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On May 9, the Toronto Star newspaper published an editorial
entitled, “Donald Rumsfeld should resign now.” The demand was of course based
on the media-manufactured “atrocities” of Abu Ghraib.
That’s odd, I thought. I couldn’t recall ever seeing an American newspaper demand that an official of a foreign country resign.
Bush
has apologized for the abuse, which he called ‘abhorrent.’ He says the soldiers
responsible will be punished. But his words are not enough. They will not
erase the anger raging throughout the Arab world, as well as across the United
States, for the indignities inflicted upon the prisoners. Nor will they help
Bush to retain, let alone attract, other coalition partners in the U.S.-led
war in Iraq.
Oh, so the Arabs loved us and then came Abu Ghraib.
During
his term as president, Harry S. Truman had a sign on his desk that read:
‘The Buck Stops Here.’ Sadly, Bush seems to have forgotten the sign. Senior
defence officials must take responsibility for these atrocities. More than
just a few privates and sergeants should be punished.
The
logical implication of the above paragraph is not that Rumsfeld should quit,
but that Bush should resign. And what “atrocities?” Atrocities were perpetrated
on four American civilians in Fallujah; what transpired in Abu Ghraib since
the Americans took control of it was on the order of abuse and degradation,
not atrocities. Under Saddam, the prison was an atrocity factory, but then
the Star was curiously silent on the matter.
Indeed,
responsibility lies at the top, with the secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld.
He should resign — and if he doesn't, Bush should fire him. As for Bush himself,
American voters will decide his fate in the November elections when he tries
to win a second term…
Can’t you just see the Star’s editorial board licking their chops with glee, thinking, “We’ve got him! We’ve lassoed that cowboy!”
As
much as anyone, Rumsfeld is responsible for the Iraqi mess. His hard ‘go-it-alone’
stance on the war scared off allies who could have formed a truly multinational
force under the guidance of the United Nations. Also, he has shown poor judgment
in not informing Bush early about the extent of the abuse. With each passing
day, more photos become public and the scandal deepens. Rumsfeld warned Friday
there are ‘a lot more photos and videos that exist’ that will only worsen
the crisis.
This
is nothing more than anti-American boilerplate. Rumsfeld didn’t scare off
anyone. The anonymous “European allies” the editorial cites are France and
Germany, which were eventually exposed as our enemies, and who only used
the appearance of being our allies – especially in the case of France – to
drag out the process interminably, and make a fool out of Secretary of State
Colin Powell. As French foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin later admitted,
France never intended to support us, no matter what. And the same went for
our former ally, Germany.
The UN cited by the Star is the same anti-American organization whose
leaders in Baghdad refused American security, which could have prevented
their deaths and the deaths of their subordinates on October 27. The same
UN that turned tail and ran, right after that date. The same UN, whose leaders
never wanted us to go into Iraq in the first place, because they (along with
our “European allies”) didn’t want anyone to discover that they had been
filling their pockets with billions of dollars in bribes from Saddam, via
the UN oil-for-fraud program, while Iraqi children starved or died for want
of medicine.
The
International Red Cross also said Friday that it warned U.S. authorities
last year of a broad ‘pattern and a system’ of abuse of Iraqi prisoners by
American soldiers, including killings.
That
would be the same IRC which in its anti-American and anti-Christian bigotry,
banned the singing of “God Bless America” at post-911 Red Cross events, which
puts its ambulances in the service of terrorists in Israel, and which in its anti-Semitism, refuses to admit the Israeli Magen David Adom
ambulance service, which has an unblemished record in aiding the wounded,
regardless of religion or creed, into its organization. It would be the same
IRC, which has long sought to seize control of disposition of the terrorists
America has caught since the War in Afghanistan began in October, 2001. And
it would be the same IRC which was worthless, when Saddam was in power. If
the seditious media at home and anti-American media abroad are desperately
spinning the Abu Ghraib into a story of “atrocities,” it would surely have
pounced on the IRC charges, had they been supported by the slightest wisp
of evidence.
Bush
must deal quickly to end this scandal. Failure to do so could result in the
demise of his own presidency, and endanger American lives abroad.
He
should start by dumping Rumsfeld, for it is clear he needs to find new people
to head the defence department, leaders who will be able to assure Americans,
and Iraqis, that such horrific abuses won't happen again.
Nonsense.
These guys hate Bush, and want him to do whatever will cripple his presidency,
his prosecution of the war, and his re-election prospects. Therefore, you
can be sure that their recommendations are not intended to save his presidency.
The same day I sent the following letter to the Star, at lettertoed@thestar.ca.
Americans need to start ensuring that our foreign critics – and not just
the Villepins – get a dose of their own medicine, every time they seek to
interfere in the workings of our government. Freedom of speech -- which few
of our foreign critics’ countries protect -- is a two-way street. And as
Harry Truman famously said, “If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen.”
Let’s just see if our foreign critics can take it, as well as they dish it
out.
To the Editor:
In
a May 9 editorial, you demanded that American Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld resign, and failing that, that Pres. Bush fire him. That struck
me as odd. We Americans don’t order Canadian public officials to resign,
and if we did, you would attack us for improperly interfering in your internal
affairs. Your argument for firing Rumsfeld could not have been more dishonest:
You claim that such an act would quell Arab anger, restore support among
European countries, and help Pres. Bush get re-elected. But you know full
well that the nations in question wished the worst on America before Abu
Ghraib, as did you, and like you, will not be appeased. The real reason The Star,
the Arabs, and many Europeans want Rumsfeld’s head, is because he’s so good
at his job, because you want America to lose the war on terror, and because
you correctly believe that eliminating Rumsfeld and his team is the best
way to cause America’s defeat in Iraq, and thus Pres. Bush’s defeat in the
coming election.
You
have inspired me to interfere in Canadian affairs, and call on my countrymen
to join with me, beginning with the demand that Toronto Star Managing Editor Mary Deanne Shears resign, or failing that, be fired for professional misconduct.
Signed,
Nicholas Stix
Mary Deanne Shears should resign now! And if she won’t resign, Star management should fire her.
N.B. Please consider signing the petition in support of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that The Federalist
has initiated. Please consider as well, twisting the arms of, or blackmailing
everyone you know into signing it. At press time, the petition had over 119,000
signatures, but the Kerry campaign claims that a petition that it started,
calling for the Secretary’s ouster, has over 250,000 signatures. Let’s try
and get at least 300,000 signatures in support of Rumsfeld. (A million would
be even better!)
New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix has written for Toogood Reports, Middle American News, the New York Post, Daily News, American Enterprise, Insight, Chronicles, Newsday and many other publications. His recent work is collected at The Critical Critic.
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