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Published on Friday, November 23, 2001 |
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Bush’s Definition of Terrorism Fits Northern Alliance Like a Glove; TV Interviewers Don’t Notice |
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by Dennis Hans |
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http://www.commondreams.org/views01/1123-05.htm
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Mark well the sequence. On the morning of November 10, President George W.
Bush addressed the U.N. General Assembly and spoke words that warmed the
hearts of human rights activists the world over:
“For every regime that sponsors terror, there is a price to be paid
and it will be paid.... [Nations that support terror] are equally guilty
of murder and equally accountable to justice... We must unite in opposing
all terrorists, not just some of them. No national aspiration, no
remembered wrong can ever justify the deliberate murder of the innocent.
Any government that rejects this principle, trying to pick and choose its
terrorist friends, will know the consequences.... The Afghan people do not
deserve their present rulers.... I make this promise to all the victims of
that regime: The Taliban’s days of harboring terrorists, and dealing in
heroin, and brutalizing women are drawing to a close.”
That evening, during a joint press conference with Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf, Bush described the Northern Alliance as “our
friends.” (“We will encourage our friends to head south across the
Shumali Plains, but not into the city of Kabul itself.”)
Moments later, Musharraf branded Bush’s “friends” terrorists:
“Why I have been recommending that Kabul should not be occupied by
the Northern Alliance basically is because of the past experience that
we’ve had when the various ethnic groups were ahold of Kabul after the
Soviets left. There was total atrocities, killings and mayhem within the
city. And I think if the Northern Alliance enters Afghanistan -- enters
Kabul -- we’ll see the same kind of atrocities being perpetuated against
the people there....”
A reporter followed up by asking Bush if he agreed with Musharraf’s
assessment of the Alliance. Bush replied, “Only, only, I said one
question. Now you’re going with three.” No other reporter put the
question to Bush.
Now that is a disciplined press corps. In the morning, President Bush
takes a strong stand against those who terrorize the innocent and brands
governments that support such terrorists “equally guilty of murder and
equally accountable.” In the evening he hails as “our friends” an
alliance that has terrorized the innocent (and, by the way, dealt heroin)
both as a government (1992-96) and as an opposition force.
For a sampling of Northern Alliance atrocities, see the October 2001
“Background” report from Human Rights Watch. Since 1992, the various
Alliance factions have killed tens of thousands of civilians every bit as
innocent as America’s 9-11 victims; their rap sheets includes rape,
torture, summary executions and “disappearances.” “To date,”
states HRW, “not a single Afghan commander has been held accountable for
violations of international humanitarian law.” (http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/asia/afghan-bck1005.htm)
Saturday night is followed by Sunday morning, so it was just a matter
of time before a Bush administration official would have to explain why
the president would describe forces that fit his own definition of
terrorists as “our friends,” why he was backing them, and what he
intended to do to bring his own administration to justice for supporting
Alliance terrorists.
Secretary of State Colin Powell looked cool November 11 in the Meet the
Press hot seat. His inquisitor, Tim Russert, can be relentless when the
topic is a stained blue dress, but he simply is intellectually and
emotionally incapable of raising moral questions about U.S. foreign
policy. He missed the obvious disconnect between Bush’s words and
policy.
Thus, Powell never had to say, “I endorse what the president said at
the U.N., and as soon as we crush al-Qaida, whether it’s next year or
next decade, we’ll base our foreign policy on his words.” He never had
to relinquish any moral high ground for a more pragmatic (and defensible)
realpolitik position.
On ABC, Slammin’ Sam Donaldson did indeed hold National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice’s feet to the fire on state sponsorship of
terrorism. Outflanking the Bush administration on the right, Donaldson put
on the screen the State Department’s list of states that sponsor terror
(Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Cuba, North Korea, Sudan) and asked why we
aren’t taking it to those governments like we’re taking it to the
Taliban.
Note that Donaldson, in theory, represents ABC’s “liberal” wing.
For two decades he’s been cast as a counterweight to George Will, the
staunch conservative of “This Week.” Donaldson could have asked why
Cuba was on the terror-sponsor list. He could have asked why Colombia was
not, given that its army collaborates with and protects a right-wing
death-squad federation on the State Department’s list of Foreign
Terrorist Organizations. He could have quoted from Bush’s U.N. speech
and the Human Rights Watch report on the Northern Alliance -- or cited the
massive U.S. aid to the terror-facilitating Colombian army -- and asked
why the U.S. wasn’t on the terror-sponsor list.
To ask any of those questions, Donaldson wouldn’t necessarily have to
be a liberal. He could just as well be a moderate or conservative, many of
whom disapprove of selective morality and alliances with cutthroats. But
he would have to be informed.
Like most everyone else posing questions on Sunday morning, Donaldson
is bright, articulate and ignorant. All are prerequisites: Smarts and a
way with words lend an air of credibility; ignorance ensures the avoidance
of embarrassing questions about “principles” that seem to be honored
more often in the breach.
To gain a coveted seat as a network foreign-policy interviewer, you
must be incapable of thinking outside the parameters of bogus State
Department lists. Your knowledge must be sufficiently superficial that you
cannot recognize an evasive answer or demolish a dishonest one. Mix in an
abiding faith in the fundamental decency of U.S. foreign policy and you
could be the next Russert, Donaldson or Jim Lehrer. |