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The return of
Cover-up Kissinger
Plus, Bush hawks and Christian right go batty over Islam
by Molly Ivins
Dec 10, 2002 (Working for Change): Good grief. I turn my back for 10
minutes, and they bring back the old War Criminal. Two generations of
Americans have come to adulthood since Henry Kissinger last held political
power, so I need to explain that War Criminal is not an affectionate
sobriquet: The man is, in fact, a war criminal -- wanted for questioning in
Chile, Argentina and France (concerning French citizens who disappeared in
Chile). He cannot travel to Britain, Brazil and many other countries because
they cannot guarantee his immunity from legal proceedings.
In addition to his role in the Chilean coup that brought the regime of Gen.
Pinochet to power, Kissinger is wanted for questioning about the
international terrorist network called Operation Condor, which conducted
killings, kidnappings and bombings in several countries, including this one:
the 1976 bombing in Washington, D.C., that killed a noted Chilean dissident
and his companion.
Kissinger's most notorious crime was the secret bombing of Cambodia and Laos
during the Vietnam War. William Shawcross argued persuasively in his book
"Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia" that the
Cambodian bombing unleashed the Khmer Rouge on that country -- which, if
true, certainly ups Kissinger's body count.
He is also a notorious liar. He has lied repeatedly to Congress, the press
and the public; he is a toady to power and a lackey of the Establishment,
and for many years now the hireling of despotic regimes around the world.
Old Cover-Up Kissinger, the man who double-crossed the Iraqi Kurds... just
the man to lead an independent inquiry into 9-11.
The cynicism of this insult to the families of those who died on 9-11 is
just flabbergasting. We knew the Bush administration opposed the whole idea
of an independent inquiry, but this adds supreme insult to injury.
The cover-up has already started: Kissinger insists he need not reveal the
identities of his client regimes. He said law firms are not required to
reveal the names of their clients. That's a two-lie answer, no record for
Henry the K. He doesn't run a law firm, he runs an international consulting
business. And in the second place, law firms are indeed obliged to publicly
register their lobbying clients. The only time I ever interviewed Kissinger,
he told me three lies in the first sentence he spoke, each word. Dropping.
From. His. Mouth. Like. A. Stone. He lies with more authority than anyone I
have ever known.
For those of you who are interested in learning more about our most famous
living war criminal, I recommend Seymour Hersh's book "The Price of Power:
Kissinger in the Nixon White House," which was widely attacked but no
factual error was ever found in it. Also, Christopher Hitchens' "The Trial
of Henry Kissinger" is a definitive argument for the war criminal charge.
If you want to get something good out of this cynical ploy, you can at least
haul out your old Tom Lehrer records and tool down memory lane. Lehrer, the
great social satirist, stopped writing the day they gave Henry Kissinger the
Nobel Peace Prize.
Meanwhile, our neo-con hawks have moved from the bellicose to the bizarre.
Ken Adelman, a member of Bush's Defense Policy Board, has joined several
other hawks in direct attacks on Islam. Calling Islam a peaceful religion
"is an increasingly hard argument to make," announced Adelman. "The more you
examine the religion, the more militaristic it seems. After all, its
founder, Mohammed, was a warrior, not a peace advocate like Jesus."
Another member of the Pentagon advisory board, Eliot Cohen, says, "Nobody
would like to think that a major world religion has a deeply aggressive and
dangerous strain in it -- a strain often excused or misrepresented in the
name of good feelings. But uttering uncomfortable and unpleasant truths is
one of the things that defines leadership."
The Christian right has gone completely batty on the subject: Rev. Jerry
Falwell called Mohammed "a terrorist," Rev. Franklin Graham said Islam is
"evil" and so forth.
Let's see, where does that leave Christianity, the religion of peace and
love, founded by the Prince of Peace?
Among the more notable Christian crimes were the unbearably bloody Crusades,
the Thirty Years War, the Inquisition, innumerable pogroms, regular
slaughter of Protestants, counter-slaughter by Protestants, genocide against
Native Americans (featuring biological warfare), slavery, the Holocaust,
ethnic cleansing, Northern Ireland... and the list goes on and on and on.
People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. Especially when they
are making bellicose statements and beating the war drums relentlessly for
what may be an unnecessary war.
Source:
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=14213&CFID=4062932&CFTOKEN=2460872 |
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