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Toward the Brink
By Robert Parry
September 17, 2001
History, like a person’s life, is defined by choices, some reasoned, some
thoughtless, some made in anger, some based on false premises. For the past
two decades or more, the United States has marked the course of its history
through choices made in a fog of propaganda.
At this publication, we have referred to this gap in the nation's
understanding of the relevant facts as “lost history,” a tapestry of events
established in scattered documents or from the testimony of participants, but
largely excluded from the national debates that inform the next series of
decisions and actions.

This blindness to the recent past often is justified by the notion that
ignoring unpleasant facts is “good for the country.” But the blind spots also
prevent Americans from fully recognizing the dangers from abroad and
comprehending the motives of potential enemies, a situation of sudden
relevance as the U.S. prepares for war in retaliation for last Tuesday's
terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

The “lost history” of recent decades has contained some very grim chapters.
One is Washington’s role in widespread “death squad” operations throughout
Latin America, bloody campaigns that claimed hundreds of thousands of lives,
including what a truth commission judged a “genocide” of Mayan Indians in
Guatemala during the 1980s.

In that same decade, the Reagan-Bush administration financed and supported
the Nicaraguan contras, a terrorist-style organization that ravaged towns
along the Nicaraguan-Honduran border, committing acts of torture, murder and
rape – killing thousands. Some contra units also collaborated with drug
cartels shipping cocaine into the United States, while the Reagan-Bush
administration sidetracked investigations for geo-political reasons.

The justification for these policies in the 1980s was President Reagan’s
belief that the Soviet Union was planning to attack the United States behind
peasant armies surging northward from Central America, a theory that lacked
any evidentiary support. In reality, the Soviet Union’s inept and brutal
system was in its final death throes.

Except for a little-noted apology from President Clinton in 1999 in
connection with a truth commission’s report on the Guatemalan slaughters, the
U.S. government has never acknowledged any blame in these blood baths that
decimated generations of the best and brightest young people of that region.
Most Americans understand only dimly, if at all, what the U.S. role was.

The Middle East
In the same twilight struggle with the Soviet Union, the Reagan-Bush
administration allied itself with Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan and
with right-wing religious forces in Lebanon and Israel.

The CIA spent an estimated $2 billion to support Afghan “freedom fighters” in
their war against Soviet troops and a Moscow-backed regime in Kabul. With
Reagan’s blessings, the CIA supplied the rebels with hundreds of advanced
“stinger” missiles that inflicted heavy damage on Soviet aircraft.

The covert war also was the launching pad for the radical career of a
well-to-do Saudi-born extremist named Osama bin Laden, who traveled through
northern Africa and other Islamic regions recruiting young zealots to battle
Soviet influence in Afghanistan. The anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan became
the crucible, too, for the Taliban movement that – with the aid of U.S.
intelligence allies in Pakistan – gained control of Afghanistan after Russian
forces withdrew.

A third prong of the Reagan-Bush international strategy played out in Iran
and Iraq, two Islamic countries that went to war over disputed borders in
1980. In the six years that followed, the Reagan-Bush team secretly sold
weapons to both sides in the conflict, while CIA Director William J. Casey
gloated over the scheme that encouraged the two armies to maul each other.
The human cost in Iran and Iraq totaled about 1 million dead.
The growing U.S. military participation in the Middle Eastern violence –
which also included lobbing shells from a Navy battleship into Muslim
villages in Lebanon – led Islamic fighters to go after U.S. targets in
Lebanon. A suicide bomber blew up the U.S. Marine barracks outside Beirut in
1983, killing 241 Marines. Muslim kidnappers began seizing American
nationals, too.

In 1985-86, the Reagan-Bush administration sold missiles to Iran in a bid to
win the release of the hostages in Lebanon. Some of the profits also were
diverted to the Nicaraguan contras because Congress had cut off funding in
reaction to widespread reports of contra atrocities and because the CIA had
mined Nicaragua’s harbors in defiance of international law.

Scattered References
References to some of this historical background – especially bin Laden’s
role in the Afghan war – can be found in some of the long articles about the
current crisis touched off Tuesday by the terrorist attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon.

But the history’s relevance is murky to most Americans who would have to
search far and wide for comprehensive information about this period of U.S.
history.

One of the chief reasons that this history has been “lost” is the powerful
influence that conservatives exercise over today's U.S. news media, both
directly through conservative outlets, such as Fox News and the Washington
Times, and indirectly by going after mainstream journalists who report facts
that put Ronald Reagan in a bad light. Many working journalists remain
frightened of being labeled a "liberal" or a "blame-America-firster," in
Jeane Kirkpatrick's famous formulation.

The danger this represents to an informed U.S. policy has been compounded by
the laziness of other journalists who have found it easier and safer to
obsess about people’s sex lives and other trivial issues. Over the past eight
years or more, the U.S. news media has trumpeted relatively minor  “Clinton
scandals,” such as the Whitewater real estate deal, the Travel Office
firings, the Paula Jones sexual harassment claims, and the Monica Lewinsky
case.

Even when official bodies have acknowledged gross misdeeds of the 1980s – as
the CIA inspector general did in 1998 in confirming the problem with
contra-drug trafficking or as a Guatemalan truth commission did in 1999 in
revealing the genocide against the Mayans – the U.S. news media showed little
interest.

Then, in Election 2000, the news media seemed more intent on taking out its
frustrations over Clinton’s survival of impeachment, by bashing Al Gore, than
in providing evenhanded coverage of the campaign or examining complex issues
like foreign policy. Center stage were Gore's “earth tone” clothes and his
supposed exaggerations.

Bush's Foreign Policy
Since gaining the presidency, even though he lost the popular vote, Bush
charted his first seven-plus months in office in directions that repudiate
the multilateralist course set by Clinton and Gore. Bush renounced the Kyoto
Protocol on global warming. He declared his intent to scrap the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and to build Ronald Reagan’s missile defense
shield.

On the Middle East, Bush disengaged from negotiations aimed at resolving the
Israeli-Palestinian dispute while publicly laying much of the blame for the
violence on Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Earlier this month, Bush
ordered U.S. diplomats to walk out of an anti-racism conference because it
was considering language that would portray the Palestinians as victims of
racism at the hands of Israeli authorities.

Though Bush denied that his course was unilateralist, he made clear that the
U.S. government was frustrated with the messy complexities of multilateral
agreements and was prepared to go its own way if he viewed that as in the
U.S. national interest. Bush was undaunted by his lack of experience in world
affairs or by the possibility that his behavior might enflame an already
dangerous situation in the Middle East.

At home, meanwhile, the U.S. economy sank toward recession, nearly 1 million
jobs were lost, the non-Social Security budget surplus disappeared.

For his part, Bush spent the month of August vacationing in Crawford, Texas,
highlighting what he called “heartland values.” His praise for the
“heartland” suggested that Americans who lived along the coasts lacked the
moral values that Bush detected in the nation’s interior.

A Terrible Day
The course of Bush’s presidency changed abruptly on Tuesday, Sept. 11, with
the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history.

Nineteen Middle Eastern terrorists, wielding knives, hijacked four U.S.
commercial airliners. Two jetliners were crashed into the twin towers of the
World Trade Center and a third rammed the Pentagon.

The fourth – a flight that had left Newark, N.J. en route to California –
crashed in Pennsylvania, apparently after passengers on the flight were told
over cell phones about the suicide attacks and battled the terrorists for
control of the plane. That heroism may have spared the White House or the
U.S. Capitol from destruction.

The overall death toll from Tuesday's attacks is expected to exceed 5,000
people. The dead will include hundreds of New York firefighters and rescue
personnel who rushed into the burning twin towers to save the inhabitants
minutes before the buildings collapsed. They gave their lives in the hope of
saving others.

New York Mayor Rudolph Guiliani also raced to ground zero to oversee the
rescue operations and offer reassuring words to a shaken city.

The national government was shaken, too. In the hours after the attacks, Bush
was ferried from Sarasota, Fla., where he was speaking, to secure locations
in Louisiana and Nebraska. Some Republicans complained that Bush should have
returned to Washington immediately, rather than hopscotch from military base
to military base.
Stung by this criticism, Bush's aides recounted later that a phone call had
warned that Air Force One might be another target and had mentioned codes
that suggested inside knowledge. But the aides refused to provide any
corroboration and some news reports suggested that the danger to Air Force
One was exaggerated to protect Bush's image.

Bush’s senior political adviser, Karl Rove, told conservative columnist
William Safire that Bush’s immediate reaction was “I don’t want some tinhorn
terrorists keeping me out of Washington.” [NYT, Sept. 13, 2001] Whatever the
real danger or his real comments, Bush agreed to stay away from Washington as
long as the city might be facing new attacks from hijacked planes.

Public Remarks
Bush's initial public remarks about the attacks also proved less than
reassuring. In a rushed appearance before cameras in Florida, Bush jarringly
referred to the mass murderers as “folks.” Later, at a U.S. Air Force base in
Louisiana, Bush appeared in a grainy videotape, looking nervous while
declaring that “freedom itself was attacked this morning by a faceless
coward.”

None of Bush’s early comments fit as accurate descriptions of the
cold-blooded zealots who murdered innocent civilians with a military-style
efficiency even in the face of their own certain death. Their target also
wasn’t “freedom” in any normal sense of the word. It was most likely the
rooting out of Western influence from the Islamic countries of the Middle
East.

One administration official conceded to the New York Times that the statement
in Louisiana “was not our best moment.” [NYT, Sept. 16, 2001]

Bush next was flown to Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Neb., where he
clambered into a cinder-block bunker and had a telephone conference with his
national security advisers. With a fighter-jet escort, Bush finally returned
to Washington at about 7 p.m., nearly 10 hours after the initial terrorist
assault.

At 8:30 p.m., Bush gave a brief televised speech declaring that now “we go
forward to defend freedom and all that is good and just in our world.” Again,
his appearance was not very reassuring. He looked shell-shocked and even his
advisers acknowledged that the speech was a disappointment.

On Thursday, the administration stiffened its rhetoric with talk of war and
began to finger Osama bin Laden, who is believed living in Afghanistan under
the protection of the Taliban, as the prime suspect in the murderous attack.
But Bush continued to send mixed messages with shaky personal statements that
sometimes slid into incoherence.

In the Oval Office, Bush’s lip quivered and his eyes welled with tears as he
responded to a reporter’s question with this answer: “I’m a lovin’ guy. And I
am also someone, however, who’s got a job to do and I intend to do it. And
this is a terrible moment. But this country will not relent until we have
saved ourselves and others from the terrible tragedy that came upon America.”

Promises of Vengeance
By week’s end, Bush began making sweeping promises of revenge, statements
that struck a chord with the vast majority of Americans outraged over the
terrorism.

While nearly all Americans would agree that a violent counter-strike is in
order against any individual or organization that was complicit in the mass
murder, Bush’s declarations envisioned a long-term war against all forms of
terrorism, a far riskier and more problematical endeavor.

On Friday, at a national prayer service, Bush went even further. He pledged
to eliminate “evil” from the world, an even more ambitious and ill-defined
goal. “Just three days removed from these events, Americans do not yet have
the distance of history, but our responsibility to history is already clear:
to answer these attacks and rid the world of evil,” Bush said.

Yet sometimes, a comprehensive view of U.S. history does not permit a
black-and-white picture of one side bathed in good and the other stewing in
the stench of evil.

For instance, one of the Senate’s first reactions to the attacks was to
approve Bush’s nomination of John Negroponte to be U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations so he can represent Bush’s foreign policy. During the 1980s,
as ambassador to Honduras, Negroponte oversaw the buildup of the contra
operation at a time the contras were collaborating with elements of the
Honduran military responsible for scores of "disappearances" and political
murders inflicted on labor leaders, academics and other dissidents.

Good and evil could be blurred again if the administration's hawks prevail
and launch indiscriminate attacks wreaking heavy collateral damage on
innocent civilians in Afghanistan or other target countries. The killing of
more innocents might only breed a new generation of anti-American zealots
prepared to mount new suicide attacks, though the next time they might come
armed with chemical, biological or even nuclear weapons.
U.S. warplanes over Afghanistan also might find themselves the target of
leftover stinger missiles, supplied to the Afghans courtesy of the
Reagan-Bush administration.

As the United States embarks on what is sure to be a dangerous course, the
past decade with its relative peace and prosperity already seems like ancient
history. So, too, does the prior decade of the Reagan-Bush era with the
memories of “death squad” brutality in Latin America and covert manipulations
of events in the Middle East.
But that is the immediate history – and those are the unlearned lessons –
that will be prologue to the future that is about to unfold.

In the 1980s, Robert Parry broke many of the stories now known as the
Iran-Contra scandal for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book is
Lost History.
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