This article originally provided by ThruthOut
July 24, 2004
The 9/11 Report Misses the Point
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Saturday 24 July 2004
After vigorously resisting the
establishment of the National Commission on Terrorist
Attacks Upon the United States, known as the 9/11
Commission, George W. Bush is now celebrating its findings.
"Constructive," said the commander-in-chief, who
plans to study the report. Bottom line: Bush is mightily
relieved that the collective finger of the Commission
doesn’t point too much in his direction.
No person or agency is singled
out to take serious responsibility for the attacks that
killed 3000 people on September 11, 2001. A list of missed
opportunities is carefully divided 60-40, six occurring
during the Bush II administration and four on Clinton’s
watch. The report recommends the creation of a new
intelligence czar, increased congressional oversight, and
transparency in funding for intelligence. But the
Commissioners were unanimous in refusing to conclude that
9/11 could have been prevented.
The events of September 11 are
recited in chilling detail in the much-anticipated 500-page
tome. Although the Commission concludes that the attacks
"were a shock," it says, "they should not
have come as a surprise." The report provides an
itemized list of structural shortcomings, and improvements
that could better prepare us for the next terrorist attack.
"Because of offensive
actions against al Qaeda since 9/11, and defense actions to
improve homeland security," the Commissioners wrote,
"we believe we are safer today." They go on to
say: "But we are not safe." The centerpiece of
Bush’s election campaign is his mantra that the world has
become a safer place on his watch. Earlier this week,
however, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, "I
cannot say the world is safer today than it was two, three
years ago."
Indeed, many feel Bush’s
misguided war on Iraq has actually made us less safe. But
the 9/11 report does not address Operation "Iraqi
Freedom" critically. A 23-year veteran of the CIA,
identified in the Boston Phoenix as Michael Scheuer,
maintains in his soon-to-be-released book, "Imperial
Hubris: Why the West is Losing the War on Terror," that
"Iraq was a gift of epic proportions to Osama bin Laden
and those who think like him."
The former CIA agent advocates a
genuine debate within the United States about its policies
in the Middle East, including its relationship with Saudi
Arabia and its unqualified support for Israel. "I think
before you draft a policy to defeat bin Laden," says
Sheuer, "you have to understand that our policies are
what drives him and those who follow him."
Scheuer is not alone in his
admonition. Earlier this month, Senator Ernest F. Hollings
(D-S.C.) penned in the Charleston Post and Courier:
"Osama bin Laden hit us because of our presence in
Saudi Arabia and policy in Israel/Palestine." Hollings
wrote: "Imagine 37 years’ occupation of Palestine …
Palestine is left with the hopeless and embittered .. But
embittered refugees from without lead with terrorism."
The senator urges the building of a Palestinian state.
"It can’t be built," however, "while homes
are bulldozed, settlements extended and walls are
constructed."
Both Hollings and Brandeis
Professor Robert B. Reich, Secretary of Labor in the Clinton
administration, dismiss the notion that we are fighting a
"War on Terrorism." Hollings says, "Terrorism
is not a war, but a weapon." Reich agrees:
"Terrorism is a tactic. It is not itself our
enemy."
Challenging Bush’s claim that
the terrorists hate us because of our values, Hollings
retorts: "It’s not our values or people, but our
Mideast policy they oppose." Reich argues for
restarting the Middle East peace process, which Bush has
"run away from."
Many in the Arab and Muslim world
see U.S. policies as terrorist. They witnessed the deaths of
one million innocent Iraqis as a result of Western sanctions
during the 1990s. The tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians
killed by Bush’s "coalition" in Iraq have not
escaped their notice. And they see the photographs and hear
the accounts of torture and humiliation of their brothers
emerging from the prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and
Guantanamo Bay.
Yet the 9/11 report glosses over
the atrocities, calling them "allegations that the
United States abused prisoners in its custody." The
photographs belie this characterization as mere
"allegations." And the Commissioners have bought
into Donald Rumsfeld’s moniker of "abuse," when
it is clear that rape, murder and sodomy with foreign
objects constitute torture.
Conspicuously absent from the
report is a political analysis of why the tragedy occurred.
Missing from the report is a comprehensive strategy to
overhaul U.S. foreign policy to inoculate us from the wrath
of those who resent American imperialism.
The report does not undertake a
serious criticism of Bush’s misadventure in Iraq, the lies
under girding it, and the tragedy it has created in that
country. It fails to analyze why this war that Bush created
has opened a Pandora’s Box of terrorism where none existed
before. Notably, there is a categorical statement that no
evidence linked Iraq with the September 11 attacks.
However, the report focuses on
Iran, noting that some of the hijackers easily passed
through Iran in the months before 9/11. Yet it finds no
evidence that Iran knew of the impending attacks.
Bush’s response to the
report’s Iran reference is reminiscent of his reaction
after the September 11 attacks. When Richard Clarke caught
Bush alone in the Situation Room the next day, Bush
"testily" ordered Clarke to investigate whether
Iraq was involved in the attacks. Even though Bush admitted
this week that the CIA had found "no direct connection
between Iran and the attacks of Sept. 11," he promised
that "we will continue to look and see if the Iranians
were involved."
The Likud lobby in Washington,
which drives much of our foreign policy, seeks the overthrow
of the Iranian government partly because it stands in the
way of the Israeli annexation of southern Lebanon and its
prized Litani River. Bush’s base – the fundamentalist
Christians – walk in lockstep with Ariel Sharon, driven by
their determination that Jerusalem be in Jewish hands when
Christ returns.
Whether Bush will make Iran the
next test of his new illegal "preemptive" war
doctrine if elected in November remains to be seen. His
blustering about Iran may be designed to pander to his
hawkish supporters as the election approaches. At the least,
we can expect Bush, if given a second term, to covertly
undermine Iran’s government, much as we did in 1953. The
CIA led a coup to overthrow the democratically elected
Mohammad Mossaddeq, and replaced him with the tyrannical but
U.S.-friendly Shah, ushering in 25 years of torture and
murder against the people of Iran.
Iran’s membership in Bush’s
"axis of evil" was in the works two years before
its formal inauguration in his state of the union address.
In its September 2000 document, "Rebuilding America’s
Defenses, Strategy, Forces and Resources For a New
Century," the neocon’s Project for the New American
Century identified Iran, Iraq and North Korea as strategic
targets.
We should not be surprised that
countries like Iran and North Korea seek to develop nuclear
weapons. While the United States rattles its sabers at these
"rogue states," it continues to develop new and
more efficient nukes and pledges to use them
"preemptively," in violation of its commitments
under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. The Bush
administration has also exempted itself from a treaty
prohibiting biological weapons to avoid being subject to
international inspections.
Short shrift is given in the 9/11
report to the reverberations from U.S. policy in Iraq and
Israel: "Right or wrong, it is simply a fact that
American policy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and American actions in Iraq are dominant staples of popular
commentary across the Arab and Muslim world." Period.
No analysis of the content or consequences of that
commentary.
The Commissioners conclude:
"Across the government, there were failures of
imagination, policy, capabilities and management." The
consequences of U.S. foreign policy, which the CIA dubbed
"blowback," need not be left to the imagination of
our leaders. The anger of millions people in the Middle East
does not stem from resentment at our democratic way of life.
It is the understandable result of our policies that torture
and kill their brethren.
The title of one chapter in the
report quotes George Tenet: "The system was blinking
red." Indeed, we must heed the blinking red light of
bitterness against U.S. imperialism throughout the Middle
East.
Finally, the Commission writes,
"we should offer an example of moral leadership in the
world." Unprovoked attacks on other countries,
uncritical support for repression against an occupied
people, and the killing and torture of prisoners are not
examples of moral leadership.
We can reorganize, restructure
and revamp our institutions. But until the American
government undertakes a radical rethinking and remaking of
our role in the world, we will never be safe from terrorist
attacks.
Marjorie
Cohn, a contributing editor to t r u t h o u t, a
professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, executive vice
president of the National Lawyers Guild, and the U.S.
representative to the executive committee of the American
Association of Jurists.
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