Bush's Strategic Change
From: http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/102306R.shtml
Monday 23 October 2006
It has gone largely unreported, but President Bush's "stay the course" mantra has apparently taken a 180-degree turn.
I offer in evidence this recent quote from Mr. Bush:
"We believe that the more we inform our American citizens, the better our government will be. We believe that the more
transparency there is in the system, the better the system functions on behalf of the American people."
The president's remarks came at a signing ceremony for the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act, which
will establish a searchable online database of federal grants and contracts.
As reported by Steve Aftergood's Project on Government Secrecy, a White House fact sheet said the new law "is part of
President Bush's ongoing commitment to improve transparency, accountability, and management across the Federal
Government."
OK, so maybe it wasn't about Iraq or Afghanistan or the Global War on Terror. And maybe the timing of its revelation
had just a tad to do with the mid-term elections. But it has to be seen as some kind of major epiphany anyway.
The reason is that this president has presided over arguably the most secretive government in US history.
Consider the findings of a report issued a while ago by Congressman Henry Waxman of California, one of the Democrats
effectively neutered by the current House majority. Waxman's report found "a systematic effort by the Bush
Administration to limit the application of the laws that promote open government and accountability ... the Bush
Administration has sought to curtail public access to information while expanding the powers of government to operate in
secret."
The report alleged that both the American people and the US Congress are being denied access to millions of pages of
documents to which they are entitled under law. It added, "The actions of the Bush Administration have resulted in an
extraordinary expansion of government secrecy. External watchdogs, including Congress, the media, and non-governmental
organizations, have consistently been hindered in their ability to monitor government activities."
The report found that the administration has systematically withheld "a vast array" of records from Congress. Subjects
have ranged "from simple census data and routine agency correspondence to presidential and vice presidential records."
Henry Waxman has good reason to know. Congress itself, Waxman's report says, has been one of the main victims of our
secret government. "On over 100 separate occasions, the Administration has refused to answer the inquiries of, or
provide the information requested" by Congressman Waxman in his role as the senior Democrat on the House Committee on
Government Reform. The information the Administration has refused to provide includes "documents requested by the
ranking members of eight House Committees relating to the prison abuses at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere," the report says.
Well, maybe Mr. Waxman and the rest of us need to cut the president some slack. After all, his epiphany only happened a
few weeks ago.
Now, the Decider in Chief has to get it implemented, and that's going to take a bit of time. Even for a chief executive
with a Harvard MBA, it's not going to be a quick or easy job.
Because, as of today, the government continues to classify more documents about more different subjects than any of its
predecessors ever dreamed of. And it spends billions in taxpayer funds to do so.
Still, the president's epiphany has to come as welcome news to all the folks who have spent the past six frustrating
years trying to make the Freedom of Information Act work in something resembling a timely manner.
Take heart, ACLU, Associated Press, and countless other soldiers in what has become an open-the-government cottage
industry.
Given the president's management skills, and his authority as Decider, maybe it won't be too long before the government
folks whose salaries we pay stop spinning the truth and let us all in on both our successes and our failures.
Maybe, in the future, it won't take an army of meddlers to learn what we need to know about Gitmo, secret CIA prisons,
domestic eavesdropping, faux science, rolling back environmental protections, interoperable radios, progress in our
Global War On Terrorism, and a host of other issues.
And - who knows? - it might just signal the end of whistleblowing!
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William Fisher has managed economic development programs in the Middle East and in many other parts of the world for
the US State Department and USAID for the past thirty years. He began his work life as a journalist for newspapers and
for the Associated Press in Florida. Go to The World According to Bill Fisher for more.