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by Jayne Lyn Stahl
While we may never know the contents of President Bush's personal letter , last week, to North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il," reportedly, it had something to do with disarmament, and odds are that the words "don't start without me" were nowhere to be found. Apart from its remarkable propensity for converting the State Department into its very own Federal Express, the White House has moved closer to handing a veiled ultimatum to "disable its key nuclear complex," as well as "disclose all its nuclear activities," by the end of this month, as part of a deal aimed at disarmament (Reuters).
The deal is not noteworthy, in itself, any more than is the irony that a military which has been hell-bent on building bigger and better weapons, for the past forty years, is now making noises about the need to "disarm." What is notable is all the finger-pointing, not only towards Iran, but towards Pakistan, whose government is thriving thanks to billions of dollars of support from the Bush administration.
That said, this administration doesn't seem to be the least bit
concerned about its partnership with India, and support of India's
nuclear ambition. Instead, Washington looks to Pakistan as a catalyst
for nonproliferation in Iran and North Korea.despite the fact that the
atom bomb was sired in Pakistan.
Increasingly, however, the
president's principal concern has not been defending his country, but
his credibility, not merely around the world, where it has frequently
been questioned, but here at home. Whether it be from what defense
secretary, Robert Gates, calls the "awkward" release of a National
Intelligence Estimate that disputes the White House claim that Iran is
enriching uranium, and developing weapons of mass destruction, or the
renunciation of torture as an interrogation technique, or that it has
had anything to do with leaking the identity of an undercover CIA
agent, every day brings another revelation that incriminating evidence
is being destroyed to protect and preserve no, not national security,
but the president's rear end.
Clearly, too, in his missive to
the North Korean leader, the president didn't mention, in defiance of
conclusive evidence from his very own intelligence agencies, that Iran
is not building a nuclear weapon, he refuses to rule out a pre-emptive
strike against that country. Indeed, the White House talks about
squeezing Iran as if it were a stubborn pimple rather than a sovereign
state.
Some, in Congress, have the temerity to suggest that the
president fibs when he says that he didn't know about the intelligence
until the report was released, and that he was briefed well in advance
of his now infamous "World War III" speech. Some of our elected
officials are audacious enough to acknowledge that the president was
aware that weapons of mass destruction are no more to be found in
Tehran than Baghdad, and was only hoping that we wouldn't find out.
Just
as he was hoping, too, that we'd never know about the disappearance of
ten million White House emails, including internal ones,which have
disappeared in violation of the Presidential Records Act; emails that
may have exposed his own handiwork in the illegal outing of CIA
operative, Valerie Plame, and which may also document what the exact
commands were with respect to suspect interrogation methods, as well as
the decimation of videos that corroborate assertions of CIA torture of
detainees. After all, it doesn't take a million emails to out an
undercover agent now, does it?
It seems that 2005 was a banner
year for the destruction of incriminating evidence as that was the year
that millions of White House emails were deleted, and it was also the
year that a command was given to destroy interrogation videotapes of
two detainees made back in 2002. What may be lost in the news that the
CIA deliberately destroyed tapes, two years ago, under the spurious
claim that it was only protecting its operatives from being identified
by Al Qaeda, is the admission of CIA director, Michael Hayden, that the
White House itself authorized the tactics used to interrogate these two
detainees.
And, talk about credibility gaps, how is anyone to
believe that an executive branch which, at best, cooperated with the
outing of one of its covert agents, is now concerned about protecting
the identity of other agents from Al Qaeda, no less? How about from the
Justice Department! More importantly, we are asked to believe that the
CIA has a mind of its own, and took it upon itself to "destroy hundreds
of hours of videotape" (NYT) against the wishes of both the president
and the attorney-general.
We are asked to accept that the
decision was one made by the CIA itself, and without the knowledge, or
cooperation, of the executive branch. What an insult to the
intelligence of the American people. Can we also be expected to buy the
story that the executive branch had no knowledge of, and no hand in,
the destruction of millions of White House emails, some of which, no
doubt, had to do with this administration's definition of "enhanced
alternative" interrogation methods?
The egregious, and endless,
redactions, and erasures made by this executive branch are not only in
violation of the Presidential Records Act, they speak to the
credibility of the commander-in-chief, and are an affront to Congress,
the Constitution, and international law. Oh, and, how convenient that
the person, in "clandestine service," who allegedly orchestrated the
chorus of ruined videos is now retired, and unavailable for comment.
Now
that Justice is pursuing this, can we expect Michael Hayden to follow
Rumsfeld, and others who have stepped down so that those in the highest
echelon of power can save face? If so, it may be time to put an
expiration date on saving face.
The perfect person to ask about
videogate, and a flagrant attempt to obstruct justice, is Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates given his tenure as head of the CIA, as well as
his nearly three decades working as an intelligence agent. One might
begin by asking Mr. Gates how he can suggest that it's Iran that seeks
to "foment instability" when his own government is conducting covert
operations against itself.
Whatever pretentions he may have had,
at the outset, of being independent, and his own man, have quickly been
dispelled by the defense secretary's mimicry of Mr. Bush's absurd
statement that even though Iran has been found to be nuke-free, it can
always "restart" its enrichment program. Using that same logic, every
inmate should get a life sentence after all, they can always commit
another crime.
Oh, and as for Iran's supplying weapons to
terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mr. Gates might also be asked to
explain who has been funneling funds to Musharraf, for more than a
decade, which Musharraf himself boasts about using to train, and arm
the Taliban. The president may write as many love letters to as many
world leaders about the need to disarm, and quit their nuclear
enrichment programs as he wants, but any serious 12 step program in
disarmament must recognize that the number one threat to world
stability is not North Korea, not Iran, not Iraq, not Russia, but the
United States.
A world that has become a coalition of the killing, must now become a coalition of the willing.
Given
the current level of volatility, not just on Wall Street, and on Main
Street, but in Washington, D.C., it's time for the world to work as a
united entity, and take a long, hard look at enforcing existing
non proliferation treaties to ensure that no one nation gets to decide
who has to comply with international law, and who doesn't, nor demand
disarmament without being ready, willing and able to make a credible
start in containing its own nuclear, and military ambitions.

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