Earthside Comments: The range of Bush failure is breathtaking in its scope -- almost everything this spoiled brat has touched has turned into sterile dung.
The national debt of the federal government has climbed to NINE TRILLION Dollars on his watch. The dollar, as we know is in the toilet ... the foreboding about the economy is palpable. Thousands have died since the Supreme Court gave Bush and Cheney control of the central government ... thousands because he could not meet his first responsibility to protect the nation on September 11, 2001, and thousands since because of his lies and incompetence in Iraq and Afghanistan. Virtually every branch of the federal govenment has been polticized and corrupted for the benefit of himself and his cronies in the last seven years.
Now, the danger level increases for all of us once again because of the bungling Bush/Cheney foreign policy that gives us an unpredictable dictator with nuclear weapons.
Really, what is wrong with America that Bush and Cheney are permitted to hold their offices in the face of such criminality, malfeasance and mendacity? We don't need a coup d'etat in this Republic to rid ourselves of this disaster -- the Constitution provides a reasoned, civil method for dumping a President and Vice President who are subversives: impeachment.
Oh yeah, we forgot ... "impeachment is off the table."
Link: Our Man in Pakistan | Robert Scheer/Truthdig.com/The Nation
So, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, treated ever so respectfully by George Bush throughout his Administration, in which he became the first Pakistani leader to visit Camp David, has turned out to be just another crummy dictator. But he was our dictator, kind of a modern, even westernized one who could stand up to all those bearded Islamic terrorists.
Well, not exactly. Not that anyone bothered to remember, but Musharraf seized power in Pakistan, ending democratic rule, two years before the 9/11 attacks and did nothing to end his nation's support of the Taliban rulers next door, who were harboring Osama bin Laden and his Al Qaeda. Before that he was part of a military elite that had, as the 9/11 Commission report would later conclude, been one of the main sponsors of the Taliban. Nor did Musharraf as dictator-president do anything to undermine the nut cases that he continued to diplomatically recognize as the legitimate rulers of the neighboring country. "On terrorism, Pakistan helped nurture the Taliban," the 9/11 Commission reported, adding: "Many in the government have sympathized with or provided support to the extremists. Musharraf agreed that Bin Laden was bad. But before 9/11, preserving good relations with the Taliban took precedence."
True, after 9/11 Musharraf did provide minimal support for the US invasion of Afghanistan in return for considerable aid and the lifting of the sanctions that had been imposed on his nation for developing nuclear weapons. Odd that a nation that had nuclear weapons and that had actively supported the terrorist haven in Afghanistan was welcomed back into America's good graces only three weeks after 9/11--at the very same time that the Bush Administration was drawing up plans to overthrow Saddam Hussein, who was bin Laden's sworn enemy.
Oh, yes, sorry, Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. I forgot, there was that guy "Curveball," the guy in Germany who told us that Saddam had those mobile biological weapons labs that Colin Powell relied on so heavily in his UN address. But, as CBS's 60 Minutes reported Sunday, the German government had told the Bush Administration very clearly that its great weapons expert was a just another immigrant trying to hustle a green card.
As for nukes (the real WMD), although Iraq didn't have them, Pakistan did--at least seventy ready to explode--as well as the airplanes and missiles that could deliver them. Worse, the "father of the Islamic bomb," Abdul Qadeer Khan, whom the 9/11 Commission called Pakistan's most revered nuclear weapons expert, "was leading the most dangerous nuclear smuggling ring ever disclosed." It was Khan who provided the key technology, uranium enrichment materials crucial to the nuke programs of Libya, Iran and North Korea. And it was Musharraf who pardoned him, made him to this day unavailable to US intelligence agents and, after a very loose form of house arrest, recently announced that he was now, as in the slogan of Southwest Airlines, free to move about the country.
No problem--why hold a little nuclear proliferation against our favored dictator when he's doing such a good job denying Al Qaeda and other religious fanatics a base of operations in Pakistan? Except that he did nothing of the sort. The all-important Pakistan border territory adjoining Afghanistan is more hospitable now to terrorists than ever before. As for bin Laden and the others Bush was going to get "dead or alive," US experts routinely concede that those terrorists have found a haven on Musharraf's side of the border.
So where did the $10 billion go, and that's not counting covert funds, that Bush gave Musharraf to beef up his military to better combat the terrorists? Well, clearly the Pakistani army is very strong--just look at the martial law it has been able to impose on judges and other folks who actually believe in the rule of law. But wait, Musharraf will back down; a deal was all but brokered, and Benazir Bhutto, whose adherence to democracy is as compelling as her family's rich history of corruption, is waiting in the wings.
Condi Rice is on the phone, so hopefully Musharraf can be bought off and the free world once again served by the nation Bush designated "a major non-NATO ally." But there is a bright side, for one adviser traveling with Rice was quoted in the Washington Post as saying, "Thank heavens for small favors," meaning that compared with Pakistan, "Iraq looks pretty good." Talk about lowered expectations.


Comments