In its efforts to portray George W. Bush in the most flattering possible
light, the liberal press in the US has jettisoned
whatever shreds of decorum and journalistic integrity it previously
retained. In the course of the past month, testimonials
to Bush’s astounding metamorphosis from mediocrity to greatness have
become almost commonplace in the pages
of such journals as the New York Times and the Washington Post.
This exercise in deception and self-delusion assumed grotesque proportions
last week when Bush held a nationally
televised, prime-time press conference. Bush’s meandering performance
reflected what he is: a severely limited man, ill-equipped intellectually
and politically to grasp the complexities of the situation that has unfolded
since the terror
attacks on New York and Washington.
The following day the New York Times published a rapturous editorial
headlined “Mr. Bush’s New Gravitas.”
Marveling at the supposed transformation of the man “who was barely
elected president last year,” the Times
declared: “He seemed confident, determined, sure of his purpose and
in full command of the complex array of
political and military challenges that he faces in the wake of the
terrible terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.
It was a reassuring performance that should give comfort to an uneasy
nation.”
The opening accolade set the tone for the rest of the commentary, which
concluded on the following note:
“In all, it was a commanding appearance that should give citizens a
sense that their president has done much to
master the complexities of this new global crisis.... [Bush] seemed
to be a president whom the nation could
follow in these difficult times.”
This was an astonishing appraisal. The George W. Bush it described bore
virtually no resemblance to the man
who gave a White House press conference on October 11. That man tried
to string together bits and pieces of
ideas that he obviously did not comprehend, resulting in a jumble of
non sequiturs, banalities and evasions.
Were the Times editorialists watching the same press conference?
The members of the White House press corps did their best to give the
president a free ride, refraining from
asking any questions that challenged the dishonest claims that are
being used to justify a war in Afghanistan
and an assault on civil liberties within the US.
No one asked Bush to explain how a group of terrorists could implement
a plan to murder thousands, destroy
the World Trade Center and bomb the Pentagon, without being detected
or deterred. No reporter noted the
White House’s failure to this day to provide concrete evidence of Osama
bin Laden’s guilt. In its collective
cowardice, the press corps refused even to question Bush’s efforts
to muzzle the press.
Of the economic and strategic aims underlying the war in petroleum-rich
Central Asia, there was not a hint.
The three-letter word beginning in “o” and ending in “l” was never
uttered.
Nevertheless, Bush proved incapable of making a coherent case for the
government’s course of action.
Far from appearing “confident, determined and sure of his purpose,”
Bush was tentative, rambling and vague.
As for his “command of the complex array of political and military
challenges,” the president could not even
repeat with any consistency the mantras that had been formulated by
his advisers.
What he initially termed “the first, and we hope, the only [war] of
the twenty-first century” became, the second
time around, “the first battle in the war of the twenty-first century,”
and, a few minutes later, “the new wars
of the twenty-first century.”
As for the nature of the war, its duration and aims, Bush could offer
little insight beyond the assertion that it was
“a different kind of war,” a phrase he repeated several times. Again
and again Bush grabbed for such catchphrases.
There was much talk about “smoking him out of his cave” and references
to bin Laden as “the evil-doer.”
Bush’s remarks contained glaring contradictions. One reporter, noting
that US officials could not say for sure
whether bin Laden was still in Afghanistan, asked whether the war on
terrorism could be won if the prime target was
not found. Bush replied that “success or failure depends not on bin
Laden.” He continued, “[S]uccess or failure depends
upon routing [sic] out terrorism where it may exist all around the
world. He’s just one person, a part of a network.”
How terrorism can be “routed out” all over the world without capturing
or eliminating the man whom the US claims
is the world’s preeminent terrorist was not explained. Having downplayed
the significance of bin Laden in one breath, moreover, Bush credited him
with possessing vast powers in the next, declaring that the Saudi exile
had
“hijacked a country” and “forced a country to accept his radical thoughts.”
Another reporter pointed to that day’s FBI warning of fresh terrorist
attacks and asked the entirely legitimate
question: “Given the complete generality of that warning, what does
it really accomplish, aside from scaring people
into not doing what you’ve urged them to do—getting back to their normal
lives...?” Bush was plainly at a loss
to unravel this conundrum.
It was “a general threat on America,” he said, adding, “had it been
a specific threat, we would have contacted those
to whom the threat was directed.” He went on to say the American people
“should take comfort” from official
warnings of imminent attacks, because they showed the government was
“on full alert.” He then cited “positive news”
of an increase in commercial aircraft load factors and a rise in hotel
occupancy rates. “We are getting back to normal,”
Bush declared.
This was a typical Bush non sequitur. He wanted to counter suspicions
that the FBI alert was a ploy to create panic
and stampede the public behind his war policy and his attacks on democratic
rights. So he insisted that the threat of
an imminent attack was real. But from this dire premise he somehow
concluded that the appropriate response of
the American people was to “get back to normal.”
People should also be vigilant, he declared. But when asked, twice,
exactly what this vigilance entailed and how
ordinary people could protect themselves, Bush was at a loss. “The
American people, obviously, if they see something
that is suspicious, something out of the norm that looks suspicious,
they ought to notify local law authorities,” he said.
In response to the final question of the news conference—“What are Americans
supposed to look for and report to
the police or to the FBI?”—Bush could do no better than: “If you see
suspicious people lurking around petrochemical
plants, report it to law enforcement.”
Here is how the Times described the president’s attempt to handle these
questions: “Mr. Bush was especially effective
in talking to the American people about their fears. He spoke candidly
about new warnings that additional terrorist
attacks could come at any time, but described the many precautions
that the government is taking to defend the
home front. He was at once firm in his resolve to protect the nation
and fatherly in his calm advice to get on with
the life of the country as much as people can.”
In this mixture of boot-licking and deceit, one claim stands out because
it calls into question whether the authors
even watched the press conference. It is factually untrue that Bush
“described the many precautions that the
government is taking to defend the home front.” He did no such thing.
The Times continued: “Using a mixture of straight talk, statesmanship
and a touch of humor here and there, Mr. Bush
used the press conference to clarify and sharpen his positions on several
core issues in the war against terrorism.”
The “clarifying” and “sharpening” which the newspaper lauded consisted
of refusing to place a time limit on the war
and allusions to setting up a client regime in Afghanistan, with the
United Nations being called on to provide a
legal fig leaf. The Times also praised Bush for threatening Iraq without
committing the US to an imminent attack on Baghdad—“a step that the nation
is not yet [emphasis added] prepared to take,” in the words of the editorial.
The Times was particularly pleased with Bush’s talk of humanitarian
aid to the “impoverished people of Afghanistan.”
It described as “heartfelt” Bush’s most sickening display of hypocrisy—his
appeal for American children to send
donations to the children of Afghanistan.
In this connection, the Times passed over in silence a highly damning
admission. Bush made a passing reference to
Washington’s “previous engagement in the Afghan area,” and said his
administration had learned from that experience
that “we should not just simply leave after a military objective has
been achieved.”
Bush was referring to US support for the Islamic Mujahedin during the
Soviet invasion of the 1980s. As is well known, the
guerillas armed and financed by the CIA in that period included Osama
bin Laden and the precursors of the Taliban. No
government played a greater role than the US in fostering the growth
of these reactionary forces in Afghanistan, and once the
Soviet army withdrew, Washington pulled out and left the population
at the mercy of rival warlords and Islamic fundamentalist
militias. The result was years of civil war that virtually destroyed
the country.
Thus, by the time Bush concluded his remarks with a play at compassion,
describing the horrific conditions facing Afghanistan’s
children, he had already pointed unwittingly to the culpability of
the US for these very conditions.
There were other remarkable statements that the Times chose to overlook,
such as Bush’s assertion that the major mistake in
Vietnam was allowing elected officials to control the actions of the
military, his inane pronouncement that the lesson to be drawn
from the events of September 11 was that “there is evil in the world,”
and his profession of “amazement” at the widespread
hatred for the US in the Arab and Muslim world.
What accounts for this simultaneous display of ignorance and dishonesty?
Bush is a man who has not read a serious book in the
last twenty years, if not in his entire life. He knows almost nothing
about history, and even less about Central Asia. He is making
war in a part of the world about which he is uninformed. It is doubtful
that prior to September 11 he could have named the
countries bordering Afghanistan.
He lacks a command of facts, let alone the ability to form broad generalizations
that are rooted in facts and history, without
which serious politics is impossible. He is abysmally unqualified for
his position. All of this is well known in ruling class political
and media circles.
The Times’ editors know that Bush’s press conference bore no resemblance
to their adulatory review. Why, then, did they
publish such a shameless tract?
The media is determined that there will be no repetition of the Vietnam-era
“credibility gap” because there will be no challenge
from their quarter to the claims of the government. This open transformation
of the press into a propaganda arm of the state is a
symptom of the far-reaching degeneration of democratic institutions
in America.
Articles and commentaries such as that of the New York Times, and they
are legion, reflect the contempt of the
American ruling elite for the public. The media is not engaged simply
in influencing public opinion. American politics
has reached the stage where public opinion itself is entirely synthetic.
Lies and half-truths have become the ingredients of a perfected system
of manipulation that is only remotely connected to facts
and has virtually no reference to the concerns and moods of the broad
mass of the population. Public opinion is nothing more
than the manner in which the corporate oligarchy and its government
agents package their own outlook.
The entire media operation has become an exercise not only in mass deception,
but also in self-delusion. It is a closed circle
that reflects the extreme alienation of the political system from the
general population.
Notwithstanding the polls showing overwhelming support for the war,
the more profound mood of the American people is one
of unease and fear that the conflict will spiral out of control. It
is inevitable that the staggering levels of social inequality and
political alienation that characterize American society will find expression
in enormous upheavals, for which an insulated ruling
elite and its media propagandists are ill prepared.