We're All Gonna Die
t r u t h o u t | Columnist
Friday 13 July 2007
We are all wired into a survival trip now.
- Hunter S. Thompson
Who can forget the incredible scandal that erupted back in May of 2002? Around about the middle of that month, details
began to emerge about the August 6, 2001 Presidential Daily Briefing that specifically warned Bush about Osama bin
Laden's determination to strike the United States.
Wait. Actually, everyone forgot, because two days later, the Bush administration unleashed a blizzard of dire warnings
about impending terrorist attacks. FBI Director Robert Mueller intoned such attacks were "inevitable," and the
Department of Homeland Security announced the imminent, explosive destruction of all American railroads, along with the
Brooklyn Bridge and the Statue of Liberty.
Who can forget the incredible scandal that erupted back in June of 2003? Over the course of two days, reports emerged
about serious doubts held by the CIA regarding the credibility of the administration's claim Iraq tried to buy uranium
from Niger. On the heels of this, Congress unfurled its 9/11 report, which criticized all levels of the Bush
administration for its performance before and during the attacks.
Wait. Actually, everyone forgot, because the Bush administration unleashed another blizzard of warnings about impending
terrorist attacks. Specifically, the Department of Homeland Security warned terrorists were, once again, preparing to
attack the United States with suicide missions using commercial airliners as bombs.
Who can forget the incredible scandal that erupted back in December of 2003? 9/11 Commission chairman Thomas Keane
declared the attacks of 9/11 should have been prevented. The next day, a Federal appeals court ruled against the
administration on the case of suspected terrorist Jose Padilla, stating Padilla could not be held indefinitely without
being charged.
Wait. Actually, everyone forgot, because the Bush administration increased the terrorism threat level to Orange and
claimed more suicide planes were about to come zooming out of the sky. Six international flights were diverted due to
potential terrorist actions of some passengers who were later identified as an insurance salesman, an elderly Chinese
woman and a five-year-old boy.
Who can forget the incredible scandal that erupted back in May of 2004? Secretary of State Colin Powell appeared on
Meet the Press and stated the intelligence on Iraqi WMD he'd been given for his UN presentation had been "inaccurate and
wrong and, in some cases, deliberately misleading." Horrifying new pictures of the torture, rape and murder of prisoners
by Americans at Abu Ghraib prison became public. The American military accidentally bombed a wedding party in Iraq,
killing 40 civilians.
Wait. Actually, everyone forgot, because FBI Director Mueller and Attorney General John Ashcroft announced they had
reports from multiple sources of al Qaeda's "specific intention to hit the United States hard." The threat levels were
not raised, but dire warnings of impending catastrophe were offered by the administration for the next several days.
The recipe is simple, like the directions on the back of a shampoo bottle. Damaging reports of Bush administration
malfeasance emerge. Warnings of imminent terrorist-borne doom immediately follow, all spread far and wide by said Bush
administration. Lather, rinse, repeat.
There are many more instances of this curious timing to be found, but apparently, no one in the administration is
concerned this dubious pattern - spreading fear among the populace to change the subject, an act of terrorism itself -
might start to wear thin.
Who is going to forget the incredible scandals of June and July of 2007? The Bush administration leaves Nixon in the
dust by commuting the prison sentence of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby. This action strongly suggests the existence of a quid
pro quo between Libby and Bush's people to cover up the criminal activities of powerful officials like Vice President
Dick Cheney, who had recently claimed his office wasn't part of the executive branch to avoid handing papers over to the
National Archives.
The administration deploys spurious claims of Executive Privilege to avoid subpoenas regarding the patently illegal NSA
wiretapping of American citizens. That privilege is extended to deny Congressional access to Harriet Miers, former White
House counsel, regarding the issue of fired US attorneys. Contempt charges are threatened against Miers, and the NSA
subpoena stonewall comes closer to getting openly challenged in court. Alberto Gonzales is exposed as having lied to the
Senate in his testimony about FBI abuses of the Patriot Act.
Few of the benchmarks for success in Iraq are met. Desperate to halt a tide of GOP defections from his Iraq policy,
Bush again coughs up the totally discredited link between 9/11 and Iraq, saying, "The same people that attacked us on
September the 11th is a crowd that is now bombing people, killing innocent men, women and children." The House again
votes to withdraw American troops from Iraq. A new Harris poll on Bush's approval rating is published. The number reads
26 percent.
Wait.
Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff all but guarantees devastating new terror attacks against the United States
this summer. He bases this warning on a "gut feeling." White House spokesman Tony Snow threatens that withdrawal from
Iraq would bring terrorism "to a shopping mall near you."
Meanwhile, al Qaeda is alleged to be as secure in Pakistan and Afghanistan as they were before 9/11, yet no one in the
administration connects this new security to the drain of resources happening in Iraq. Additionally, no one in the
administration points out the fact that, if Chertoff's gut is indeed correct, and we are indeed attacked again,
responsibility for that attack will fall upon those who manufactured war in Iraq. Never mind the fact that if an attack
is allowed to happen, even a minor one, more of our constitutional rights and protections will be eviscerated by the
very same people who failed to stop it again.
Will everyone forget about the scandals of June and July 2007 amid these deadly warnings of coming death?
Lather, rinse, repeat.
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William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is now available from PoliPointPress.