Bush, the Pentagon and the tsunami
07/01/2005
- Opinión
After Secretary of State Colin Powell surveyed the devastated
coast of Aceh in Indonesia from a military helicopter, he
proclaimed at a press conference that Americans “care about the
dignity of every individual and the worth of every individual” and
have a “need to respond to the needs of every individual of
whatever faith.”
Most Americans are indeed empathetic and generous to others.
Unfortunately the Bush administration of which Powell is a part
does not represent America. Its very actions in the aftermath of
the quake and the tsunamis point out its hypocrisy as it spins out
images for the global media while maneuvering to protect corporate
interests and project the Pentagon’s power even deeper into the
Muslim world.
Consider, for example, that the only place in the Indian Ocean
basin that received full advance warning of the impending tsunamis
was the US military base on the British isle of Diego Garcia. It
houses “Camp Justice,” one of the secret facilities used to
imprison and torture suspects in the US war on terror. As it
battened down the hatches on the base, the Pentagon made no effort
to alert the nations in the region of the impending doom that was
about to strike them.
Consider, too, that with the death toll mounting in the days after
the tsunamis hit, Americans reacted with dismay and embarrassment
as President Bush at first pledged only a meager $35 million in
aid to the region while continuing to do photo ops and chop wood
while vacationing on his ranch in Crawford, Texas. Only after the
head of the United Nation’s emergency relief effort and The New
York Times called that offer stingy and others pointed out that
the President planned to spend more than three times that much on
his inaugural events and parties did he up the ante to $350
million. Japan pledged half a billion. Three hundred and fifty
million is approximately what the US spends in a day and a half on
the war in Iraq.
Now the President is trying to use the tsunami tragedy to bolster
his image in the world. There is no question that US aid workers
and agencies who have converged on countries stricken by the
tsunamis are dedicated to their lifesaving roles. But the
President appears to be less interested in saving lives than on
burnishing his image and the Pentagon’s to divert attention from
the criminal activities of his administration in Iraq and
elsewhere.
Hence, we are treated to film coverage of U.S. military
helicopters taking off from the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln
with food and medicine for the tsunamis victims. The Abraham
Lincoln is the same ship on which the president, decked out as a
fighter pilot, landed on May 1, 2003 to proclaim an end to the
hostilities in Iraq. The use of this ship symbolizes how Bush is
adept at saying one thing and doing another and then using staged
events and the media to mislead large numbers of his constituents
about his intentions and actions. He told us and the world, for
example, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction when he had
evidence that it did not. Then he said that Saddam Hussein had
ties to Al Qaeda when he knew that was not true. Next he insisted
he wants to promote democracy and the rule of law by holding
elections in Iraq. Tens of thousands have died and are dying in
Iraq as a result of these fabrications.
Now he says his goal in Indonesia is to aid the victims of the
tsunamis. But instead of funneling aid through neutral sources he
is now channeling it in Aceh through the brutal Indonesian
military, where a Free Aceh Movement has been fighting for
independence since 1976.
The Indonesian military, according to Human Rights Watch, has been
responsible for “executions, disappearances, torture, and
collective punishment, as well as its efforts to restrict
fundamental rights of expression, assembly, and association.” The
military is also protecting the Exxon-Mobil natural gas facility
in Aceh. As Amy Goodman noted on Democracy Now, ExxonMobile makes
direct payments to the Indonesian military contingents stationed
around its natural gas facilities. The Aceh movement has
proclaimed a cease fire since the tsunamis struck, but its relief
workers and a dozen villages have been attacked by the Indonesian
military.
Since 9/11, the United States has extended military aid and
training to the Indonesia military (TNI) as part of the US war on
terror in the largest Muslim nation in the world. Powell announced
in Indonesia that the United States is “increasing the number of
helicopters to help the TNI.” Just as in Iraq there is an
imbroglio unfolding between the Pentagon, petroleum corporations
and proxy military forces.
Little wonder, then, that the world needs to be skeptical of
President Bush’s reasons for sending U.S. troops and aid to
Indonesia as a result of the tsunamis.
*Paul Cantor is a professor of economics at Norwalk Community
College in Connecticut. Roger Burbach is co-author with Jim
Tarbell of “Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the Hubris of
Empire.” To order the book see www.globalalternatives.org
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/111092
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