace, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, demurred. General Pace told the Voice of
America on February 12 that he has no information indicating that
Iran’s government is supplying weapons to the Iraqi insurgency.
General Pace
said that "Iranians are involved," but "what I would
not say is that the Iranian government, per se, knows about this
. . . I would not say by what I know that the Iranian government
clearly knows or is complicit."
Unlike the
New York Times, Fox "news," CNN, and the TV networks,
General Pace refused to lie for the Bush Regime.
Perhaps America
could regain its reputation if General Pace would send a division
of US Marines to arrest Bush, Cheney, the entire civilian contingent
in the Pentagon, the neoconservative nazis, and the complicit members
of Congress and send them off to The Hague to be tried for war crimes.
But he did
the best he could and refused to lie for warmongers.
There is absolutely
no doubt that Bush-Cheney and the neoconservative nazis are planning
revenge against General Pace. We can only hope the general does
not have a wife who works for the CIA.
Bush’s support
stands at 30% or less of the American population; Cheney’s at 20%
or less. How can "leaders" who are not supported by public
opinion or by a single fact escalate a war that is entirely
based on lies while starting a new war that is entirely based on
lies?
Is America
any longer a democracy where failed leaders are held to account?
Obviously not.
What has America
become while it has been in the hands of the Bush Regime?
How can any
patriotic American support a regime that has shredded the US Constitution,
ignored the separation of powers, violated the Geneva Conventions,
forced through a law legalizing torture, launched a war of aggression
that has produced 26,000 American military casualties in service
of a lie, murdered tens or hundreds of thousands of Muslim civilians,
destroyed an entire country, and planned an attack on Iran, perhaps
with nuclear weapons?
Patriotism
is loyalty to country and to the US Constitution, not loyalty to
a criminal regime.
This criminal
regime is in the hands of a tiny cabal of fanatical ideologues who
would risk the very existence of human life for their perverted
ideology that has no higher value than American and Israeli hegemony.
Bush and the
congressional sheep say "support the troops," by which
they mean, of course, "continue the war."
But Bush does
not support the troops. On February 12 the Associated Press reported:
"The Bush administration’s budget assumes cuts to funding for
veterans’ health care two years from now even as badly wounded
troops returning from Iraq could overwhelm the system."
Bush is an
ignorant warmonger. He doesn’t care who pays the price as long as
the American people let him sit in the Oval Office and play Napoleon.
MoveOn, an
organization that, unlike the Bush Regime, has redeeming virtues,
is making a terrible mistake in trying to collect half a million
signatures in behalf of saving federal funding for NPR and PBS.
I cannot imagine
a surer way of adding NPR and PBS to the Bush Regime’s ministry
of propaganda.
NPR and PBS
desperately need to be totally independent of government and dependent
only on their listeners. Any organization dependent on government
money belongs to the government. Such an organization has no independence.
Just ask the many physicists who cannot express doubts about the
9/11 Commission Report because their careers depend entirely on
federal government grants.
We have witnessed
a decline in the integrity of NPR reporting over the past six years.
The Bush Regime put an ideological commissar in charge of NPR and
the result is that NPR sounds increasingly like Fox "news."
The few people with integrity that America has left in the news
business desperately need their independence.
On February
13, I listened for two hours to NPR and did not hear a single report
of General Pace’s contradiction of Bush/Cheney propaganda about
Iran’s leaders. But I did hear a neoconservative from the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), a propaganda institution in Washington
D.C., push the buttons for war with Iran.
The Clinton
Administration permitted the destruction of independent news in
the US when it allowed the extraordinary concentration of the media.
The American media is no longer run by journalists with a commitment
to truth but by advertising executives who seek to protect profits
by avoiding "controversy" and who seek to protect the
value of the conglomerates, a value that depends on government-granted
broadcast licenses, by accommodating the government’s line, whatever
it might be.
The only free
and independent media in the US is online. The best thing that could
possibly happen to NPR is to lose all federal funding and to become
totally independent of Washington.
Then
we could trust it again.
February
15, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and testified before
Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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