http://snipurl.com/7p56
Conservatives Increasingly Unhappy With Bush


http://snipurl.com/7pnw

Congress, even though it is Republican-run, is showing an increasing
willingness to stand up to the Bush administration. If the president is
re-elected, it doesn't bode well for his second-term legislative agenda of
permanent tax cuts and deep spending cuts...

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http://www.alternet.org/story/18765

The Big Lie
By Nicholas von Hoffman, tomdispatch.com

Posted May 23, 2004

The frightening shark swimming with toothy grin in a giant aquarium does
not see the human faces looking in from the other side of the glass. The
shark is in a world of its own, with its own reality. Like the shark,
Americans don't see the people outside the glass. It is as though America
is in a 3,000-mile-wide terrarium, an immense biosphere which has cut it
off from the rest of the world and left it to pick its own way down the
path of history. By the time the American army stepped into Iraq, the
difference in world view between the United States and everybody else had
grown to the size of the hole in the ozone layer over the South Pole.

A fanciful explanation for the two realities is that the United States is
the continent-wide set for a large scale re-enactment of the movie The
Truman Show. The plot of that movie has the well-intentioned but naive
hero go about his daily life without any suspicion that he is, in fact, in
a gigantic soap opera. His hometown is actually the set for the TV show
and from earliest childhood he has been manipulated and controlled by the
producer and the director. The enthusiastic acceptance by the American
multitudes of the Iraqi stuff-and-nonsense coming out of the White House
would be understandable if we were all living on a stage set in a village
called Freedom Island threatened by a town called Evil Axis.

Americans believed, as they usually do when their government and their
television tell them something, but the rest of the world laughed every
time George Bush or Colin Powell or Dick Cheney or Donald Rumsfeld thought
up yet one more scary reason to invade Iraq. The ill-constructed, clumsy
untruths were surprisingly crude for people who have had years to practice
the craft of mass deception, and they had only to speak their latest
falsehood to be cheered by their countrymen and disbelieved by
non-Americans everywhere.

It's not easy to pull off the Big Lie and George Bush failed; though, in
mitigation, pulling off a bait-and-switch war demands skillful finagling
and this one was complicated. There was the bait (terrorism), then the
switch (weapons of mass destruction), then a switch again (kill the
dictator), and yet again (regime change). A politician has to be an
accomplished teller of tall tales and absurd fabrications to bring off
such a demarché. Even the masters of mass prevarication occasionally fail.

In September 1939, Adolf Hitler made the mistake of dressing up some
nondescript clowns in Polish uniforms and having them "attack" the
territory of the Third Reich. This was done to show an incredulous world
that his invasion of Poland, which quickly followed his costume party on
the border, was a justified counter thrust to unprovoked aggression. The
world didn't believe him, but Hitler didn't care. At Obersalzberg, just
before initiating the hell which was World War II, he had announced that,
"The . . . destruction of Poland begins Saturday early. I shall let a few
companies in Polish uniform attack in Upper Silesia. . . . Whether the
world believes it is quite indifferent. The world believes only in
success." Hitler, the Biggest of Big Liars, had the brass and the disdain
which George Bush, under his Texas cowpuncher veneer, does not have. This
may be to his credit, but without them Iraq was guaranteed to be a bloody
mess. If you are going to tell a Big Lie badly, you have to pull off the
crime, you have to make it a success. George Bush didn't.

The Big Lie must be simple and it must be repeated until it reverberates
like a jack hammer digging up the street in front of where you live:
inescapable sound. George Bush, either out of a fumbling honesty,
inexperience, or incompetence, did not lie well. His labored and
embarrassing build-up to the Iraqi invasion broke every rule for effective
deception.

Unlike a chef d'état who has the technique down pat, Bush made the
amateur's mistake. He, his spokesmen and women, his spinners and weavers
of untruth, his propagandists, all fell into the trap of answering back,
elaborating, retracting, and adding on. Instead of the Big Lie, simple and
pure, the official U. S. government story grew more ornate and complicated
as the date Bush had set for the invasion came closer. Instead of one good
reason to go to war, swarms of bad reasons were proffered, which gave
skeptics in other countries material to pick his little white fables
apart.

A corollary to keeping things simple is to refrain from offering evidence.
Where there is no evidence there can be no refutation. Bush, however,
trumpeted that he had warehouses full of evidence -- which, as it
happened, consisted of tons of used paper towels and soiled Kleenex. Once
exposed to air and light, the truckloads of proof positive turned into
proof negative; the often-cited smoking gun was revealed to be a dribbling
water pistol. The more evidence the world's last remaining superpower
brought forth, the goofier or more dangerous Mr. Bush appeared to
foreigners, who saw him as either a gibbering bobble-head doll or an
international menace. In one of the UN's more memorable afternoons, the
world heard American Secretary of State Colin Powell, who a year earlier
had said that Saddam was toothless and "has not developed any significant
capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction," explain to the
Security Council that a photograph of what looked like a couple of rusty,
abandoned Good Humor ice cream trucks actually showed traveling war germ
factories. The ice cream trucks, he told his global audience, many of whom
must have been rolling on the floor laughing, were making biological
weapons of mass destruction.

Heaping Pelion on Ossa, the secretary of state pulled another photograph
out of his attache case. This one, he said, was of an Iraqi pilotless
airplane bearing Saddam Hussein's weapons of deadly germs and lethal
chemicals, ready for takeoff. To the non-American part of his audience the
object looked like the balsa wood airplanes boys glue together and fly in
the park. After the model airplanes and the ice cream trucks came the
aluminum tubes for the nonexistent atom bomb factories, forged documents
out of Africa, tales of spies and agents meeting in Viennese cafes,
far-fetched dribs and super-secret drabs of what was hopefully called
intelligence. The more of it Powell and Bush gave the world, the less the
world believed.

Mexican President Vincente Fox and Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien
were having none of George Bush's mega-fibs. The United Kingdom, the other
partner in the Coalition of the Willing -- a phrase the White House
tunesmiths must wish they could take back -- was dragged into the Iraqi
adventure over the protests of millions of its indignant subjects by a
prime minister whose consecration to the Anglo-American "special
relationship" almost destroyed his career. When it came to foreign
politicians rallying to the American cause, there were few Bush could
count on, though he had the support of Ariel Sharon, a man who has never
seen an Arab he didn't want to throttle, and Silvio Berlusconi, the
Italian premier/businessman shunned as a crook and white collar criminal
by all of Europe.

Nevertheless, the voluble Silvio had a way of expressing the
less-than-articulate George Bush's thoughts: "We must be aware of the
superiority of our civilization, a system that has guaranteed well-being,
respect for human rights -- and in contrast with Islamic countries --
respect for religious and political rights, a system that has as its
values understandings of diversity and tolerance," said the enthusiastic
premier, who on another occasion explained the difference between Saddam
Hussein and one of Premier Berlusconi's predecessors in the office by
remarking that, "Mussolini never killed anyone . . . Mussolini sent people
on holiday to confine them [banishment to small islands such as Ponza and
Maddalena which are now plush resorts]." Not that the ordinary Italians
were rushing to the colors. The idea that Saddam Hussein was an immediate
threat to anybody but his own people was disbelieved there and everywhere
except in the United States.

There is something distant and abstract about a term like "weapons of mass
destruction." You can see how the fear that they might exist could make a
lot of people give George Bush and his fellow doomsayers the benefit of
the doubt. After all, who's to say that Saddam, being the homicidal swine
he is, might not have had a few poison-gas rockets capable of killing
people in Israel or even farther afield?

But for most of the world such ruminations and nugatory suspicions did not
add up to a case for invasion. Why then did Americans go for it, embracing
the preposterous assertion that Saddam Hussein, however malevolent his
intentions may have been and however nauseating his past acts, was a
fearsomely powerful chieftain able to strike a meaningful blow against the
United States?

You didn't have to be a retired general to know it couldn't be. Twelve
years before, the American armed forces had demolished the Iraqi military.
They had done it in 100 hours of shelling, bombing, and shooting at
Saddam's army -- which did fight back. Before the 100-hour massacre,
American air power had spent days destroying the Iraqi electric power,
public utilities, and transportation facilities. After the 100-hour war,
if you want to dignify the 1991 skirmish with that name, a United Nations
commission had destroyed Saddam's poison gas, his biologicals, his
rickety, inaccurate rockets, and the poor beginnings of a nuclear weapons
program. Since then the Americans and the British had -- sometimes
periodically and sometimes incessantly -- bombed whatever Saddam had left
in the way of fighting forces.

The defeated -- though always devious -- dictator had no means of
rebuilding the inferior force which had been destroyed in 1991 when he was
driven out of Kuwait. After Gulf War I, the United States, through the UN,
controlled the sale of Iraqi oil which, other than rugs, was that
country's only significant source of income. The United States, again
through the UN, decided what and how much Iraq could buy with the little
moneys allotted to it. It was scarcely permitted food and medicine. As for
guns, perish the thought. Embargoes and sanctions aside, the money wasn't
there to pay for the war machine the United States insisted Saddam had but
was hiding among the camels. The Iraqi nation was prostrate, as
innumerable visitors reported on returning home after seeing Baghdad's
hungry children. It was ludicrous to suppose that the dictator and his two
sadistic sons posed a threat to anyone other than those unlucky enough to
be Iraqi citizens.

What was obvious to others wasn't to Americans. They nursed the thought
that people in the rest of the world might not have taken Saddam Hussein
to be the toothless tyrant he was if 9/11 had happened to them. If the
French and the Germans had seen three thousand of their people murdered in
one blow, if they had had a personal experience with terror it might have
made them less lenient with a man like the Bastard of Baghdad. A man who,
whatever the evidence or the lack thereof, had something to do with the
destruction of the World Trade Center; who, you may be sure, was in
cahoots with al Qaeda; who, have no doubt about it, was slipping money to
fanatic Muslim militants; who could let go forty-five minutes after the
command of an immediate missile attack against the United States in the
spring of 2003. What was received as subjective theorizing in Europe was
flat-out fact in the United States. America and the rest of world were
veering away from each other.

The horror of 9/11 had been met with enormous sympathy abroad, but it did
not cause people elsewhere to take leave of their senses. None had lost
3,000 people in one blow to terrorist attacks, but the American sense of
the uniqueness of what their country had suffered was not taken by others
to be a license to go berserk and act like a bull wildly kicking its hind
legs and expelling rockets from its nostrils in every direction across the
globe. Not even non-Muslim India, which has over the years endured
assassinations and terror attacks rivaling or surpassing America's
suffering, approved. The Russians, committed to a struggle in which their
horrors are answered with a terrorism as appalling as any, could not bring
themselves to go along with the invasion of Iraq. Why couldn't America see
it? And why is this question so seldom asked?


The above was an excerpt from Nicholas von Hoffman's newest book Hoax: Why
Americans Are Suckered by White House Lies. He is a columnist for the New
York Observer.

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