A 9/11 Reality Check

By Robert Scheer

September 09, 2009 "Truthdig" --- What if eight years ago the World Trade 
Center had been leveled by a small nuclear bomb that took out most of lower 
Manhattan as well? How many millions of innocent civilians would we have killed 
in retaliation? Would we still be a free society, or would Dick Cheney have 
attained the power of a demented king, having moved on from snooping on our 
phone calls and outing honest CIA agents to destroying the last vestiges of the 
rule of law?

As assaults on a society go, the 9/11 attacks, which left 3,000 dead and are 
sure to be described in this anniversary week as being among the greatest of 
historical outrages, were something less than that, given the world's 
experience with the ravages of war. The countless Russians and the 6 million 
Jews killed by those so finely educated Germans come to mind. The 3.4 million 
Vietnamese, mostly rice farmers, whom Robert McNamara admitted to having helped 
kill with his carpet-bombing of their country, are a forgotten footnote. Yet we 
who have never experienced such carnage on our home front all too easily poke 
out tens of thousands of eyes for each lost one of our own.

Surely two planes crashing into office buildings and another hitting the 
Pentagon doesn't compare to the leveling of every major city in Japan with 
conventional bombing, capped off by the mass murder of hundreds of thousands 
more at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Speaking of eyes lost, mark the words of 
Hiroshima's mayor two years ago: "That fateful summer, 8:15 AM. The roar of a 
B-29 breaks the morning calm. A parachute opens in the blue sky. Then suddenly, 
a flash, an enormous blast-silence-hell on Earth. The eyes of young girls 
watching the parachute were melted."

We assumed that the Japanese people would readily forgive us and, having been 
raised in the spirit of total obedience to their emperor, they accommodated our 
occupation quite well, even injecting industrial-grade silicon into their 
women's breasts to satisfy the erotic appetites of our soldiers.

Americans who blithely claim the moral high ground with every pledge of 
allegiance to a flag that, because it is American, is assumed to have never 
been sullied by imperial greed or moral contradiction expect no less than 
instant and full forgiveness for our "mistakes." Only last month, four decades 
after he led the massacre of 500 villagers in My Lai, Vietnam, did former Army 
Lt. William Calley express "regret" for his crimes. He served no time in prison 
for the point-blank shooting of toddlers, thanks to the commutation of his 
sentence by Richard Nixon, who might have been anticipating his own need for a 
presidential pardon.

In blind and wrathful retaliation for 9/11 we wreaked havoc on Iraq, a nation 
that our then-president knew had not attacked us, and we continue to slaughter 
peasants in Afghanistan who aren't able to find Manhattan on a map.

We, a people whose nation has never suffered a long and widespread occupation, 
easily gave vent to our most barbaric impulses, assuming the absolute right to 
arrest and torture anyone anywhere in the world without revealing his identity, 
let alone respecting a single one of those God-given rights that we claim for 
ourselves alone. And even when we identify the few we hold responsible for the 
attacks on our soil, we refuse them public and fair trials even after years of 
torturing them.

But we do have a saving grace for our experiment in democracy-although 
unfortunately it did not exist in the Supreme Court or Congress as a barrier to 
an imperial vice presidency. It is the power of the lone whistle-blower of 
conscience, occasionally given voice in what remains of our free press and 
which can influence presidential elections, as happened quite dramatically this 
last time around. There are those like Joe Wilson, who exposed presidential 
fraud masquerading as national security concern over bogus Iraqi purchases of 
uranium from Niger, and more recently the truth-telling of Ali H. Soufan, a 
former FBI agent and lead interrogator of terrorists.

In Sunday's New York Times, Soufan, who was involved in obtaining much reliable 
information from prisoners before they were tortured, observed that the 
recently released memos cited by Cheney to back his argument that torture was 
efficient actually "fail to show that the techniques stopped even a single 
imminent threat of terrorism."

So, Cheney is again proved wrong, but if there had been a larger attack on 
9/11, I doubt whether many free souls would be around now to tell him so.

© 2009 TruthDig.com





Satrio Arismunandar 
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Verba volant scripta manent...
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