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by
William Rivers Pitt
May
15, 2003
The
compounds were a holdover from the Saudi oil boom of the 1970s, a place where
non-Muslims as well as Saudis seeking distance from the hard social rules in
Riyadh could have a drink, a place where their wives could wear a swimsuit to
the pool without being covered from head to toe. It was a place where you could
be a Westerner in the beating heart of Islam, driving distance from Mecca and
Medina. The compounds had names al Hamra, Vinnell and Eshbiliya gated and
guarded communities for those doing long-term business in the Saudi capital.
At 11:25pm on Monday night, these protected
compounds transformed into the newest battleground in George W. Bush's War on
Terror. Gunmen clashed with sentries, hands reached through barriers to slap
buttons that opened the gates, and three bomb-laden vehicles roared in to
explode themselves and their drivers beside the choicest targets they could
find. When it was done, at least eight Americans were among the 29 people dead.
Secretary
of State Colin Powell rushed out to proclaim that the attacks had the
"earmarks of al Qaeda" due to the fact, he said, that the whole thing
was staged with multiple impacts brought home by suicide squads. In fact, the
evidence of al Qaeda involvement in this attack is almost beyond doubt.
The
spokesman for al Qaeda, Thabet bin Qais, was quoted by reporters on May 7
that is one week ago, for the record - as saying, quite bluntly, that Osama bin
Laden's forces were gearing up for a series of attacks. The London-based
Al-Majalla magazine received an email the day before the attacks from an al
Qaeda operative named Abu Mohammed Ablaj. The email described arms the
operatives had stored and martyrdom squads that were about to attack.
"Beside targeting the heart of America, among the strategic priorities now
is to target and execute operations in the Gulf countries and allies of the
United States," Ablaj wrote.
American
agents on the ground in Saudi Arabia, upon hearing these warnings, tried in
vain to get security beefed up around these soft targets. These pleas were
ignored until explosions rocked Riyadh.
George
W. Bush, speaking at a rally in Indianapolis to promote his tax cut, said,
"The United States will find the killers, and they will learn the meaning
of American justice."
Does
this sound familiar? It should.
The
Bush administration was warned many weeks before the 9/11 attacks that Osama
bin Laden and al Qaeda were planning to attack prominent American targets with
hijacked commercial airplanes. The Egyptian, Israeli, Russian and Germam
intelligence services delivered these warnings in the strongest possible terms.
On the home front, FBI officials like Robert Wright, John O'Neill and the
officers in the Minnesota branch were screaming that an attack was impending, that
we were unprepared, that we were ignoring the blood-obvious facts staring us in
the face.
Nothing,
but nothing, was done. The explosions came, the bodies dropped, and here we
are. This is a microcosm of September 11, right down to the Presidential reaction.
American
justice did a bang-up job on the city of Baghdad, and the thousands of Iraqi
civilians who were killed, maimed and continue even today to die there can
attest to the callous recklessness behind our idea of "Doing What Is
Right." Unsurprisingly, the war in Iraq did exactly nothing to make our
citizens at home or abroad safer. The eight American corpses who were blown
sideways out of their homes in Riyadh are evidence enough of that. In fact, the
scene at the compounds in Saudi Arabia proves that our war did, in fact, make
the world a more dangerous place.
The
CIA calls what happened in Riyadh 'blowback.' There will be more, as promised
by Thabet bin Qais, who said al Qaeda had reorganized and was planning attacks
against the United States on the scale of September 11. The bloodstains and
smoking craters in Riyadh indicate that these guys always keep their promises.
We
went to war in Iraq on a number of flawed and blatantly incorrect premises.
There is no fearful arsenal of mass destruction weapons; there is no liberty
for the Iraqi people; there were no terrorists, nor was there ever a connection
between Saddam Hussein and 9/11. To fight this war, we drastically scaled back
our operations in Afghanistan the new Bush budget has precisely no dollars
set aside to pay for operations and democratization/reconstruction there and
allowed al Qaeda to reassemble in safety. We also alienated the entire global
community in the process. We need their help, whether we like it or not, to get
the intelligence required to stop these attacks.
"The
United States will find the killers, and they will learn the meaning of
American justice," said George. Will they learn this meaning the way Osama
bin Laden, still alive and free after almost two years, has learned it? Will
they learn it the way Saddam Hussein, still alive and free as well, has learned
it? Thousands and thousands of Iraqi and Afghan civilians have learned what
justice means to George W. Bush. It means a terrible grinding death in the dirt
while the real killers get away.
Such
a catalog of failure and shame is the Bush administration record to date. They
walked away from the Israel/Palestine talks and let that situation turn into a
bloody horror. They pointedly ignored a vast array of warnings about impending
terror attacks in the summer of 2001 and let that situation turn into the
nightmare we currently endure. They fought a war in Afghanistan and walked away
before the job was done, allowing the enemy to escape and regroup. They poured
vital resources into an Iraq war that did nothing to curb terrorism and did
everything to inspire and motivate the terrorists. They passed tax cuts and
budgets that steal money from the coffers of Homeland Security that means
cops and fire fighters and emergency response crews to make sure their wealthy
friends and corporate sponsors feel well and truly loved.
September
11 did not remove from the earth the concept of right and wrong. It did not
redefine the meaning of the words Lie, Steal and Murder. It did not reinvent
reality in the way Bush wishes it did. New York Governor George Pataki, at a
pro-Iraq-war rally on April 10, said, "The war started here on Sept. 11,
2001." This statement attempted to directly connect the Iraqi civilians
who were getting cluster-bombed with the deaths of those 3,000 who perished on
that terrible day. This was a lie, a wretched one, promoted for months by the
Bush administration and promulgated by mouthpieces like Pataki.
Now,
in Riyadh, we see what we have won. We have been awarded courtside seats at the
event of the century. George W. Bush and his handlers believe 9/11 granted them
the ability to reinvent America and the world according to their own perverted
ultra-conservative views. We will be lucky to live through it. If we are smart,
we will get rid of these wretches before too many more bombs go off, before too
many more people die, before things go past the point of no return, before
America is a burned-out hulk crouching in defeat beside history's wide highway.
William Rivers
Pitt
is
a teacher from Boston, MA. He is author of the bestselling book War On Iraq:
What Team Bush Doesnt Want You To Know (Context Books, 2002) with Scott
Ritter, and The Greatest Sedition is Silence (Pluto Press, 2003), now
available at http://www.silenceissedition.com.