So where am I going with this? In case you haven't sussed it
out, I'll be talking here about CheneyBush, the Democratic Party, and
Pervez Musharraf. Lord Acton would have a field day with these guys as
negative role models for how not to lead.
CHENEYBUSH & AUTHORITARIANISM
Cheney,
ever since his days in the Ford Administration, has been consumed with
the desire to expand the powers of the presidency presumably as long
as he's in proximity to the Oval Office. Candidate-Bush appointed
Cheney to go find him the best Vice Presidential running-mate; after a
nationwide search, Cheney reported back that he found the perfect V.P.
for Bush: himself. The rest is (bad) history.
Bush has been
quoted at least three times expressing, supposedly in jocular fashion,
that dictatorships are much preferable to clunky, messy democracy "as
long as I get to be the dictator." Ha, ha.
As they've clearly
demonstrated, neither Cheney nor Bush has any affinity for the give and
take of democracy. Certainly they've evidenced very little patience for
the way the country's Founding Fathers, in their genius, doled out
pieces of power to the three branches of government so that no one
person or faction easily could abuse their limited authority. If the
three branches couldn't come to compromise agreements, there would be
governmental deadlock for awhile and then the people would have a
chance to rectify and alter the situation with their pressure or with
their votes in the next election.
That separation-of-power
arrangement worked reasonably well for more than 200 years, but Cheney
and Rove and Bush much preferred a more authoritarian approach. They
put democracy on hold and took matters into their own hands in order to
push their domestic and foreign agendas. The Founding Fathers, and
today's citizens, never imagined the scenario of "men with the quality
of gangsters" in the Executive Branch amassing all control in their
hands, and acting ruthlessly to maintain that stranglehhold on power by
crushing all opposition.
Short version: They relegated the
then-minority opposition party, the Democrats, to non-entity status
with the aim of making them irrelevant to government and, with the help
of some electoral dirty-tricks and vote-manipulation, creating
one-party rule for at least a generation or two. (The result of keeping
all power in the hands of the Republicans was that virtually all bribes
and lobbying money went to GOP politicians which, given the truth of
Lord Acton's dictum, resulted in numerous corruption indictments of
Republican office-holders a few years later.)
Further, if any
bills passed that didn't please CheneyBush 100%, Bush would attach a
"signing statement" to the legislation saying he reserved the right to
ignore or overturn those parts he didn't agree with. In effect, a
permanent veto power outside the traditional way of quashing
Congressional legislation. It's estimated that Bush has attached close
to 1000 such "signing statements" to laws passed by Congress.
Even
more outrageous: CheneyBush got their legal counsels (David
Addington/Scooter Libby, Alberto Gonzales) to devise a theory of
governance that permitted Bush to violate the Constitution or
Congressional laws whenever he claimed he was acting as
"commander-in-chief" to protect the "national-security" interests of
the American people. In short, under a cockamamie "unitary executive"
theory of governance, Bush would be permitted to act as a dictator on
all matters foreign and domestic. He warned the courts, which he has
packed with his own ideological kinsmen, not to interfere with these
prerogatives, and he essentially cut the Legislative Branch out of
oversight of his behavior and/or ignored their occasional objections,
in effect daring anybody to stop him.
Few felt brave enough to
question this misrule at the top, especially on the subjects of the
lies used to invade and occupy Iraq, or on torture of suspected
terrorists, or on the shredding of the 800-year-old tradition of habeas
corpus along with Constitutional protections of the Bill of Rights.
(Bush's near-police state included domestic spying without court
warrants, rifling through one's computer, black bag jobs,
"disappearing" citizens into military jails with no access to lawyers,
etc.). With no effective opposition, and with most of the mass-media
parrotting the White House spin, CheneyBush have had free reign to
rampage through the law and threaten and invade around the globe.
Hundreds of thousands have died or been maimed as a result American
troops and Iraq/Afghanistan civilians and a new war is being planned
for Iran.
THE DEMOCRATIC "OPPOSITION PARTY"
And
how has the ostensible "opposition party" responded to the
stop-me-if-you-can gauntlet thrown down by CheneyBush and their GOP
supporters in Congress? The Democrats barely take on the issues that
really matter: the ongoing Iraq war, the impending attack on Iran, the
destruction of the Constitution.
In 2006, the American people
angry and turned off by CheneyBush's extremism, thorough-going
incompetence, and corruption on so many levels voted the Republicans
out of power in Congress and installed a slim but telling Democratic
majority. Polls revealed that the voters were fed up with CheneyBush
policies, especially with regard to the quagmirish Iraq war and the
violation of their privacy rights, and that's why they gave the
Democrats a mandate to clean out the stables.
But the timid Dems
forgot who put them into power and why, and continued to act as if they
were still in the minority by rolling over on their backs whenever
CheneyBush started calling them "soft on terrorism" or whatever. In
effect, the Democrats have become enablers of the worst policies of the
CheneyBush juggernaut, and now have blood on their hands.
The
logic of the Dems' easy and constant capitulations is baffling. Bush is
now the most loathed president in modern history, even lower in
approval ratings than Richard Nixon at his lowest, a mere 24%, and
Cheney is even lower at 11% approval. The public is more than
two-thirds opposed to CheneyBush's Iraq War and Occupation and feel the
U.S., in general, is headed "in the wrong direction." And yet the
Democrats behave as if they have to snap to it whenever the
Administration looks at them the wrong way.
Perhaps the best
symbol of that timidity is their refusing to even consider impeachment
of Cheney and Bush for a long list of high crimes and misdemeanors.
Because of their wimpy behavior, on impeachment and Iraq, the Democrats
in Congress are held in even less repute than CheneyBush.
Indeed,
elements of the Democratic activist base, the ones who worked so hard
to get them into the majority in 2006, are threatening to abandon the
party and are denouncing Dem leaders and many of the announced
presidential candidates for the 2008 race. Many Dems are no longer
sending donations to the Party coffers, and instead are restricting
their giving to specific candidates who demonstrate moral strength and
independence in their policy choices.
In short, as Lord Acton
would have known would happen, the ascension to C
ongressional majority status power has tended to corrupt the Democrats,
and there is great suspicion that if they were given absolute power
they would be only a little different from the morally-bankrupt
CheneyBush Administration, with more wars of choice abroad and more
willingness to misuse the expanded powers of the presidency against
their perceived political enemies.
HYPOCRISY IN PAKISTAN
The
situation in Pakistan is uber-serious. If a centrist/secular Pakisan
government were to fall and militant Islamists got their hands on that
country's nuclear missiles, there is no telling what kind of
conflagration might occur in the Greater Middle East, or beyond.
But
certain lessons can be drawn from the situation there. And, lo and
behold, Condi Rice and George W. Bush delivered some of them, calling
for Musharaff (nudge nudge, wink wink) to return to democratic
institutions, guarantee an honest voting process, support a
free-wheeling investigatory press, respect an independent judiciary and
oppositional elements, etc.
Trouble is, the CheneyBush vision of
what's wrong is sharp when it refers to Pakistan but they seem
incapable of seeing the mote in their own eyes. You can't pretend to be
an admirable democratic country when you violate your Constitution and
deny citizens their rights, and you can't denounce torture and
mistreatment of protesters and prisoners when you sanction such in your
own behavior, and you can't decry a political leader also being the
head of the military when your country operates that way, too. The
American double-standard reeks.
(Catch this quote from White
House Press Secretary Dana Perino when asked about the situation in
Pakistan. Question: "It is ever reasonable to restrict constitutional
freedoms in the name of fighting terrorism?" Her unequivocal answer:
"In our opinion, No." Oh, but I love the smell of hypocrisy in the
morning.)
LIMITED CHOICES IN PAKISTAN
In a way,
what's happening in Pakistan, with Musharraf proclaiming martial law
and arresting his political enemies, is reminiscent of the era of Cold
War politics. The U.S. supported with gobs of money and military aid
any country that professed "anti-communism"; this policy meant that the
U.S. lost popular international support around the globe because we
were backing the worst sort of dictators who repressed their peoples
(Marcos in the Philippines, the Shah of Iran, the apartheid regime in
South Africa, etc. etc.). And here we are again: If you claim you're
anti-"terrorist," American will supply you with billions in cash,
police "training," and loads of high-tech weaponry.
Musharraf,
who assumed office in a military coup, always has been in a delicate
position with his own people. He has to mollify the U.S., his major
benefactor, while not losing the support of his more nationalist,
Islamic population. Eventually, of course, by being so tightly allied
to Bush, he antagonized the nationalists and the Islamist extremists,
the latter of whom began suicide bombing in Karachi, Islamabad and
beyond. By stomping on his political opposition, Musharraf, who
continued to head the military while serving as president,
nearly-destroyed the moderate middle of the political spectrum. Now
what does he do?
(If he loses the election he promises to hold
in January or February, and militant Islamists were to move into power,
would the U.S. honor the democratic will of the Pakistani citizenry?
Or, as happened in the Palestinian territories, would the U.S. denounce
the result of the election and refuse to deal with the
popularly-elected victors? For CheneyBush, democracy is a bitch when
the "wrong" people get elected.)
CheneyBush have few decent
choices with regard to Pakistan. They could cut Musharraf loose and
support Bhutto, but she has yet to demonstrate that she can command the
allegiance of the people, that she can govern from the middle, that she
would be any more welcome by fundamentalists in her country. How to
arrange all this without greasing the tracks for the militant Islamists
to ride into power that's the trick.
A talented diplomatic
magician is needed to help arrange this trick, and the U.S. should be
in the thick of it. But Bush, Cheney and Rice (fixated as they are on
the catastrophe they've unleashed in Iraq and now on how and when to
attack Iran) have demonstrated time and time again over the past seven
years that they are not skilled at the kind of nuanced diplomatic
negotiations that are required.
My guess is that we'd better prepare ourselves for what's about to hit the giant fan in South Asia. Break out the umbrellas.
Bernard
Weiner, Ph.D, in government & international relations, has taught
at universities in Washington State and California, worked as a
writer/editor with the San Francisco Chronicle for two decades, and
currently co-edits The Crisis Papers (www.crisispapers.org). For
comment: crisispapers@comcast.net .