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That's It?

If Bushies escape justice, what's left of the U.S.?


BY TED RALL

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Doublevision. If you were expecting Barack Obama to deliver justice, forget it.

Doublevision. If you were expecting Barack Obama to deliver justice, forget it. "I don't believe that anybody is above the law. On the other hand, I also have a belief that we need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards," Obama said recently.

That's it? Bush moves back to Texas to dote on his presidential library- while drawing a $197,000 pension? Cheney goes back to Wyoming to fish and work on his memoirs? After committing crimes so numerous and monstrous that bookshelves are already groaning under their weight, the cabal of illegitimate coup leaders who destroyed the U.S. get to tiptoe out of the rubble and go home to a comfortable retirement?

Earlier this week a senior Pentagon prosecutor openly admitted what has long been known: torture, the lowest and most criminal act any society can sanction, is official U.S. policy. "His treatment met the legal definition of torture," Judge Susan Crawford told The Washington Post about the alleged "20th hijacker" on 9/11, now being held at Gitmo. The man was so brutalized, Crawford decided, that he could not be charged in court. The same is true of many of those being held at the Guantánamo concentration camp.

None of the Bush Administration officials responsible has faced the slightest inconvenience as the result of his actions.

Donald Rumsfeld, the beast who promoted, botched and joked about a war that has killed more than a million innocent Iraqis, spent the last year as a "distinguished visiting fellow" at Stanford, cogitating about "issues pertaining to ideology and terror."

John Yoo, the Justice Department hack who wrote the memos that authorized U.S. military and intelligence personnel to torture prisoners of war, is enjoying the cozy ambiance of academe as a UC Berkeley law professor.

Colin Powell, whose 2003 lie to the U.N. ("There can be no doubt that Saddam Hussein has biological weapons and the capability to rapidly produce more, many more") convinced Americans who were still on the fence to support the invasion of Iraq- a misbegotten project that drove the last nail in the coffin of the U.S. economy- wiles away his days attending the meetings of various corporate boards.

If you were expecting Barack Obama to deliver justice, forget it. "I don't believe that anybody is above the law. On the other hand, I also have a belief that we need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards," Obama said recently. "Look forward" is Beltwayese for "no accountability."

Obama went on to assure the men and women who tortured innocent detainees to death that no one will ever bother them about their war crimes. "And part of my job is to make sure that for example at the CIA, you've got extraordinarily talented people who are working very hard to keep Americans safe. I don't want them to suddenly feel like they've got to spend all their time looking over their shoulders and lawyering up."

What We've Come To

Have Americans become so morally depraved that we condone this level of lawlessness? Have we become so weak and helpless in the face of unconscionable violations of the Bill of Rights- torture, government spies listening to our phone calls, starting wars against countries that never hurt us, looting the treasury- that we just "look forward"?

So much for the land of the free and the brave. See you around, nation of laws.

The meltdown at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, historians say, brought down the Soviet government by exposing its incompetence and powerlessness. Poor design and disaster response turned the accident into a disaster. The regime's inability to contain the problem and successfully cover it up highlighted its impotence.

"The Chernobyl catastrophe," wrote Philip Taubman in The New York Times in 1996, "was a manifestation of the political, moral and technological rot that was metastasizing in the Soviet system and would soon kill it." People stopped believing in the USSR. Then they stopped fearing it.

Should the United States collapse, historians will likely point to two events: 9/11 and Katrina. 9/11 proved the U.S. was a paper tiger, an aggressive power that can blow up the world with nuclear weapons yet can't scramble a single fighter jet to stop 19 idiots with boxcutters. The inept response to the hurricane that destroyed New Orleans was incompetence personified. The American people don't think the U.S. government cares about them. Even worse, they doubt the government could help them if it wanted to.

With the American government exposed as stupid and weak, all that remains is the American ideal: the 232-year-old democratic experiment that began with the idea that we are all equal under the law and that all human beings enjoy a set of inherent, inalienable rights- even "enemy combatants" and illegal immigrants.

If we fail to hold the elites who seized the presidency in a 2000 judicial coup d'état to account, if we say torture is no big deal, if we don't imprison men who lied and conspired to murder more than one million Iraqis and Afghans and Americans and countless others, if we let these individuals golf and fish and deliver lectures to young people as if they have done nothing wrong, then such horrors will happen again and again. I want would-be torturers to "look over their shoulders." I want them to second-guess themselves.

Even worse than that: If we don't prosecute Bush and Cheney and Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld and Yoo and Rice and Powell and scores of other top Bush officials who took part in the destruction of fundamental American values, there will be nothing- not even an idea- left of the United States.


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4 comments posted for this article
Michael Y.
 2/ 7/2009 - 6:32pm
   I agree with Glee3d re: prosecution of government officials; that is, *all* government officials who have committed crimes. Full investigation and accountability. Although re: the claim that the Republicans would have saved the world re: FNMA/FHLMC: a bit obsessive; anyway, I'm sure those specific people have violated other laws, so prosecute them anyway! Speaking of which-- Actually, every member of congress that voted for war funding (which is pretty much all of them, minus one or two) in any of America's criminal wars of aggression is a war criminal under international law. Much of the American military is guilty of war crimes as well. And, well, obviously, the people referred to in Rall's column are also criminals. Nearly all of the rest of the government officials can probably be gotten on taxes or other corruption.
   
   Now, we'd basically have no government after that-- which shouldn't be taken to mean that I would object on practical grounds, because I wouldn't. What Glee3d expresses appears to demonstrate a mythologization of American politicians (particularly Republicans; of the five politicians identified for prosecution, three are Democrats and two are identified by their association with the Democratic president; I wonder if he realizes too that Geithner was appointed by George W. Bush in 2003 to head the NY Federal Reserve...); they (American politicians) are *all* guilty of something or other (exceptions are of course possible, but they are highly unlikely)-- again, that shouldn't be construed as objection to prosecution of American politicians' crimes just because "they all do it".
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wisd0m
 1/30/2009 - 8:42am
   Great article. Reading it was, well, not torture. Bush and his sidekick should be held accountable, but they never will be.
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Glee3d
 1/29/2009 - 11:22pm
   How about we prosecute Harold Raines, Barney Frank, Chris Dodd for their failure, lack of oversight and complacency in the Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac debacle? How about prosecuting "Secretary" Geithner for failure to file taxes in the last 5 out of 8 years? How about this tidbit of news:
   
   "Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, in his first full day on the job, is announcing new rules to limit special-interest influence on the government's $700 billion financial rescue program.
   
   The new rules are designed to crack down on lobbyist influence over the rescue program. The Obama administration says they go farther than the lobbying rules imposed by the Bush administration."
   
   Except the rukes don't apply to the new assistant secretary of defense, a former Ratheon lobbyist, or evidently to Geithners second in command, a former Goldman Sachs officer. In this case it looks a lot like the Goldman team is ex-facto running Treasury for the country. Look out below!
   
   At least President Bush's team did what had to be done to keep America safe from attacks on our soil. Calling them "criminals" doesn't make their replacements any more palatable. Now I have to worry about an attack on my wallet from tax cheats posing as appointed government officals, and former lobbyists signing massive purchase orders to their former employers. What a life!
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osageboy
 1/28/2009 - 4:39pm
   This article is just dumb. Reading it was, well, torture.
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