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Want a Cover-Up Expert? Kissinger's Your Man
History Puts His Credibility at Zero in the 9/11 Probe
Robert Scheer
Los Angeles Times | Commentary
Tuesday,
3 December, 2002
The president
clearly does not want to know the truth about Sept. 11. Otherwise
he would not have appointed Henry Kissinger to head an inquiry
into the origins of arguably the most successful terrorist attack
in history. Long an unabashed advocate of concealing and distorting
the truth in the name of national security, he is the last guy
who has the right to ask someone in government, "What did you
know and when did you know it?"
Kissinger, after
all, was the member of the Nixon White House most bent on destroying
Daniel Ellsberg for giving a copy of the Pentagon Papers, the
government's secret history of the Vietnam War, to the New York
Times. His obsession with preventing all government leaks, except
those of his creation, is well documented in the Nixon tapes.
And this is the man who publicly lied about everything from the
bombing of Cambodia to the cover-up of the Watergate break-in
of Democratic Party headquarters to the overthrow and death of
the democratically elected leader of Chile.
But even if truth
serum could be slipped into his morning espresso, Kissinger still
would be an appalling choice to lead what should be the fearless,
unbiased fact-finding investigation necessary to prevent future
tragedies like the destruction of the World Trade Center towers.
He has been much
too personally embroiled in the gamesmanship, greed and opportunism
underlying politics in the Mideast; neither is he willing to
disclose his long list of lucrative government and business contracts
that pose potential conflicts of interest.
For example,
Kissinger Associates, the former secretary of State's ultra-connected
consulting firm, has had dealings in the past with Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait -- the two nations most closely linked with the 9/11
hijackers -- and was the subject of a congressional investigation
for its role in the $4-billion bankrolling of Saddam Hussein
in the late 1980s by the Atlanta office of Italy's BNL bank.
Kissinger Associates then included Brent Scowcroft, who became
national security advisor for President George H.W. Bush, and
Lawrence Eagleburger, secretary of State in that administration.
That those ties
crisscross with other suspicious activities of close Bush family
advisors -- including Poppy Bush's consulting role with the Carlyle
Group that took him to Saudi Arabia to drum up business -- makes
Kissinger's selection as understandable as it is dishonest.
The truth is,
the administration doesn't want a commission looking into what
went wrong on Sept. 11 because its focus might turn too close
to home. The incoming Bush administration in 2001 ignored dire
warnings from Clinton National Security Advisor Sandy Berger
that Al Qaeda was the major security threat facing the U.S. Instead,
the new administration focused on the war on drugs and even funneled "humanitarian" aid
to Taliban-run Afghanistan as a reward for the fundamentalists'
eradication of an opium crop.
The truth about
Sept. 11 might dampen Bush's exploitation of tragedy to draw
attention from a sagging economy, a down stock market and stunning
financial scandals that began with the downfall of Bush's close
buddies at Enron. How convenient to divert the public's attention
from other problems with the notion that the whole world must
be turned upside down to combat terrorism, when marginal and
avoidable mistakes by our government allowed the dreams of madmen
to be fulfilled in blood.
Would the monstrous
new homeland security bureaucracy really have protected us from
a few box-cutter-wielding nuts? How difficult, after all, is
it to prevent people already on a terrorist wanted list from
entering the country to attend U.S. flight schools? How hard
is it for the president of the United States to get the FBI and
the CIA to talk to each other? And why are we apparently going
to war with Iraq, which had nothing to do with Sept. 11, instead
of with Saudi Arabia, which did?
The Bush administration
was floundering before Sept. 11, and it still seems to have difficulty
dealing with the nation's domestic problems. Instead of facing
that harsh reality, Bush wants us to welcome the shredding of
constitutional protections, allegedly for our own protection,
and be excited at the prospect of a sideshow war with Hussein.
Best to not look
too hard at any of this. The Bush administration resisted convening
a 9/11 commission for more than a year and, when forced by overwhelming
public pressure to do so, picked an infamous man with the legendary
chops to quash any search for truth.
(In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes.)
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