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BUSH WATCH...HEATHER WOKUSCH
Heather Wokusch can be reached via her website: www.heatherwokusch.com She’s
been on an extended book-writing sabbatical, but will be up and ranting on a
regular basis in early 2006.
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WWIII or Bust: Implications of a US Attack on Iran
by Heather Wokusch
"This
notion that the United States is getting ready to attack Iran is
simply ridiculous... Having said that, all options are on the
table." George W. Bush, February 2005
Witnessing the
Bush administration's drive for an attack on Iran is like being a
passenger in a car with a raving drunk at the wheel. Reports of
impending doom surfaced a year ago, but now it's official: under
orders from Vice President Cheney's office, the Pentagon has
developed "last resort" aerial-assault plans using
long-distance B2 bombers and submarine-launched ballistic missiles
with both conventional and nuclear weapons.
How ironic that
the Pentagon proposes using nuclear weapons on the pretext of
protecting the world from nuclear weapons. Ironic also that Iran has
complied with its obligations under the Non-Proliferation Treaty,
allowing inspectors to "go anywhere and see anything," yet
those pushing for an attack, the USA and Israel, have not.
The nuclear threat
from Iran is hardly urgent. As the Washington Post reported in
August 2005, the latest consensus among U.S. intelligence agencies is
that "Iran
is about a decade away from manufacturing the key ingredient for a
nuclear weapon, roughly doubling the previous estimate of
five years." The Institute for Science and International
Security estimated that while Iran could have a bomb by 2009
at the earliest, the US intelligence community assumed
technical difficulties would cause "significantly delay."
The director of Middle East Studies at Brown University and a
specialist in Middle Eastern energy economics both called the State
Department's claims of a proliferation threat from Iran's Bushehr
reactor "demonstrably false," concluding that "the physical
evidence for a nuclear weapons program in Iran simply does not exist."
So there's no
urgency - just a bad case of déjà vu all over again.
The Bush administration is recycling its hype over Hussein's supposed
WMD threat into rhetoric about Iran, but look where the charade got
us last time: tens of thousands of dead Iraqi civilians, a country
teetering on civil war and increased global terrorism.
Yet the stakes in
Iran are arguably much higher.
Consider that many
in the US and Iran seek religious salvation through a Middle Eastern
blowout. "End times" Christian fundamentalists believe a
cataclysmic Armageddon will enable the Messiah to reappear and
transport them to heaven, leaving behind Muslims and other
non-believers to face plagues and violent death. Iran's new Shia
Islam president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, subscribes to a competing
version of the messianic comeback, whereby the skies turn to flames
and blood flows in a final showdown of good and evil. The Hidden Imam
returns, bringing world peace by establishing Islam as the global religion.
Both the US and
Iran have presidents who arguably see themselves as divinely chosen
and who covet their own country's apocalypse-seeking fundamentalist
voters. And into this tinderbox Bush proposes bringing nuclear weapons.
As expected, the
usual suspects press for a US attack on Iran. Neo-cons who brought us
the "cakewalk" of Iraq want to bomb the country. There's
also Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, busy coordinating the action plan
against Iran, who just released the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense
Review calling for US forces to "operate around the globe"
in an infinite "long war." One can assume Rumsfeld wants to
bomb a lot of countries.
There's also
Israel, keen that no other country in the region gains access to
nuclear weapons. In late 2002, former
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Iran should be targeted
"the day after" Iraq was subdued, and Benjamin Netanyahu,
leader of the Likud Party, recently warned that if he wins the
presidential race in March 2006, Israel will "do what we did in
the past against Saddam's reactor," an obvious reference to the
1981 bombing of the Osirak nuclear facility in Iraq. It doesn't help
that Iran's Ahmadinejad has called the Holocaust a myth and said that
Israel should be "wiped off the map."
In the eyes of the
Bush administration, however, Iran's worst transgression has less to
do with nuclear ambitions or anti-Semitism than with the petro-euro
oil bourse Tehran is slated to open in March 2006. Iran's plan to
allow oil trading in euros threatens to break the dollar's monopoly
as the global reserve currency, and since the greenback is severely
overvalued due to huge trade deficits, the move could be devastating
for the US economy.
So we remain pedal
to the metal with Bush for an attack on Iran.
But what if the US
does go ahead and launch an assault in the coming months? The
Pentagon has already identified 450 strategic targets, some of which
are underground and would require the use of nuclear weapons to
destroy. What happens then?
You can bet that
Iran would retaliate. Tehran promised a "crushing response"
to any US or Israeli attack, and while the country - ironically -
doesn't possess nuclear weapons to scare off attackers, it does have
other options. Iran boasts ground forces estimated at 800,000
personnel, as well as long-range missiles that could hit Israel and
possibly even Europe. In addition, much of the world's oil supply is
transported through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow stretch of ocean
which Iran borders to the north. In 1997, Iran's deputy foreign
minister warned that the country might close off that shipping route
if ever threatened, and it wouldn't be difficult. Just a few missiles
or gunboats could bring down vessels and block the Strait, thereby
threatening the global oil supply and shooting energy prices into the stratosphere.
An attack on Iran
would also inflame tensions in the Middle East, especially provoking
the Shiite Muslim populations. Considering that Shiites largely run
the governments of Iran and Iraq and are a potent force in Saudi
Arabia, that doesn't bode well for calm in the region. It would
incite the Lebanese Hezbollah, an ally of Iran's, potentially
sparking increased global terrorism. A Shiite rebellion in Iraq would
further endanger US troops and push the country deeper into civil war.
Attacking Iran
could also tip the scales towards a new geopolitical balance, one in
which the US finds itself shut out by Russia, China, Iran, Muslim
countries and the many others Bush has managed to piss off during his
period in office. Just last month, Russia snubbed Washington by
announcing it would go ahead and honor a $700 million contract to arm
Iran with surface-to-air missiles, slated to guard Iran's nuclear
facilities. And after being burned when the US-led Coalition
Provisional Authority invalidated Hussein-era oil deals, China has
snapped up strategic energy contracts across the world, including in
Latin America, Canada and Iran. It can be assumed that China will not
sit idly by and watch Tehran fall to the Americans.
Russia and China
have developed strong ties recently, both with each other and with
Iran. Each possesses nuclear weapons, and arguably more threatening
to the US, each holds large reserves of US dollars which can be
dumped in favor of euros. Bush crosses them at his nation's peril.
Yet another danger
is that an attack on Iran could set off a global arms race - if the
US flaunts the non-proliferation treaty and goes nuclear, there would
be little incentive for other countries to abide by global
disarmament agreements either. Besides, the Bush administration's
message to its enemies has been very clear: if you possess WMD you're
safe, and if you don't, you're fair game. Iraq had no nuclear weapons
and was invaded, Iran doesn't as well and risks attack, yet that
other "Axis of Evil" country, North Korea, reportedly does
have nuclear weapons and is left alone. Its also hard to
justify striking Iran over its allegedly developing a secret nuclear
weapons program, when India and Pakistan (and presumably Israel) did
the same thing and remain on good terms with Washington.
The most horrific
impact of a US assault on Iran, of course, would be the potentially
catastrophic number of casualties. The Oxford Research Group
predicted that up
to 10,000 people would die if the US bombed Iran's
nuclear sites, and that an attack on the Bushehr nuclear reactor
could send a radioactive cloud over the Gulf. If the US uses nuclear
weapons, such as earth-penetrating "bunker buster" bombs,
radioactive fallout would become even more disastrous.
Given what's at
stake, few allies, apart from Israel, can be expected to support a US
attack on Iran. While Jacques Chirac has blustered about using his
nukes defensively, it's doubtful that France would join an unprovoked
assault, and even loyal allies, such as the UK, prefer going through
the UN Security Council.
Which means the
wildcard is Turkey. The nation shares a border with Iran, and
according to Noam Chomsky, is heavily supported by the domestic
Israeli lobby in Washington, permitting
12% of the Israeli air and tank force to be stationed in its territory.
Turkey's crucial role in an attack on Iran explains why there's been
a spurt of high-level US visitors to Ankara lately, including
Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, FBI Director Robert Mueller and
CIA Director Porter Goss. In fact, the German newspaper Der
Spiegel reported in December 2005 that Goss had told the Turkish
government it would be "informed of any possible air strikes
against Iran a few hours before they happened" and that Turkey
had been given a "green light" to attack camps
of the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Iran "on the
day in question."
It's intriguing
that both Valerie Plame (the CIA agent whose identity was leaked to
the media after her husband criticized the Bush administration's
pre-invasion intelligence on Iraq) and Sibel Edmonds (the former FBI
translator who turned whistleblower) have been linked to exposing
intelligence breaches relating to Turkey, including potential nuclear
trafficking. And now both women are effectively silenced.
The US public sees
the issue of Iran as backburner, and has little eagerness for an
attack on the country at this time. A USA Today/CNN Gallup Poll
from early February 2006 found that a full 86%
of respondents favored either taking no action or using
economic/diplomatic efforts towards Iran for now.
Significantly, 69% said they were concerned "that the U.S. will
be too quick to use military force in an attempt to prevent Iran from
developing nuclear weapons."
And that begs the
question: how can the US public be convinced to enter a potentially
ugly and protracted war in Iran?
A domestic
terrorist attack would do the trick. Just consider how long Congress
went back and forth over reauthorizing Bush's Patriot Act, but how
quickly opposing senators capitulated following last week's nerve-agent
scare in a Senate building. The scare turned out to be a false
alarm, but the Patriot Act got the support it needed.
Now consider the
fact that former CIA Officer Philip Giraldi has said the Pentagon's
plans to attack Iran were drawn up "to be employed in
response to another 9/11-type terrorist attack on the
United States." Writing in The American Conservative in
August 2005, Giraldi added, "As in the case of Iraq, the
response is not conditional on Iran actually being involved in the
act of terrorism directed against the United States."
Chew on that one a
minute. The Pentagon's plan should be used in response to a terrorist
attack on the US, yet is not contingent upon Iran actually having
been responsible. How outlandish is this scenario: another 9/11 hits
the US, the administration says it has secret information implicating
Iran, the US population demands retribution and bombs start dropping
on Tehran.
That's the
worst-case scenario, but even the best case doesn't look good. Let's
say the Bush administration chooses the UN Security Council over
military power in dealing with Iran. That still leaves the proposed
oil bourse, along with the economic fallout that will occur if OPEC
countries snub the greenback in favor of petro-euros. At the very
least, the dollar will drop and inflation could soar, so you'd think
the administration would be busy tightening the nation's collective
belt. But no. The US trade deficit reached a record high of $725.8
billion in 2005, and Bush & Co.'s FY 2007 budget proposes
increasing deficits by $192 billion over the next five years. The
nation is hemorrhaging roughly $7 billion a month on military
operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and is expected to hit its debt
ceiling of $8.184 trillion next month.
So the
white-knuckle ride to war continues, with the administration's goals
in Iran very clear. Recklessly naïve and impetuous perhaps, but
clear: stop the petro-euro oil bourse, take over Khuzestan Province
(which borders Iraq and has 90% of Iran's oil) and secure the Straits
of Hormuz in the process. As US politician Newt Gingrich recently put
it, Iranians cannot be trusted with nuclear technology, and they also
"cannot be trusted with their oil."
But the Bush
administration cannot be trusted with foreign policy. Its military
adventurism has already proven disastrous across the globe. It's
incumbent upon each of us to do whatever we can to stop this race
towards war. --posted Feb. 20, 2006
Mission Accomplished: Big Oil’s Occupation of Iraq
by Heather Wokusch
The Bush administration’s covert plan to help energy companies steal Iraq’s
oil could be just weeks away from fruition, and the implications are staggering:
continued price-gouging by Big Oil, increased subjugation of the Iraqi people,
more US troops in Iraq, and a greater likelihood for a US invasion of Iran.
That’s just for starters.
The administration’s challenge has been how to transfer Iraq’s oil assets to
private companies under the cloak of legitimacy, yet simultaneously keep
prices inflated.
But Bush & Co. and their Big Oil cronies might have found a simple yet devious
solution: production sharing agreements (PSAs).
Here’s how PSAs work. In return for investment in areas where fields are small
and results are uncertain, governments occasionally grant oil companies
sweetheart deals guaranteeing high profit margins and protection from
exploration risks. The country officially retains ownership of its oil
resources, but the contractual agreements are often so rigid and severe that
in practical terms, it can be the equivalent of giving away the deed to the farm.
Since Iraq sits on the world’s third largest oil reserves, the PSA model makes
little sense in the first place; Iraq’s fields are enormous and the exploration
risks are accordingly miniscule, so direct national investment or more
equitable forms of foreign investment would be in order. But as a comprehensive new
report by the London-based advocacy group PLATFORM details, the PSA model “is on
course to be adopted in Iraq, soon after the December elections, with no
public debate and at enormous potential cost.”
PLATFORM’s “Crude Designs: The Rip-off of Iraq’s Oil Wealth” points out that the
proposed agreements (with US State Department origins) will prove a bonanza
for oil companies but a disaster for the Iraqi people:
- “At an oil price of $40 per barrel, Iraq stands to lose between $74 billion
and $194 billion over the lifetime of the proposed contracts, from only the
first 12 oilfields to be developed. These estimates, based on conservative
assumptions, represent between two and seven times the current Iraqi
government budget.”
- “Under the likely terms of the contracts, oil company rates of return from
investing in Iraq would range from 42% to 162%, far in excess of usual
industry minimum target of around 12% return on investment.”
Of course, given the current political chaos, Iraqi citizens have little power
over whether their politicians sign the proposed PSA agreements. That critical
decision could be left to con-men like the former Interim Oil Minister Ahmad
Chalabi, who recently met with no less than Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice during
his red-carpet visit to the White House. One can assume the topic of Iraq’s
proposed PSAs came up more than once.
Chalabi’s successor as Oil Minister, Ibrahim Mohammad Bahr al-Uloum, is
expected to toe the corporate line, and Iraq’s former Interim Prime Minister Iyad
Allawi issued post-invasion guidelines stating: “The Iraqi authorities should not
spend time negotiating the best possible deals with the oil companies; instead they
should proceed quickly, agreeing to whatever terms the companies will accept,
with a possibility of renegotiation later.”
But PSAs are notoriously hard to renegotiate. According to PLATFORM, “under
PSAs future Iraqi governments would be prevented from changing tax rates or
introducing stricter laws or regulations relating to labour standards,
workplace safety, community relations, environment or other issues.” The Iraqi people
would be locked into inflexible agreements spanning 25-40 years with disputes
solved by corporate-friendly international arbitration tribunals, rather than
by national courts.
Is that really the same thing as liberation?
According to Greg Muttitt, co-author and lead researcher of the “Crude
Designs” report, “for all the US administration's talk of creating a democracy in Iraq,
in fact, their heavy pushing of PSAs stands to deprive Iraq of democratic
control of its most important natural resource. I would even go further: the
USA, Britain and the oil companies seem to be taking advantage of the weakness
of Iraq's new institutions of government, and of the terrible violence in the
country, by pushing Iraq to sign deals in this weak state, whose terms would
last for decades. The chances of Iraq getting a good deal for its people in
these circumstances are minimal; the prospect of mega-profitable deals for
multinational oil companies is fairly assured.”
Of course, ongoing oil exploration in Iraq by administration-friendly
companies would require permanent US bases, a massive ongoing troop presence and
billions more in taxpayer-dollar subsidies to sleazy outfits like Halliburton.
The implications of all of this for domestic oil prices is unclear. While
neo-conservatives initially pushed for privatizing Iraq’s oil reserves as a
way of destroying OPEC (they wanted to boost production and flood world markets
with cheap oil) the administration seems to have taken a more corporate-friendly
stance. After all, the last thing oil executives want is to break OPEC’s
stranglehold on pricing, because keeping supply low has delivered record
profits.
But the “National Strategy for Victory in Iraq” which
Bush released this week as part of his pro-occupation PR blitz lists a
surprising goal: “facilitating investment in Iraq’s oil sector to increase
production from the current 2.1 million barrels per day to more than 5 million per day.” OPEC’s quota for Iraq currently sits at around 4 million barrels per day, so the administration’s goal is not only significantly higher, but (at “more than 5 million”) a little too open-ended for the cartel’s comfort. Could be that Bush & Co. want to have their cake and eat it too: tighten the screws on OPEC, yet continue to rip off
consumers through elevated prices.
The whole PSA affair may also stoke the fires for a US invasion of Iran, which
sits on oil reserves even greater than those of Iraq.
Tehran already is on the administration’s hit list, less for its nuclear
aspirations than for its plans to open a euro-based international oil-trading
market in early 2006. Iran’s oil “bourse” would compete with the likes of New
York’s NYMEX and provide OPEC the opportunity to snub the greenback in favor
of “petroeuros,” a development the administration will avoid at all costs. So
if the PSA model is adopted in Iraq, it would provide a clear precedent for implementing it in Iran too, and hand the administration another reason to start the next invasion. --posted December 4, 2005
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April 14, 2005 - Latest Article
Courting
Armageddon: How the Bush Administration's
Biological
Weapons Buildup Affects You
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News that a U.S.
company recently sent vials of a 1957 pandemic flu strain to
laboratories across the world
by accident is only the latest outrage from the billion-dollar
boondoggle called the federal biological weapons program.
As you might
recall, the Bush administration started its "biodefense"
spending spree following the September 2001 deadly anthrax attacks,
and one of its first projects was to genetically engineer a super-resistant,
even more deadly version of the anthrax virus.
Our leaders are nuts.
Unfortunately,
Project "Anthrax" Jefferson has good company. A US
Army scientist in Maryland is currently trying to bring back
elements of the 1918 Spanish flu,
a virus which killed 40 million people. And a virologist in St.
Louis has been working on a more lethal form of mousepox (related to
smallpox) - just to try stopping the virus once it's been created.
Lack of oversight
and runaway spending are exacerbated by the Bush administration's
disrespect for the internationally-recognized Biological Weapons
Convention. In short, reduced pressure on weapons labs to issue
declarations and allow inspections means less accountability - and
more opportunities for secrecy and abuse.
Put bluntly, the
increasing number of stateside bioweapons blunders should come as no
surprise. In February 2003, for example, the University of California
at Davis (UCD) took a full ten days to inform nearby communities that
a rhesus monkey had escaped from its primate-breeding facility.
Coincidentally, UCD had been vying for government funds to set up its
own "hot zone" biodefense lab which could use primates for
biological weapons testing. If that monkey had been infected with
ebola, or some other virus, it's unclear when or if the public would
have been informed.
At roughly the
same time that the monkey ditched UCD, the Pentagon unearthed over
2,000 tons of hazardous biological waste in Maryland, much of it
undocumented leftovers of an abandoned germ warfare program. Nearby,
the FBI was draining a pond for clues into 2001's anthrax attacks.
Doesn't inspire
much trust in the transparency of US biological weapons programs.
And things appear
only to be getting worse.
In 2004, a
whopping $6 billion went up for grabs for federal biodefense
programs, and laboratories across the country went ballistic trying
to get their hands on some of that cash. Predictably, cases of fraud
and abuse quickly surfaced.
In June 2004, for
example, the
Army was caught shirking inspections at a major biodefense lab under
its domain.
The scandal went back to 1999, when the Army commissioned a
biological and chemical weapons-agent lab at Tennessee's Oak Ridge
National Laboratory. Oversight regulations obligated the Army to
inspect the lab each year thereafter, and the Centers for Disease
Control (CDC) were supposed to have inspected the lab on a regular
basis too.
Everything seemed
to be running smoothly; in December 2003, the committee in charge of
safety at the Oak Ridge lab announced that it "remains
comfortable of the review and inspections of the Chem/Bio Facility
conducted by the CDC and the Army."
Small problem. In
2004, the Department of Energy's Inspector General discovered that
the Army actually hadn't inspected the Oak Ridge biodefense lab for
the previous three years, and that the CDC hadn't been there for four
years. Yet the lab's safety committee said it was
"comfortable" with the imaginary inspections.
Also in 2004, a
military biodefense contractor called Southern Research landed in hot
water by accidentally sending live anthrax across the country from
Frederick, Maryland to the Children's Hospital of Oakland
(California). To make matters worse, it turns out that Southern
Research's lab in Frederick, Maryland didn't even maintain the
institutional biosafety committee required by federal research rules.
The punishment for these acts of gross incompetence and
irresponsibility? The Bush administration gave Southern Research the
task of safeguarding a new $30 million biological weapons facility
being built near Chicago.
In September of
the same year, three lab workers at the Boston University Medical
Center were accidentally exposed to a potentially lethal biowarfare
agent called tularaemia bacterium. The lab didn't report the
tularemia infections until two months later though - after it had won
a contract to build a new, $178 million biodefense laboratory.
Concerns about
lack of transparency and monetary waste aside, the administration's
bioweapons buildup raises obvious ethical problems. Why should the
U.S. create newer, even deadlier viruses? Who are these catastrophic
weapons going to be tested on? What populations will they ultimately
be used against?
These questions
take on urgent meaning given the Bush administration's military
adventurism coupled with the US media's poor coverage regarding war
victims. For example, eyewitnesses
to the late-2004 attack on Fallujah claimed that US forces used
poisonous gases, and "weird" bombs
that exploded into fires that burned the skin despite water being
thrown on the burns - a telltale sign of napalm or phosphorus bombs.
UK reaction to the
revelation was swift and strong, with demands that Prime Minister
Blair remove British troops from Iraq until the US ceased from using
such savage weaponry. Labor MP Alice Mahon demanded that Blair make
"an emergency statement to the Commons to explain why this is
happening. It begs the question: 'Did we know about this hideous
weapon's use in Iraq?'"
No similar outrage
in Congress. In fact, no comment at all. The US mainstream media
didn't cover the "weird bomb" allegations.
But it doesn't
take a genius to put two-and-two together: if we permit our
government to ignore international weapons-control conventions and
then say nothing while fresh billions are invested in barbaric new
weaponry, we lose the right to act surprised when our own military
uses that weaponry on innocent civilians abroad.
Or even on us.
You may be
surprised to learn that in 2003, the
Pentagon quietly admitted to having used biological/chemical agents
on 5,842 service members
in secret tests conducted over a ten-year period (1962-73).
In operations
called Project 112 and Project SHAD, the Defense Department tested
its own weapons on service members aboard Navy ships, and in all
sorts of other nasty ways - such as spraying a Hawaiian rainforest
and parts of Oahu. All in all, tests were conducted in six states
(Alaska, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, Utah) as well as in
Canada and Britain.
Many military
personnel were not informed when the toxic agents were being tested
on them. Only decades later, as crucial documents slowly become
declassified, have the veterans' health complaints been acknowledged.
You might think
such barbarism could never happen again: too many legal protections
for citizens in place. Think again.
There's a tricky
clause in Chapter 32/Title 50 of the United States Code (the
aggregation of US general and permanent laws) which states that the
Secretary of Defense can conduct a chemical or biological agent test
or experiment on humans in certain cases
"if informed consent has been obtained."
So far so good.
But check out a different part of Chapter 32, Section 1515, entitled
"Suspension; Presidential authorization":
"After
November 19, 1969, the operation of this chapter, or any portion
thereof, may be suspended by the President during the period of any
war declared by Congress and during the period of any national
emergency declared by Congress or by the President."
You got it. If the
President or Congress decides we're at war then the Secretary of
Defense doesn't need anybody's consent to test chemical or biological
agents on human beings. Gives one pause during these days of a
perpetual "War on Terror."
In January 2005,
US Senate majority leader Bill Frist called for a new Manhattan
Project (referring to the WWII-era nuclear weapons bonanza) for
biological weapons. Frist told an audience at the World
Economic Forum, "The greatest existential threat we have in the
world today is biological," and he went on to predict a
biowarfare attack "at some time in the next 10 years."
How ironic that
while Frist cited the 2001 US anthrax attacks as proof more
biological weapons research was necessary, he failed to mention that
those incidents involved anthrax produced right in the good 'ole USA
- or that the primary suspect in the attacks was a US Army scientist.
Frist also didn't clarify how developing even more biological warfare
agents would make the world safer.
The original
Manhattan Project ultimately led to US forces dropping atom bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, with the resulting slaughter of hundreds of
thousands of people. It's terrifying to consider the potential
repercussions, both domestic and abroad, of the Bush administration's
coveted new biological-weapons Manhattan Project.
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"The
military don't start wars. Politicians start wars."
Stingy? Not with WMD and War
by Heather Wokusch
As the body count from the tsunami rises, America's international reputation plummets to new depths, thanks to the Bush administration's smugly incompetent response.
While other world leaders immediately put forward action plans and solid donations, Bush has spent most of the past critical week on holiday at his Texas Òranch,Ó riding his mountain bike and avoiding the press. Predictably, only allegations of stinginess increased the White House's initial measly offer of $15 million for the relief effort to a grand total of $35 million.
But it's unfair to say the Bush administration is stingy Ð it just has different priorities. The White House has so far requested roughly $100 billion for the occupation of Iraq in FY 2005, which translates to about $8.3 billion per month, or over $270 million per day (eighteen times more than the administration's first offer of help to tsunami victims). And that's only Iraq. The US military budget request for FY 2005 was 420.7 billion dollars Ð double that of China, Russia, the UK, France and Germany combined.
Of course, perpetual war requires a lavish arsenal so the US spends further billions each year perfecting its weapons of mass destruction. In 2004 alone, a full $6 billion was earmarked for federal biological weapons programs, dedicated to destructive pursuits including bringing back elements of the 1918 Spanish flu (which killed 40 million people) and producing even deadlier strains of anthrax. Meanwhile the US budget for nuclear-weapon activities in fiscal 2004 topped $6 billion, which is twelve times more than it spent on securing/reducing existing stockpiles or on non-proliferation efforts. Also factor in the $10 billion Bush requested in FY 2005 for his failed missile ÒdefenseÓ program, a budget almost double what the Department of Homeland Security pays for the crucial activities of customs and border patrol.
In other words: it's not a problem of money. The Bush administration has ample funding available for war and increasingly barbaric means of killing, just not much left over to help out in global humanitarian catastrophes.
How ironic that Bush uses Christianity as a cynical PR tool but fails to grasp the biblical proportions of this tsunami disaster. How glaring that the administration brags about its superior morality and devotion to family values, but shows no empathy in the face of overwhelming human tragedy. And how embarrassing that after the outpour of love and support the US received with 911, this is all our government can come up with in return. --posted 01.05.05
Heather Wokusch is a free-lance writer. She can be contacted via her web site: www.heatherwokusch.com.
We just donÍt talk anymore: Bush's communication
problem with women
by Heather Wokusch
Despite the presidentÍs campaign pledge that ñW stands
for Woman,î Bush tends to bomb out with the fairer sex.
Unsurprisingly, a recent poll by the Pew Research
Center for the People and the Press has registered
women voters favoring Kerry over Bush by a full 12
percentage points.
So itÍs no wonder that the Bush campaign is working
overtime to nab critical female voters, enlisting wife
Laura and various female administration members to
carry BushÍs message from the Oval Office to the powder
room.
But Bush just doesnÍt seem to get it. ñWhat women wantî
is to be heard, not to receive a message. Women want to
be asked questions and to be given honest answers - and
thatÍs precisely the area over which Bush is losing
female voters.
While the presidentÍs opposition to abortion rights and
his curtailing of family planning options has alienated
many voters, arguably even more damaging for Bush among
women is the perception that he has tuned them out.
Just ask a disgruntled woman voter where it all went
wrong with Bush, and chances are sheÍll name three
communication areas that died, taking the relationship
along with it:
1. He closed womenÍs offices
One of BushÍs first acts as president was to shut down
the White House Office for WomenÍs Initiatives and
Outreach, which had monitored policy initiatives,
helped coordinate federal programs and served as a
liaison for outside groups since 1995.
Then in late 2001, only public outcry saved ten
regional offices of the Department of Labor WomenÍs
Bureau the administration had planned to axe.
Ominously, Bush has proposed reducing funding to the
WomenÍs Bureau itself in FY2005.
2. He fudged the facts about women
Information affecting women in crucial areas ranging
from pay equity, to breast cancer to HIV has been
distorted on governmental web sites and publications
during BushÍs term even worse, data has sometimes
disappeared altogether. The list is extensive, but
includes:
- The National Cancer Institute changed its web site to
suggest that abortion and breast cancer were linked,
even though studies had found they werenÍt. The web
site was changed back only when Congress insisted.
- The Department of Labor has eliminated essential
publications on the rights of women workers, such as
DonÍt Work in the Dark Know Your Rights, and Fact
Sheets on women workers.
- The Department of Health and Human Services altered
information on its web site to make ñabstinence-onlyî
programs seem more effective than evidence indicates.
3. He made questionable appointments
When running for president, Bush was asked if his
personal opposition to abortion rights would be
reflected in his administrationÍs judicial
appointments. Bush replied: ñVoters should assume that
I have no litmus test on that issue or any other issue.î
Immediately upon assuming office, however, the
president began elevating abortion foes to critical
offices: John Ashcroft became attorney general, Tommy
Thompson became Secretary of Health and Human Services,
and a slew of similarly-minded appointees were soon
drafted into the lower courts.
Crucial women-oriented advisory committees have met a
similar fate. Case in point: Dr. David Hager, who has
refused to prescribe contraceptives to unmarried women,
is only one of three religious conservatives Bush named
to the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Advisory
Committee for Reproductive Health Drugs.
But back to the president and his difficulties with
women voters. The lesson here is that when an
administration seems more focused on its own political
agenda than on honest communication, women will start
looking for greener pastures.
In other words, Mr. Bush, take some advice about
dealing with women: LISTEN. Ask questions, and then
LISTEN some more. TELL THE TRUTH. And please, save the
slogans for a different target group. --posted 06.30.04
Clinton And The Two Bushes: The War Crimes Left
Behind
by Heather Wokusch
Given repercussions over Abu Ghraib, it isn't
surprising that Washington recently asked the UN
Security Council for another one-year extension on its
war crimes exemption for peace-keepers. The prison
abuse scandal is just the iceberg's tip of Geneva
Convention violations by the United States, and closer
inspection could send Bush Jr., Bush Sr., not to
mention Bill Clinton, straight to the courtroom docks.
Back in the heady days of 1991's Persian Gulf War,
Commander in Chief Bush Sr. was widely praised for the
invasion's rapid end, but the true battle had only
begun for many on the ground: the United States had
dumped 375 tons of depleted uranium (DU) weaponry on Iraq during the
war, despite foreknowledge its radioactivity would make
food and water in the bombed regions unsafe for
consumption on an indefinite basis (DU remains
radioactive for 4.5 billion years). And according to
the Geneva Conventions, that's a war crime.
DU is a highly radioactive nuclear waste product valued
by the US military for its ability to penetrate tank
armor, but it's also a remorseless enemy. A region's
food chain is devastated by the trails of carcinogenic
dust left in a DU bomb's wake, and of course, humans
inhale and absorb the dust as well; even nine years
after the war, veterans afflicted with Gulf War
Syndrome ailments still had DU traces in their urine.
Depleted uranium is also suspected in dramatically
elevated levels of birth defects and cancer cases among
those in bombed areas, as well as in a wide litany of
Gulf War vet health complaints.
But the use of DU weaponry wasn't Bush Sr.s only
transgression in Iraq. US forces also bombed electrical
grids that powered 1,410 water-treatment plants for
Iraq's 22 million people, even though the Geneva
Conventions clearly state that destroying or rendering
useless items essential to the survival of civilian
populations is illegal under international law and a
war crime. An excerpt from "Strategic Attack."
a 1998 US Air Force
document, explains: "The electrical attacks proved
extremely effective ... The loss of electricity shut
down the capital's water treatment plants and led to a
public health crisis from raw sewage dumped in the
Tigris River." A second US Defense Intelligence Agency
document, 1991's "Iraq Water Treatment
Vulnerabilities," predicted how sanctions would then be
used to prevent Iraq from getting the equipment and
chemicals necessary for water purification, which would
result in "a shortage of pure drinking water for much
of the population" leading to "increased incidences, if
not epidemics, of disease."
That's where Bill Clinton came in. Far from heeding the
dangers of radioactive weaponry, he contributed to the
estimated 11 tons of DU weaponry used by NATO forces in
the 1999 Balkan conflict. Clinton also strongly
supported the devastating sanctions against Iraq that
led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis.
Notoriously, in 1996 when his Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright was asked about the estimated over
half a million Iraqi children who were thought to have
died as a result of the sanctions, her response was "I
think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we
think the price is worth it."
Fast forward to 2001, when Bush Jr. used DU weaponry in
the invasion of Afghanistan. Cities subjected to allied
bombing were later reported to have uranium
concentrations at 400% to 2000% above normal, with
birth defects sharply on the rise. Then during the 2003
invasion of Iraq, US and British forces deployed an
estimated 1,100-2,200 tons of depleted uranium
weaponry, with untold future health implications for
both Iraqis and coalition service members.
It's worth considering the future of warfare
Bush-style, as can be gleaned by his administration's
funding of weaponry. Despite the Cold War's end, the
Bush administration is spending 12 times more on
developing nuclear weapons than on securing/reducing
existing stockpiles or on non-proliferation efforts. The administration has also
repealed the ban on low-yield nuclear weapons,
dismissed international non-proliferation agreements,
and pushed development of the so-called "bunker buster"
which in fact is a nuclear weapon. It is safe to say
the Bush administration wonêt be backing off nuclear or
radioactive weaponry anytime soon.
In testimony on the Abu Ghraib crisis, Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld recently told the Senate Armed
Services Committee, "It is the photographs that give
one the vivid realization of what actually took place.
Words don't do it." So if our leaders really can't
grasp pain and suffering without Polaroids, then bring
out the cameras. Bring out pictures of populations
devastated by WMD such as radioactive weaponry, tainted
water supplies and the starvation wrought by sanctions.
Splash those images across the media along with photos
from Abu Ghraib.
Because if as a nation we can bring ourselves to face
the horrors inside one prison far away, then the scope
can be widened to consider other war crimes. And when
that happens, Bush Sr., Clinton and Bush Jr. will have
some explaining to do. --posted 06.06.04
Originally published in The Baltimore Chronicle, June 4, 2004
More Essays By Wokusch
The views expressed are the writer's own and do not necessarily reflect those of Bush Watch.
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