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http://www.consortiumnews.com/Print/112902a.html

consortiumnews.com

Richard Milhous W. Bush

By Nat Parry
November 30, 2002

George W. Bush is fast building a political system of secrecy and snooping  that 
Richard
Milhous Nixon would have died for. Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Bush has asserted
broad powers to wiretap, spy on and imprison indefinitely people he deems a threat to
national security � authority far beyond what was available to the famously paranoid 
Nixon.

Bush�s executive powers are already so sweeping they may be unprecedented in U.S.
history. While some of Bush�s supporters cite prior suspensions of constitutional 
rights
during the Civil War and World War II, those eras lacked today�s technology to pry 
into the
most personal details of the lives of Americans.

Even in the late 1960s and early 1970s, President Nixon and his allies were forced to 
adopt
relatively crude means for invading the privacy of Americans. Bugs were placed on 
phones;
agents were infiltrated into political organizations; and burglars were sent into 
homes and
offices searching for embarrassing or incriminating information.

By contrast, today�s modern technology can let Bush�s team collect and analyze 
trillions of
bytes of data on transactions and communications, the electronic footprints left in the
course of everyday life: books borrowed from a library, fertilizer bought at a 
farm-supply
outlet, X-rated movies rented at a video store, prescriptions filled at a pharmacy, 
sites
visited on the Internet, tickets reserved for a plane, borders crossed while 
traveling, rooms
rented at a motel, and hundreds of other examples.

Bush�s aides argue that their unrestricted access to this electronic data may help 
detect
terrorists, but the data could prove even more useful in building dossiers on anti-war
activists or blackmailing political opponents. Despite assurances that such abuses 
won�t
happen again, the capability will be a huge temptation for Bush, who has made clear his
view that anyone not supporting his war on terror is siding with the terrorists.

The technological blueprint for an Orwellian-style �thought police� is already on the 
drawing
board at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon�s top research and
development arm. DARPA has commissioned a comprehensive plan for electronic spying
that would track everyone in the world who is part of the modern economy.

�Transactional data� will be gleaned from electronic data on every kind of activity �
�financial, education, travel, medical, veterinary, country entry, place/event entry,
transportation, housing, critical resources, government, communications,� according to 
the
Web site for DARPA�s Information Awareness Office. The program will then 
cross-reference
this data with the �biometric signatures of humans,� data collected on individuals� 
faces,
fingerprints, gaits and irises. The project seeks what it calls �total information 
awareness.�

Masonic Eye

The Information Awareness Office even boasts a logo that looks like some kind of clip 
art
from George Orwell�s 1984. The logo shows the Masonic symbol of an all-seeing eye atop 
a
pyramid peering over the globe, with the slogan, �scientia est potentia,� Latin for
�knowledge is power.�

Though apparently unintentional, DARPA's choice of a giant white pyramid eerily recalls
Orwell's Ministry of Truth, "an enormous pyramidal structure of glittering white 
concrete,
soaring up, terrace after terrace, 300 metres into the air." The all-seeing Masonic 
eye could
be read as "Big Brother Is Watching."

Former Vice President Al Gore and others have noted these strange similarities both in 
style
and substance with Orwell's totalitarian world. "We have always held out the 
shibboleth of
Big Brother as a nightmare vision of the future that we're going to avoid at all 
costs," Gore
said. "They have now taken the most fateful step in the direction of that Big Brother
nightmare that any president has ever allowed to occur." [Times/UK, Nov. 22, 2002]

Besides the parallels to 1984, the assurances about respecting constitutional 
boundaries
have been undercut by the administration's provocative choice of director for the
Information Awareness Office.

The project is headed by President Reagan's former national security adviser John
Poindexter, who was caught flouting other constitutional safeguards in the Iran-contra
scandal of the mid-1980s. Poindexter approved the sale of missiles to the Islamic
fundamentalist government of Iran and the transfer of profits to Nicaraguan contra 
rebels
for the purchase of weapons, thus circumventing the Constitution's grant of war-making
power to Congress. Under U.S. law at the time, military aid was banned to both Iran and
the contras.

Noteworthy, too, the Iranian government - then as now - was listed by the U.S. 
government
as a sponsor of international terrorism, and the contras were widely regarded by human
rights monitors as a terrorist organization that slaughtered thousands of Nicaraguan
civilians. One former contra director, Edgar Chamorro, described the practice of 
seizing
towns and staging public executions of Nicaraguan civilian officials. [For details, 
see Robert
Parry's Lost History.]

In 1990, in federal court in Washington, Poindexter was convicted of five felonies in
connection with the Iran-contra scheme and the cover-up. But his case was overturned 
by a
conservative-dominated three-judge appeals court panel, which voted 2-1 that the
conviction was tainted by congressional immunity given to Poindexter to compel his
testimony to Congress in 1987.

Though Poindexter's Iran-contra excesses in the 1980s might be viewed by some as
disqualifying for a sensitive job overseeing the collection of information about 
everyone on
earth, DARPA says it seeks out such committed characters to run its projects. "The best
DARPA program managers have always been freewheeling zealots in pursuit of their
goals," the agency's Web site says.

Fewer Safeguards

While the Bush administration has promised that this time there won't be violations of
constitutional protections, a marked difference between the Nixon era and now is that 
there
are actually fewer institutional safeguards protecting the American people today.

When Nixon was president, opposition Democrats held the congressional levers that
permitted investigations into Nixon's domestic spying. The national news media also
approached its duties with far more professionalism. The federal courts, too, were less
partisan and less likely to rubber-stamp White House assertions of national security.

Now, with all those checks and balances either gone or substantially weakened, there is
little to interfere with Bush's consolidation of power or a return to Nixon-style 
abuses.

Even with the political constraints that existed three decades ago, Nixon mounted a
systematic campaign to spy on and neutralize people he considered threats to his 
Vietnam
War policies. Some of the domestic espionage against anti-war and black militant groups
started in previous administrations, though Nixon intensified many of the operations 
out of a
personal fury over challenges to his authority.

The Plumbers

When the FBI and the CIA drew lines on how far they were willing to go, Nixon turned 
to a
private organization of ex-spooks dubbed the �Plumbers,� whose name came from their job
of clamping down on leaks of information. They included G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard
Hunt.

One of their assignments was to destroy the reputation of former Defense Department
official Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the secret Pentagon Papers history of the Vietnam 
War,
which chronicled the lies and deceptions that led the American people into the 
conflict.
Nixon�s Plumbers broke into Ellsberg�s psychiatrist�s office searching for derogatory
information about him. [For a just-published account of the Pentagon Papers affair, see
Daniel Ellsberg's Secrets.]

Nixon operatives also tailed Sen. Ted Kennedy and undertook other political espionage. 
The
Plumbers� most notorious � and ill-fated � caper was breaking into the Watergate 
complex
in Washington to put bugs on phones at the Democratic National Committee. On June 17,
1972, the operatives returned to fix bugs that weren�t working and were caught.

Nixon denied a connection to the burglars, but aggressive investigative reporting at 
the
Washington Post and other news organizations exposed the secret White House links and
the cover-up. On Aug. 9, 1974, his lies exposed by tape recorders he had placed in his 
own
offices, Nixon resigned.

In retrospect, it is clear that Nixon was driven to order widespread domestic 
espionage by
his rage over the Vietnam War protests as well as his personal paranoia. Nixon came to
see public opposition to his policies as tantamount to aiding and abetting the enemy. 
[For
detailed accounts of Nixon�s spying, see J. Anthony Lukas�s Nightmare, Angus 
Mackenzie's
Secrets, or Seymour Hersh's Price of Power.]

Different Men

In many ways, Richard M. Nixon and George W. Bush are different historical figures. 
Nixon
came from a humble background and rose on the strength of his intelligence, hard work
and ruthlessness. Bush has lived a life of privilege, a playboy in his youth, a heavy 
drinker, a
failed businessman who was repeatedly bailed out by his father�s friends, a politician 
who in
author Frank Bruni's phrase was "ambling into history."

Like Nixon, however, Bush has demonstrated a taste for the imperial powers of the
presidency, including the authority to surround his actions with secrecy. Immediately 
after
taking office in January 2001, Bush stopped the legally required release of documents 
from
the presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Then, the new Bush White
House engaged in secret meetings with Enron Corp. and other energy companies in
developing a national energy policy, the records of which are still being kept secret.

After Sept. 11, 2001, Bush claimed unchecked power to jail American citizens and others
deemed �enemy combatants� indefinitely without charges. They are denied their
constitutional rights to a lawyer, to court review and to an opportunity for 
confronting an
accuser. American citizen Jose Padilla was arrested in Chicago and locked away in a 
Navy
brig after Attorney General John Ashcroft accused him of plotting to detonate a 
radioactive
bomb. No physical evidence has been presented to support the charge, which is 
apparently
based on a secret interview with a captured al-Qaeda operative.

During this fall�s campaign, Bush also demonstrated a readiness to question the 
patriotism
of Democrats, even though they supported the vast majority of his military actions in
response to the Sept. 11 attacks.

In one ploy, Bush turned a Democratic plan for a homeland security department against
them. After first resisting creation of the department, Bush embraced the plan in 
June. He
then transformed a difference over civil service rules into an accusation that the
Democratic-controlled Senate was �not interested in the security of the American 
people.�

Republicans successfully portrayed Sen. Max Cleland, D-Ga., as lacking patriotism 
although
Cleland lost both legs and an arm fighting in the Vietnam War. Bush urged voters to 
send
him congressional allies who would stand shoulder to shoulder with him in the war on
terror - - and Republicans swept to victory in key race after key race.

Amid his political successes, Bush has begun viewing himself as the infallible leader 
whose
judgments is beyond questioning. Like Nixon, Bush has tasted the nectar of presidential
power.

When asked by author Bob Woodward if he ever explained his positions, Bush answered,
�Of course not. I�m the commander � see, I don�t need to explain why I say things. 
That�s
the interesting thing about being the president. Maybe somebody needs to explain to me
why they say something, but I don�t feel like I owe anybody an explanation.� 
[Washington
Post, Nov. 19, 2002]

`Fifth Columnists'

Yet, like Nixon, Bush has faced protesters whom his supporters have begun to call 
"fifth
columnists."

Since Bush's inauguration, after stopping the counting of votes in Florida, protesters 
have
gone into the streets to challenge his legitimacy and his international policies. Tens 
of
thousands turned out in the freezing rain on Jan. 20, 2001, representing the largest
inaugural protests since Nixon�s 1973 inauguration.

Anti-Bush demonstrators shouted at pro-Bush celebrants, "Selected, not elected!,"
"Shame!," "Hail to the thief!," and "Go back to Texas!" Other favorite chants 
included, "Oh,
no! Gore's ahead! Better call my brother Jeb!," and, simply, "Gore got more!" When the
newly anointed president's motorcade drove past the area around 14th St. and
Pennsylvania Ave., where most protesters had congregated, the booing and hollering were
deafening.

After Bush took office, Americans still outraged over Election 2000 launched 
grassroots anti-
Bush Web sites, which grew in popularity. Beyond showing the simmering anger over
Bush's bare-knuckled tactics during the Florida recount, the Web sites marked a growing
disillusionment with the professionalism of the national news media, which was going 
out of
its way to build Bush up as a legitimate leader.

Web sites -- such as democraticunderground.com, smirkingchimp.com,
mediawhoresonline.com, buzzflash.com and truthout.org -- provided a daily alternative
source of information as well as communities of like-minded people to chat on message
boards.

The anti-Bush sentiment also was strong across the world, and notably among U.S. 
allies in
Europe. Across the continent, most Europeans had rooted for Al Gore, out of sympathy 
with
the policies of the Clinton-Gore years and an aversion to the right-wing ideology
represented by Bush. Europeans found his enthusiasm for capital punishment, for 
instance,
to be appalling and barbaric.

Many Europeans I spoke to while I lived in Denmark from February 2001 until July 2002
expressed bewilderment over the fact that Al Gore could have won the American popular
vote but still lost the presidency.

Bush also offended Europeans by disengaging from Clinton-Gore efforts to resolve
international conflicts and address environmental concerns. Bush turned his back on 
peace
talks in the Middle East, spurned the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty and withdrew the 
U.S. from
the Kyoto Protocol on global warming. Many Europeans feared that the U.S. president was
a serious threat to the future of the planet.

Sympathy for America

Those European attitudes changed on Sept. 11, 2001. Disgust with Bush�s foreign 
policies
gave way to sympathy for and solidarity with the American people. I joined a 
pilgrimage to
the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen where Danes spontaneously covered the sidewalk with
flowers and a New York Yankees cap. The French paper Le Monde ran a cover story after
the Sept. 11 attacks, with the banner headline, �We Are All Americans.�

There was also hope across Europe that Bush would abandon his go-it-alone strategies 
and
finally see the value in working multilaterally with allies. But Bush showed no sign of
changing the direction of U.S. foreign policy. He squandered much of the international
goodwill with heavy-handed tactics in Afghanistan. U.S. aircraft bombed the 
headquarters
of the International Red Cross twice. Bush authorized the dropping of devastating Daisy
Cutters and cluster bombs in a sometimes-indiscriminate air war that killed large 
numbers
of civilians as well as Taliban and al-Qaeda forces.

In Copenhagen, the pro-American gestures were replaced by demonstrations against the
bombing in Afghanistan.

Further alienating allies, Bush showed a renewed contempt for multilateral 
cooperation. He
disregarded international law in the treatment of prisoners of war and went after 
respected
international leaders, such as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary
Robinson. With stunning speed, the sympathy over Sept. 11 lost out to even more 
profound
disillusionment with U.S. policies. [For details, see Consortiumnews.com's "Bush's Grim
Vision."]

Bush's shift from targeting al-Qaeda to going after Iraq added new impetus to protests 
in
Europe. On Sept. 28, in what was called one of the largest demonstrations England has
ever seen, about 400,000 marched through London protesting Bush�s plans to attack Iraq
and the British government�s cooperation in those plans. On Oct. 5, in Italy, 1.5 
million
protested across the country in opposition to Bush�s war plans and Italian Premier 
Silvio
Berlusconi�s alliance with Bush. On Nov. 9, 450,000 marched through the Renaissance 
city
of Florence.

U.S. Protests

A parallel situation was unfolding in the United States. Under the radar of the 
national
media, anti-Bush demonstrations have been spreading across the country.

Even as Bush has sustained high popularity ratings since Sept. 11, 2001, millions of
Americans remain angered over his theft of Election 2000 and his squandering of the
trillions of dollars of budget surplus in only a few months. But his plans for war in 
Iraq,
which are widely seen as plans to expand U.S. power and secure new sources for oil, 
have
been the main impetus to spark widespread protests.

On Aug. 22, thousands of people took to the streets in Portland, Oregon, in response to
Bush's visit to that city. The protesters were greeted by hundreds of police, many in 
full riot
gear. Although the protest was peaceful, the police declared a state of emergency and 
used
pepper spray and rubber bullets to disperse the protesters.

In late September in Washington, 600 peaceful protesters were arrested "pre-emptively" 
to
prevent them from causing possible trouble later. D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey 
said the
arrests "took the wind out of their sails" for the next two days of protests. Despite 
the
arrests, over 10,000 turned out two days later to protest Bush's plans for war in Iraq.

On Oct. 26, in the largest anti-war street protest on American soil since the Vietnam 
War
era, tens of thousands of people flooded the streets of Washington to oppose Bush's 
plans
to attack Iraq. Estimates of the size ranged from 100,000 to more than 200,000, 
setting a
record for the largest U.S. protest ever for a war that hadn�t started.

The Oct. 26 march in Washington was accompanied by a joint protest in San Francisco 
that
drew an estimated 50,000 people. The New York Times reported that the demonstrations
may have marked the rebirth of the American peace movement and could foreshadow
larger protests if war breaks out. [NYT, Oct. 30, 2002]

In less than two years in office, Bush has become one of the most protested presidents 
in
American history. This is true not only in the United States, but all over the world.
Wherever Bush goes, from South Korea to Germany to Mexico, angry street protesters
greet him.

Another large-scale national anti-war protest is planned in Washington on Jan. 18,
coinciding with Martin Luther King's birthday. The protest is being organized by 
International
ANSWER, which is launching a "People's Peace Congress" the day after the national 
march.

The Future

A troubling question about Bush and his hard-right supporters will be how they react to
street protests and other dissent if opposition to a war in Iraq grows.

Bush and many of his advisers were young men during the Vietnam War and favored the
U.S. intervention while avoiding military service there. Some of today's key hawks 
seem to
have been nursing personal grudges against the anti-war movement ever since.

Now that they have total control of the government, they may react to a renewed era of
protests in the same way Nixon did. Indeed, with the technological advances and 
rollbacks
of civil liberties in recent years, it's hard to imagine that they won't.

Attorney General Ashcroft testified to Congress last December that those who object to
"phantoms of lost liberty" only serve to "aid terrorists � for they erode our national 
unity
and diminish our resolve." According to Ashcroft, those who question the 
administration's
policies "give ammunition to America's enemies, and pause to America's friends."

Some peace activists already find themselves blacklisted by federal agencies from 
flying on
commercial airlines. Others say they are singled out for special searches and delays. 
[For
details, see Salon.com "Grounded."]

Bush aides say they also are considering establishing a new domestic spy agency that
would take over intelligence-gathering responsibilities from the FBI. This new agency 
would
be more directly under the control of the Bush White House. [Washington Post, Nov. 16,
2002]

Along similar lines, Bush is integrating the U.S. military more into domestic law
enforcement, again waiving time-honored safeguards established to prevent the
transformation of the U.S. into a police state. One effort seeks to repeal the posse
comitatus act, which keeps the military out of police functions.

A military spy plane was put into the skies over Washington during the hunt this fall 
for a
serial sniper. Though seemingly a reasonable precaution at the time, the precedent will
make it easier for the military to be called on for other police duties in the future.

After the Republican sweep on Nov. 5, Bush is clearly in possession of the means, 
motive
and opportunity to clamp down on traditional American civil liberties. In the months 
ahead,
especially if he faces widespread opposition to a war with Iraq, Bush will be tempted 
to
take a page from Nixon's play book and use the Presidency's extraordinary powers to
neutralize a new generation of protesters who might in some sense "give ammunition to
America's enemies."

The machinery is quickly being moved into place for a crackdown on those Americans
whom Bush may judge to be not with him and thus with the terrorists.

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