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When will GOP conservatives tell neocons to get lost?

 
 
Reply Mon 24 May, 2004 11:10 am
Posted 5/23/2004 USA Today
History lesson: GOP must stop Bush
By Carl Bernstein

Thirty years ago, a Republican president, facing impeachment by the House of Representatives and conviction by the Senate, was forced to resign because of unprecedented crimes he and his aides committed against the Constitution and people of the United States. Ultimately, Richard Nixon left office voluntarily because courageous leaders of the Republican Party put principle above party and acted with heroism in defense of the Constitution and rule of law.

"What did the president know and when did he know it?" a Republican senator ?- Howard Baker of Tennessee ?- famously asked of Nixon 30 springtimes ago.

Today, confronted by the graphic horrors of Abu Ghraib prison, by ginned-up intelligence to justify war, by 652 American deaths since presidential operatives declared "Mission Accomplished," Republican leaders have yet to suggest that George W. Bush be held responsible for the disaster in Iraq and that perhaps he, not just Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, is ill-suited for his job.

Having read the report of Major Gen. Antonio Taguba, I expect Baker's question will resound again in another congressional investigation. The equally relevant question is whether Republicans will, Pavlov-like, continue to defend their president with ideological and partisan reflex, or remember the example of principled predecessors who pursued truth at another dark moment.

Today, the issue may not be high crimes and misdemeanors, but rather Bush's failure, or inability, to lead competently and honestly.

"You are courageously leading our nation in the war against terror," Bush told Rumsfeld in a Wizard-of-Oz moment May 10, as Vice President Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell and senior generals looked on. "You are a strong secretary of Defense, and our nation owes you a debt of gratitude." The scene recalled another Oz moment: Nixon praising his enablers, Bob Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, as "two of the finest public servants I've ever known."

Sidestepping the Constitution

Like Nixon, this president decided the Constitution could be bent on his watch. Terrorism justified it, and Rumsfeld's Pentagon promoted policies making inevitable what happened at Abu Ghraib ?- and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The legal justification for ignoring the Geneva Conventions regarding humane treatment of prisoners was enunciated in a memo to Bush, dated Jan. 25, 2002, from the White House counsel.

"As you have said, the war against terrorism is a new kind of war," Alberto Gonzales wrote Bush. "In my judgment, this new paradigm renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its provisions." Quaint.

Since January, Bush and Rumsfeld have been aware of credible complaints of systematic torture. In March, Taguba's report reached Rumsfeld. Yet neither Bush nor his Defense secretary expressed concern publicly or leveled with Congress until photographic evidence of an American Gulag, possessed for months by the administration, was broadcast to the world.

Rumsfeld then explained, "You read it, as I say, it's one thing. You see these photographs and it's just unbelievable. ... It wasn't three-dimensional. It wasn't video. It wasn't color. It was quite a different thing." But the report also described atrocities never photographed or taped that were, often, even worse than the pictures ?- just as Nixon's actions were frequently far worse than his tapes recorded.

It was Barry Goldwater, the revered conservative, who convinced Nixon that he must resign or face certain conviction by the Senate ?- and perhaps jail. Goldwater delivered his message in person, at the White House, accompanied by Republican congressional leaders.

Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee likewise put principle above party to cast votes for articles of impeachment. On the eve of his mission, Goldwater told his wife that it might cost him his Senate seat on Election Day. Instead, the courage of Republicans willing to dissociate their party from Nixon helped Ronald Reagan win the presidency six years later, unencumbered by Watergate.

Another precedent is apt: In 1968, a few Democratic senators ?- J. William Fulbright, Eugene McCarthy, George McGovern and Robert F. Kennedy ?- challenged their party's torpor and insisted that President Lyndon Johnson be held accountable for his disastrous and disingenuous conduct of the Vietnam War, adding weight to public pressure, which, eventually, forced Johnson not to seek re-election.

Today, the United States is confronted by another ill-considered war, conceived in ideological zeal and pursued with contempt for truth, disregard of history and an arrogant assertion of American power that has stunned and alienated much of the world, including traditional allies. At a juncture in history when the United States needed a president to intelligently and forcefully lead a real international campaign against terrorism and its causes, Bush decided instead to unilaterally declare war on a totalitarian state that never represented a terrorist threat; to claim exemption from international law regarding the treatment of prisoners; to suspend constitutional guarantees even to non-combatants at home and abroad; and to ignore sound military advice from the only member of his Cabinet ?- Powell ?- with the most requisite experience. Instead of using America's moral authority to lead a great global cause, Bush squandered it.

In Republican cloakrooms, as in the Oval Office, response to catastrophe these days is more concerned with politics and PR than principle. Said Tom DeLay, House majority leader: "A full-fledged congressional investigation ?- that's like saying we need an investigation every time there's police brutality on the street."

When politics topples principles

To curtail any hint of dissension in the ranks, Bush scheduled a "pep rally" with congressional Republicans ?- speaking 35 minutes, after which, characteristically, he took no questions and lawmakers dutifully circled the wagons.

What did George W. Bush know and when did he know it? Another wartime president, Harry Truman, observed that the buck stops at the president's desk, not the Pentagon.

But among Republicans today, there seems to be scant interest in asking tough questions ?- or honoring the example of courageous leaders of Congress who, not long ago, stepped forward, setting principle before party, to hold accountable presidents who put their country in peril.
----------------------------------

Carl Bernstein's most recent book is a biography of John Paul II, His Holiness. He is co-author, with Bob Woodward, of All the President's Men and The Final Days.
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Brand X
 
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Reply Mon 24 May, 2004 11:52 am
Important to what? Bernstein's agenda?
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 May, 2004 11:56 am
Brand X
Brand X

Rolling Eyes Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Mon 24 May, 2004 03:20 pm
It would appear that the political hacks that govern this nation loyalties are to their party first and foremost.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 25 May, 2004 02:00 pm
When will GOP conservatives tell neocons to get lost?
The Great Neo-Con Con

Articles / Commentary
Date: May 23, 2004 - 05:24 PM

The NeoCons are giving conservatives a bad name. When are the conservatives going to say "No more" ?
By Mick Youther

Four years ago, I didn't even know what a NeoConservative was?-and now they're running our country. George W. Bush may be President, but the NeoCons are calling all the shots.

• "[NeoCons] want Bush to expand the war, broaden the theater of operations, multiply our enemies, and ignore our allies. If Bush should adopt this strategy, it would be America and Israel against the Arab and Islamic world with Europe neutral and almost all of Asia rooting for our humiliation."-- Patrick J. Buchanan, The American Conservative, 3/1/04

• "Iraq is just one battle in a larger war, bringing down the regime in Iran is the central act, because Iran is the world's most dangerous terrorist country."-- Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute?-the de facto headquarters for neconservative policy, quoted in NeoCon 101, csmonitor.com

• "In 1989, following the end of the Cold War and just prior to the Gulf War, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, and Paul Wolfowitz produced the 'Defense Planning Guidance' report advocating U.S. military dominance around the globe. …the plan called for the U.S. to be dominant over friends and foes alike."-- The Sunday Herald, 9/15/02

• "[Rumsfeld] says he has told the Pentagon to ?'think the unthinkable'. [Cheney] has said the US is considering military or other action against ?'40 to 50 countries' and warns that the new war may last 50 years or more… […and Bush adviser, Richard Perle says] ?'If we just let our vision of the world go forth, and we embrace it entirely, and we don't try to piece together clever diplomacy but just wage a total war, our children will sing great songs about us years from now.'"--John Pilger, Daily Mirror, 1/29/02

I've noticed two important things about the NeoConservatives. First?-they have been wrong on just about everything they have ever said about Iraq, and second?-they are not Conservatives. They infiltrated our government in the guise of Conservatives, and they continue to enjoy the support of Conservatives; but they are not conservatives.

• "Our ?'neoconservatives' are neither new nor conservative, but old as Bablyon and evil as Hell."-- Edward Abbey (1927-1989), Author and Environmentalist

• "The oil revenues of Iraq could bring between $50 and $100 billion over the course of the next two or three years…We're dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction, and relatively soon."-- Assistant Secretary of Defense and the mastermind responsible for Operation Iraqi Freedom?-Paul Wolfowitz, in Congressional Testimony, 3/27/03

• "[The war] could last six days, six weeks. I doubt six months."-- Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Feb 2003

• "We will, in fact, be greeted as liberators.…I think it will go relatively quickly… weeks rather than months."-- Vice President Cheney, 3/16/03

• [Six months later] "I think has been fairly significant success in terms of putting Iraq back together again…and certainly wouldn't lead me to suggest or think that the strategy is flawed or needs to be changed."--Vice President Cheney, MSNBC, 9/14/03

• "Neo-con interventionist foreign policies are only breeding resentment, creating even more enemies, and putting our children and grandchildren into a financial black hole so deep they may never get out…. There is nothing conservative about the U.S policy in Iraq."-- Rep. John J. Duncan (R-TN), 9/24/03

• "Does [Conservative] describe an administration that has undermined some of our most basic freedoms, gutted laws designed to conserve our natural resources, and led the nation into a war based on fear rather than fact? …If you think you are a conservative, look at the track record for this administration and ask yourself if it fits the conservative profile of smaller government, a balanced budget and limited foreign entanglements."-- Joan King, The Gainseville Times, 12/9/03

• "…If the neoconservatives retain control of the conservative, limited-government movement in Washington, the ideas, once championed by conservatives, of limiting the size and scope of government will be a long-forgotten dream."-- Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), 7/10/03

Conservatives need to ask themselves which they would prefer?-enduring four years of a liberal President who wants their children to have a good education and healthcare; or to stay the course and pour all of America's blood and treasure into the NeoCon's perpetual war machine.

I'm sorry Conservatives, but you were fooled and America has suffered for it. Instead of a conservative President, you got a War President?-controlled by war profiteers. So remember:

• "Fool me once... Shame on.. Shame on you....Fool me...Can't get fooled again." (You know what he meant.)-- President George W. Bush, MSNBC-TV, 9/17/02

Conservatives, don't get fooled again.
-------------------------------------

Mick Youther is retiring from Southern Illinois University to devote the next few months to Regime Change in America. You can email your comments to [email protected]

Posted May 23, 2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This article comes from Intervention Magazine
http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/

The URL for this story is:
http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=747
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