-Caveat Lector-

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0204-07.htm

Published on Tuesday, February 4, 2003 by CommonDreams.org

An Open Letter to the U.N. about Colin Powell
by Dennis Hans


Greetings, members of the United Nations.

I am writing on the eve of Secretary of State Colin Powell's February
5 presentation on Saddam Hussein and Iraq's alleged links to al Qaeda
and its possession of and/or ongoing attempts to develop banned
weapons of mass destruction. Many of you will read this after
February 5, and that's fine. You will be debating and discussing the
import and details of Powell's presentation in the days and weeks
that follow, and you will be aided immeasurably by a fuller
understanding of the man and his standards.

Judging from the following excerpt of an article in Sunday's
Washington Post ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/articles/A12652-2003Feb1.html), European diplomats in particular
have far too rosy a view of Powell's character and credibility:

"Any hope of an agreement, a European diplomat said, rests with
Powell. He is widely trusted by council governments, and many said
his words this week will have a heavy impact. `You are lucky to have
a representative for this administration that is as credible as he
is,' the European diplomat said. `If you didn't have him, you'd
really have much, much greater difficulties working with a whole lot
of Europeans.'"

Secretary Powell is a brilliant man, but I ask that you leave open
the question of trust and credibility. For starters, you might ask
Hans Blix to expound on this portion of a recent New York Times
article: "Mr. Blix took issue with what he said were Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell's claims that the inspectors had found that
Iraqi officials were hiding and moving illicit materials within and
outside of Iraq to prevent their discovery. He said that the
inspectors had reported no such incidents" (
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/31/international/middleeast/31BLIX.html
).

If Blix is correct, this suggests that Powell is willing to deceive
on matters that are easily checked. What would such a man be capable
of when presenting "evidence" that is not subject to verification?

Although our immediate focus is Iraq, I include below a postscript
that offers evidence and citations from reputable human rights groups
of Powell's "fictitious" certifications to Congress on aid to
Colombia, as well as his devotion in the 1980s to murderous
governments and rebel forces in Central America and Africa whose
depridations would make that European diplomat's skin crawl.

Iraq: Powell for the prosecution

U.N. members, if you prepare properly for Powell's presentation, you
can make an invaluable contribution to your own and the world's
understanding of the true extent of Iraq's threats to its neighbors
and the global community, as well as its links, if any, to al Qaeda.
If you're not prepared, you could make a horrendous mistake with
unfathomable repercussions.

Powell's presentation will be in the form of "here is the unvarnished
truth as we understand it." But his will be a case for the
prosecution and should be viewed as such. He will present only those
tidbits that strengthen his case while suppressing tidbits that
undermine it � and he will have a great advantage over a prosecutor
in an American court.

You see, that prosecutor would earlier have taken part in what is
called the "discovery" phase. The rules differ by state and by type
of case, but the idea is that both sides in a trial get access to
just about all the information and evidence the other side has
gathered. You, on the other hand, will not be privy to the mountain
of evidence from which Powell has selected his damning tidbits. You
won't have access to the material that places each accusation in its
proper context, or the material that weakens or directly contradicts
each accusation.

Nor will you know if certain evidence is unreliable because it was
obtained through torture. On Monday Kenneth Roth, executive director
of Human Rights Watch, wrote a letter to Powell (
http://hrw.org/press/2003/02/powell-ltr020303.htm) urging him to
denounce the use of torture and not to include in his presentation
any "information" obtained through torture or severe mistreatment.
(An in-depth story in the Dec. 26 Washington Post, cited by Roth,
indicates the administration now countenances torture.) Would the
Bush administration permit U.S. intelligence agencies to torture
directly and/or ship detainees to foreign torture centers in hopes of
extracting the magic words "Saddam and al Qaeda � all for one and one
for all"? You might want to ask Secretary Powell.

The tubes: What did Powell know and when did he know it?

Powell has known for many months that officials in his own State
Department, as well as experts in the Energy Department, doubted that
those aluminum tubes Iraq tried to purchase were intended for use in
a nuclear-weapons program. Yet Powell stood by as President Bush
delivered three major speeches where he stated as incontrovertible
fact that Iraq's purpose for the tubes was nuclear. If the president
wanted to mislead the American people � to scare them into supporting
his desire for war � that was just fine with Powell.

It was in President Bush's September speech to your body, the United
Nations, that he made his first categorical statement that Iraq had
attempted to purchase aluminum tubes necessary for building
centrifuges for the enrichment of uranium. He didn't say that the
tubes "could" be used in a nuclear project, or that "we have grave
concerns" that this might be the case. He didn't say what he and
Powell knew to be true: "Even though we lean hard on all our
intelligence pros to put the worst possible spin on Iraqi actions,
the truth is that many of our best people make a persuasive case that
the tubes are for a non-nuclear program."

Bush repeated his categorical statement about the tubes' nuclear
purpose in a national address October 7. He repeated it again January
28, in his State of the Union address. Between the two speeches,
evidence continued to mount that the tubes were indeed for the
purpose that Iraq told the U.N. inspectors: for conventional
artillery rockets.

We now know, thanks to the work of Washington Post reporter Joby
Warrick (not to be confused with pretend-reporter and Powell-
mouthpiece Bob Woodward), that the nuclear theory had plenty of holes
from the start ("U.S. Claim on Iraqi Nuclear Program Is Called Into
Question" ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A35360-
2003Jan23.html).

Amazingly, the primary reason cited by CIA and Pentagon proponents of
the nuclear theory � the fact that Iraq was seeking tubes of a
precise size � is the strongest evidence for the conventional-rockets
theory! (So much for the pretense by Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz that the
CIA is too eager to dismiss allegations of Iraqi misdeeds.) In fact,
the 81mm tubes were a perfect fit for the conventional-rocket program
that dated back to the 1980s, and not even close to a fit for
centrifuges. On Jan. 8, reports Warrick, Dr. el Baradei of the IAEA
issued his "preliminary assessment that the tubes were `not directly
suitable' for uranium enrichment but were `consistent' with making
ordinary artillery rockets -- a finding that meshed with Iraq's
official explanation for the tubes." Yet on Jan. 28, the president
continued to pretend otherwise in a nationally televised speech,
confident that the major U.S. news media would let him get away with
one more lie. Confident that his much admired and respected secretary
of state would side with him, rather than the American people who
were the target of the lie.

Big lies that go unchallenged produce big results for Bush and Powell

Recall what else Bush was saying around the time he first told his
tall tubular tale: He was trying to scare the hell out of the
American people and Congress with warnings about the grave and
imminent nuclear threat posed by Saddam. At a Sept. 7 news
conference, Bush said, "I would remind you that when the inspectors
first went into Iraq and were denied � finally denied access [in
1998], a report came out of the Atomic � the IAEA that they were six
months away from developing a weapon. I don't know what more evidence
we need." But as Joseph Curl reported three weeks later in the
conservative Washington Times, there was no such report: "In October
1998, just before Saddam kicked U.N. weapons inspectors out of Iraq,
the IAEA laid out a case opposite of Mr. Bush's Sept. 7
declaration: `There are no indications that there remains in Iraq any
physical capability for the production of weapon-usable nuclear
material of any practical significance,' IAEA Director-General
Mohammed Elbaradei wrote in a report to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan" ( http://www.washtimes.com/national/20020927-500715.htm).

But Bush's lie was reported widely as fact, and along with other lies
it has had a tremendous impact on public perceptions. According to a
recent Knight-Ridder poll, 41 percent of Americans believe Saddam has
nuclear weapons while only 24 percent know the truth: he has none (
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/4911975.htm). If Bush and Powell
had a policy of leveling with the American people, support for a war
would plummet.

There is a long list of lies and half-truths in Bush's three major
speeches on Iraq, as the Institute for Public Accuracy (accuracy.org)
and others have shown. Each lie and half-truth merits its own
investigation, to determine just how long that Powell and Bush have
known it was all or partly false, yet continued to peddle it. It is
bad enough to take unconfirmed rumors and pass them off on the public
as certified facts. But it is unconscionable to knowingly, willfully
mislead the American public and the community of nations in order to
trick them into waging a war of aggression.

How to stage your own "discovery" phase

You won't have access to the raw data from which Powell will build
his case, but if you try hard enough you can have the next best
thing: honest national-security bureaucrats who've seen all this data
and, in recent months, have provided to the handful of serious
reporters in Washington careful analyses that directly contradict the
party line pushed by Powell and Bush. These reporter include the
Post's Joby Warrick, Knight-Ridder's Jonathan Landay and Warren
Strobel ( http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/nation/1607676 ), and
the Los Angeles Times' Greg Miller and Bob Drogin (
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/la-na-
cia11oct11.story).

The reporters and their sources can help you start your
own "discovery" process. It could begin the day of Powell's
presentation and continue in the days and weeks that follow. It can
be carried out in a manner that safeguards intelligence "sources and
methods" and in conjunction with those members of the U.S. Congress
who are still eager to have the free, open and honest debate they
were denied last fall.

These dedicated, experienced officials, Landay and Strobel
report, "charge that the administration squelches dissenting views
and that intelligence analysts are under intense pressure to produce
reports supporting the White House's argument that Saddam poses such
an immediate threat to the United States that pre-emptive military
action is necessary. `Analysts at the working level in the
intelligence community are feeling very strong pressure from the
Pentagon to cook the intelligence books,' said one official, speaking
on condition of anonymity. A dozen other officials echoed his views
in interviews. No one who was interviewed disagreed."

I can't tell you their names. I don't know them because they spoke to
the reporters on the condition they not be named. Landay and Strobel
explained why: "None of the dissenting officials, who work in a
number of different agencies, would agree to speak publicly, out of
fear of retribution."

Powell is on the side of the squelchers and the bullies. He is no
friend of the frightened officials who want nothing more than for
their leaders to be honest with the American people.

Bring these reporters to New York. Ask them to tell you what their
sources told them. Ask them how to reach their sources, and plead
with those sources to go public. Tell them there is safety in
numbers. If 20 blow the whistle, it will be impossible for the White
House to discredit them all. Ask dissident members of the U.S.
Congress, former President Jimmy Carter and retired General Anthony
Zinni to echo your plea. It only takes a few brave bureaucrats to
open the floodgates for dozens more to follow.

Only by bringing these well-informed, honorable patriots out into the
open can U.S. citizens and the world community begin to have the
full, open and honest debate that we absolutely must have before
making such a momentous and fateful decision to go � or not to go �
to war.

The ultimate "team player" on a team that cheats

All his career, Colin Powell has been known as a "team player." But
as was the case in the 1980s, today he's playing on a team that
cheats. Ponder for a moment the words of the thoughtful Wall Street
Journal reporter David Wessel, writing in the December 12 edition:

"[T]his administration seems particularly proud of its skill in
misleading the press, the public and Congress, when convenient. It
has even hired Elliott Abrams and John Poindexter, both of whom were
convicted of lying to Congress about Reagan-era aid to Nicaraguan
rebels. . . . A White House aide who had told me one thing on the
record a few weeks ago tried to persuade me over the weekend, not for
attribution, that the opposite was true. I protested. His reply: `Why
would I lie? Because that's what I'm supposed to do. Lying to the
press doesn't prick anyone's conscience.'"

Lying to the press is the same thing as lying to the public. It's a
hallmark of the Bush team, and Powell is its all-star. Beware.

Sincerely yours,

Dennis Hans

Postscript: More Reasons to Be Wary of and Sickened by Powell

Human Rights Watch says Powell files "fictitious" certification on
Colombia

On January 14, 2003, Human Rights Watch (HRW) held a press conference
to announce the release of its latest world report. Executive
director Kenneth Roth said that Powell's State Department twice in
2002 issued "fictitious" certifications that Colombia had met the
human-rights and rule-of-laws conditions that the U.S. Congress had
attached to Colombia aid. Congress required him to make an honest
judgment, and HRW, Amnesty International and the Washington Office on
Latin America demonstrate in a collaborative report that Powell did
no such thing ( http://hrw.org/backgrounder/americas/colombia-
certification4.htm). He says Colombia met all of the conditions; they
say none. If you read the report, you'll be hard-pressed to consider
this an "honest disagreement."

Two of my own articles ( http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0209-
04.htm, http://www.colombiareport.org/colombia85.htm) address
Powell's slippery � dare I say "Clintonesque" � language in 2001 when
the State Department designated the AUC (a rightwing paramilitary
death-squad federation in Colombia) a "Foreign Terrorist
Organization." The carefully worded statement included not a hint of
a relationship between the AUC and the U.S.-backed Colombian army.
HRW has, for years, documented that intimate working relationship. If
Powell had acknowledged the obvious truth, he and President Bush
would have been placed in the awkward position of justifying
continued aid to an army that, in a myriad of ways, aids and abets
terrorists.

Powell proud of his support for murderous contras

During the 1980s, thousands of Nicaraguan were murdered by a
terrorist rebel force known as the contras, which had been created by
the U.S. from the remnants of the hated National Guard of the deposed
Somoza dictatorship. The U.S. organized, armed and trained the
contras, directed them to attack defenseless Nicaraguan villages, and
produced and distributed a handbook that justified and encouraged the
assassination of local officials. In 1986 the International Court of
Justice ordered the Reagan administration to end the contra war and
pay reparations to Nicaragua. It did neither.

You can read all about the contras in the gruesome reports of HRW,
whose careful documentation has stood the test of time. But, you ask,
what does that have to do with Powell? To this day, Powell is proud
of his contribution to the contra cause. Here's what he said to
journalists Norman Solomon and Robert Parry in 1995:

"Working for Ronald Reagan as his deputy national security adviser
and national security adviser, I worked very hard, fought very hard
to get adequate support to the contras, the freedom fighters, who
were resisting the communist government of the Ortegas in
Nicaragua.... I have no regrets about my role." (
http://www.fair.org/extra/9601/powell.html)

According to HRW, the contras made torture, murder of defenseless
civilians, and execution of surrendered enemy soldiers standard
operating procedure. In the eyes of Powell, the contras were "freedom
fighters."

A word on the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John Negroponte

The Reagan team had bribed the brutal generals who ran Honduras
behind a democratic fa�ade to provide bases and sanctuary for the
contras. You see, the contras, unlike a legitimate guerrilla force,
could not establish themselves in their own country. The CIA helped
the worst of the Honduran military set up a death squad called
Battalion 316, which developed a habit of torturing suspects to
death. The man whose job it was to hush this up, to pretend that no
systematic abuses were being committed by our allies, was the U.S.
ambassador. His name is John Negroponte, and many U.S. senators, as
well as his predecessor in Honduras, consider him dishonest. But he's
a good friend of Powell's, and today he's the U.S. ambassador to the
U.N.

The only notable black American to countenance Constructive Engagement

Ask your fellow ambassadors from South Africa, Angola, Mozambique,
the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire) and Namibia what
they thought of the "Reagan Doctrine" and of "Constructive
Engagement" with South Africa. Ask them how many of their countrymen
were slaughtered in the 1980s as a result of U.S. support for
monsters named Savimbi and Mobutu. Ask them about the strategic
alliance between Powell's president and the apartheid regime that was
destabilizing the entire southern African region. The number
slaughtered as a direct result surely is in the hundreds of
thousands. Ask these African ambassadors what they think of a black
man who is proud to have served in the uppermost foreign-policy
reaches of an administration that conceived the abomination known as
Constructive Engagement.

No African American of stature other than Powell would have willingly
served as a cheerleader for the Reagan Doctrine, with its murderous
consequences in Africa and beyond. Perhaps this helps explain why
Powell is so beloved by the big names of America's lilywhite, center-
right news media.

My background

I'm a moderate liberal who, in the 1990s, taught courses on American
foreign policy and mass communications as an adjunct (part-time)
professor at the University of South Florida's St. Petersburg campus.
In the 1980s I wrote a number of essays and book reviews on U.S.
intervention in the Third World and how the major U.S. media tended
to stick close to the White House party line (a tendency that's in
full force today). The essays appeared in Christianity & Crisis, the
National Catholic Reporter and the Berkshire Eagle newspaper. Today I
write as an opponent of the looming war, hoping to persuade you to
join me in opposition.

I have no love for Saddam Hussein. I regard him as one of many brutal
dictators whose most grisly crimes were committed in the 1980s, when
they had strong support from the Reagan administration that Powell so
loyally served. My preferred solution to the current crisis is for
Saddam to go into exile, with a 5-year grant of immunity from
international prosecution, after which he must fend for himself. He
can come to my state, sunny Florida, where two U.S.-backed Salvadoran
generals whose human rights record is nearly as appalling as Saddam's
are enjoying their retirement in relative tranquility.

Dennis Hans is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in the New
York Times, Washington Post, National Post (Canada) and online at
TomPaine.com, Slate and The Black World Today (tbwt.com), among other
outlets. He has taught courses in mass communications and American
foreign policy at the University of South Florida-St. Petersburg, and
can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

�2003 by Dennis Hans

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