Being the Government Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry

Category: Americas, World Affairs Topics: Conflicts And War, George W. Bush Views: 3217
3217

The apology of Richard Clarke, the chief counter terrorism adviser to the Clinton and Bush administrations, for the U.S. government's failure to protect its citizens on September 11 starkly contrasts with the U.S. government's standard operating procedure. Sitting government officials, whether in Democratic or Republican administrations, rarely apologize for any transgressions of the state, no matter how grievous.

For example, the Clinton Justice Department never officially apologized to Richard Jewel, the man wrongly accused of bombing the Atlanta Olympics in 1996. More recently, several juveniles incarcerated in the U.S. government's maximum security prison in Guantanamo, Cuba were released with a mere private apology after years of captivity with no charges ever being filed against them. Similarly, five British citizens were also released after being detained at the same facility for two years without being charged. Instead of the appropriate response of dropping to his knees, apologizing to them profusely and asking their forgiveness, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, at a Pentagon news conference, referred to their experience with totalitarian-like treatment in the following derisive way: "So they get interrogated for a couple of years. Then at some point you say we think we got what we need out of this crowd-five people-and let's move them along."

Both the Clinton and Bush administrations owe the American public an apology for the September 11 attacks, but officials from both have noticeably refused to do so. The most obvious avoidance of responsibility was by none other than Rumsfeld. In the wake of Clarke's apology, Rumsfeld, on PBS's Lehrer News Hour with Jim Lehrer, was asked whether he failed in the lead-up to September 11. His response was the rambling bureaucratic defense that his department was concerned with only combating external threats, not terrorists who infiltrate the country and attack it from within. However, published reports indicate that prior to September 11, the Department of Defense intercepted message traffic that would have provided some warning of the attacks if it had been translated promptly. That episode is one of the most damning indictments of government failure prior to September 11.

In an interview with CBS's "60 Minutes," Condoleeza Rice, President Bush's National Security Adviser, also avoided apologizing for government failures before September 11. She said, "I don't think that there is anyone who is not sorry for the terrible loss that these families endured, and, indeed, who doesn't feel the deep tragedy that the country went through on September 11th. I do think it's important that we keep focused on who did this to us, because, after all, this was an act of war." Of course, Rice is trying to divert the American media and American public's attention to a foreign enemy from their recent focus on the government's failure to fulfill its number one reason for being-protecting its citizens. But you have to have been in a coma for the last three years not to have focused on the monsters that perpetrated the September 11 attacks. The government reminds us of it everyday. The terrorists killed many innocent people and need to pay the price for what they did. But that's not the issue.

And, surprisingly, neither is the main issue what the government could have done to detect and foil the September 11 attacks-although shrinking, rather than ballooning, the number and size of the intelligence bureaucracies would likely reduce the chances of a repeating the information-sharing fiasco that plagued the government's pre-September 11 counter terrorism activities.

The real issue is whether the U.S. government contributed to the hatred that caused the September 11 attacks. The biggest, and least examined, failure to accept responsibility is by the president himself. He disingenuously has alleged that the terrorists attack us because they "hate our freedoms." Yet they don't seem to attack Switzerland and Sweden, countries that are equally free. Moreover, although the terrorists are killing innocent civilians, they are really attacking American targets because they hate the U.S. government's foreign policy toward the Middle East. Poll after poll in Islamic countries indicate that American culture, technology and freedoms are popular but U.S. foreign policy is not. But we don't have to rely on general polling data to understand why terrorists are attacking the United States. We just need to pay attention to what they are saying. Osama bin Laden, in his writings and media statements, does not fulminate against the decadent American culture, high technology or political and economic freedoms. He is primarily angry at U.S. support for corrupt dictators in Islamic nations and U.S. meddling in the Middle East.

In the short-term, Al Qaeda's methods are heinous, and it must be neutralized. In the long-term, the U.S. government should engage in quiet introspection about whether its policies overseas-that is, unnecessary military interventions, such as the invasion of Iraq--are fanning the flaming anti-U.S. hatred in much of the Islamic world that ultimately endangers U.S. citizens.

Ivan Eland is the Director of the Center on Peace and Liberty at the Independent Institute in Oakland, California and author of the book, Putting "Defense" Back into U.S. Defense Policy: Rethinking U.S. Security in the Post-Cold War World.


  Category: Americas, World Affairs
  Topics: Conflicts And War, George W. Bush
Views: 3217

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Older Comments:
AKBAR KHAN FROM CANADA said:
Woops I forgot to give the link to the article to Washington Post, I'm sure many of you have already read it on Iviews's main page:

http://washingtontimes.com/world/
20040405-011159-2392r.htm
2004-04-06

AKBAR KHAN FROM CANADA said:
This is freedom of speech...close a newspaper that expresses the views of Muslims in Iraq, and not of Americans in Iraq. As linked on Iviews, you can see that the iron fisted rule of Paul Bremer in Iraq extends to taking over the press in Iraq, the way Saddamn did in Iraq before, the way Hitler did in Germany before, the way Zia Al-Haq did before, the way Raza Pahlavi did before. All of these fools oppressed the voice of Islam in within the borders of the states they ruled...and later became the fools...Paul Bremer and his Provisional Authority will send a ripple effect across back to the USA and all her allies, including those who just joined NATO...fools.
2004-04-06

NICK CAMERON FROM UNITED STATES OF AMERICA said:
For what it's worth Hudd D'Alhamd, I'm not a big fan of unilateralism either. I think the best foreign policy approach for my country is not neoconservatism, but structural realism. We should act in a way that primarily serves our interests as opposed to the interests of KSA or even Israel. And we should utilize existing alliances to bolster our power and prestige throughout the world, because allow us to create a networked web of influences to ensure our standing. Shirking our relationships as we have done under the Bush Administration has not promoted our interests sufficiently, because the sad fact is that as powerful as America is it can't do everything on its own. It's time that we reevaluate our conduct in the world. Otherwise, people will start to believe the myth that the United States is a global tyrant.

It is the way of things.
2004-04-05

HUDD D'ALHAMD FROM CANADA said:
What seems to me ridicolous is that US declared war on terrorism, on al-Qaeda and OBL and they are fighting or waring everybody else. Even now, they aked their Pakistani allies to go sweep the Pathanistan, alleged hiding place of OBL. How can a man operate in hiding, it is beyond my understanding. Since terrorism was defined as an ideology, I wonder how could anybody fight it with conventional weapons in an open war strategy? Personally I believe that even if US would change her policies in the world, she would still face the threat of sporadic terrorism of some past unsolved doings. For US to be safe, first she needs to change her attitute in the world. Accept UN as the Earth representative for all the nations. Stop unilaterally support Israel and call it justice. Call it what it is: biased and unconditional support. Allow UN to rule on that on which you are partial, if you want to be called just and fair. Improve the security of US at home, make sure 9/11 could not possibly happen. Treat every citizen with the same measure and you will have a strong nation. Invading sovereign countries of the world and militarize the whole globe is not by a close shave the road to a global peace or world harmony. The site of big guns make many nations jittery. If US states that UN is irrevelant, what does that say? It says, nobody has authority over us, we do whatever we want to. We will tell you what is right and what is wrong. Leave the judgement to us, we are gods! They should know better since they faught for freedom on all costs and so will all downtrodden nations of the world. Call it terrorism call it rogue countries or dictatorship, islamism, whatever, they will rebel. That's the way it is, Nick would put it! It's proven in the history.
Peace out!
2004-04-04

NICK CAMERON FROM UNITED STATES OF AMERICA said:
We do have a double standard in the sense that we have a standard for our enemies and one for our allies. I think that most countries are like that, since the realities of the realpolitik demand that each nation-state defends their own national interests.

If terrorism and nation-state conduct are inextricably linked in this way, then the only way to end terrorism is to end the nation-state system and form World Government with binding powers over all countries. In the long-term, that might not be a bad idea since in theory such a global governmental body could eradicate war forever. It's certainly a nice thing to think about, but I don't believe that we're anywhere near this today.
2004-04-03

NICK CAMERON FROM UNITED STATES OF AMERICA said:
The author suggests that it's military intervention like the recent war in Iraq that's fanning the flames of terrorism. Would the author include America's interventions on behalf of the Bosnians and the Kosovo Albanians as causes of terror? Amazingly, I've actually heard of Muslims blaming America for the atrocities committed against the Bosnians and Kosovo Albanians.

But perhaps the author has a point nonetheless. After all, the Muslim world has never been so angry at us before my government tried to broker a deal between the Palestinians and the Israelis in the 90s as they are post-Oslo. Fact is that trying to make things right in the Muslim world probably won't do anything to placate Muslims. So perhaps the wiser course of action is to withdraw completely from the so-called "peace process" and just maintain our relationship with Israel, because our willingness to deal with the PA have only made things worse for our prestige. Hopefully if we wash our hands of the mess immediately, things will simmer down.
2004-04-02

UMM MUHAMMAD FROM UNITED STATES said:
To heal itself America is going to have to be honest. Stop lying. Stop brainwashing the American public.
This problem of "terroism" will never be solved if we first do not even know what the word for war is in Arabic. no it is not jihad.
2004-04-02

UMM MUHAMMAD FROM USA said:
America is the BIG DADDY, if you have the gall to think that you will try to challenge America or get to big for your britches America will squash you like a bug. If you can serve their interest, fine but don't defy them, you will pay with war and mayhem.

WHAT A TOTALLY RIDICULOUS statement that "they hate our freedoms". This must be the idiot statement of the century.
Nobody on the face of the earth hates America because of its freedoms. (Some of those "freedoms" like same sex marriage and abortion, Bush is against)
Whether people are in the Middle East or Washington D.C. they are enjoying aspects of American culture and technology. They watch our movies and drink our coke.
They listen to our music.
Maybe this country has too much "freedom" but you don't see Middle Easterners coming to America and
complaining about our so-called "freedoms".
2004-04-02