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The untold story
By Robert C. Koehler
Back to Saddam one last time, and his trial and death, and the
strong possibility - indeed, the common-sense conclusion - that
part of the point of the charade was to silence him.
Why else try him only for his earliest crimes when the later
ones racked up the big numbers (and, incidentally, served so
nicely as a moral cover for our own activities in Iraq)?
Our alliance with Saddam in his "foment war with Iran" phase is
so well documented - who hasn't seen the photo of him shaking
hands with Donald Rumsfeld, President Reagan's special envoy, in
1983, for instance? - that there's almost certain to be
something hideously compromising in the secret record, which an
ex-dictator at large would surely have talked about and a real
trial would have unearthed.
My unwillingness to let go of this matter, even though the news
cycle has moved on, is not to stoke my own or anyone else's
outrage into a pointless frenzy. It's simply to ask a couple
questions: If the truth about war is fated always to be tangled
in secrecy, how can we ever become less stupid in our assessment
of the new one on the horizon? And even more significantly,
perhaps, what conditions - what belief system - would permit
raw, unspun truth, no matter how unsettling, to have a place at
the center of our national thought and dialogue? What's it going
to take, in short, for us to grow up?
Bill Moyers, speaking recently in New York, noted that, in the
wake of the Democrats' recapture of Congress, job one is a bit
deeper than merely choosing from among several dozen
long-neglected agenda items - increasing the minimum wage,
reducing the interest rate on college loans, funding public
transportation, and so on - to push piecemeal into law.
"America needs something more right now than a 'must-do' list
from liberals and progressives," Moyers said. "America needs a
different story." The country needs, he said, to retell itself
the story that embraces the best of our dreams and history and
promise - the story of inclusiveness and human rights, the story
of public education, Social Security, the Marshall Plan, the
civil rights revolution - and shout down the din of the
free-market ideologues and latter-day robber barons.
While I heartily agree, I would add: America needs not only a
new but a different kind of story - one that sees beyond itself,
you might say, isn't fear-based and, embracing its own flaws,
has the capacity to change as new data warrants, self-correct
and evolve. We need a story that doesn't require its adherents
to deny reality.
This, I think, is what Albert Einstein had in mind at the dawn
of the atomic age, when he said: "Our world faces a crisis as
yet unperceived by those possessing the power to make great
decisions for good and evil. The unleashed power of the atom has
changed everything save our modes of thinking, and thus we drift
toward unparalleled catastrophe."
We've been lucky so far. We've dodged the nuclear bullet despite
a progression of leaders wedded to old, reckless modes of
thinking and displaying, it seems, an increasingly cavalier
attitude about the great physicist's vision of "unparalleled
catastrophe."
And while George Bush is perhaps not the most cavalier of these,
he's certainly the one in possession of the most power to do
good or evil with his decisions. "We must make sure that our
military has the capability to stay in the fight for a long
period of time," he said in December, announcing to the world
his intention to stick to his guns in Iraq despite the Iraq
Study Group report calling in no uncertain terms for withdrawal.
Apparently nothing is capable of amending the story by which
Bush governs, least of all the consequences he has already
churned up. "The enemy is merciless and violent," he said,
flailing away at the corpse of his "mission" to liberate the
Iraqis, or whatever. "They can't run us out of the Middle East .
. . they can't intimidate America."
When the "enemy" says the same thing, what the world gets is
force bashing itself against force, both sides convinced they're
right and blind to their own excesses, which are, in any case,
visited on a subhuman other. Thus we hear of plans (both U.S.
and Israeli) to use nuclear bunker busters - "mini-nukes" - on a
defiant Iran, which would surely create a tidal wave of
retaliatory consequences that circle the globe and burrow into
the future.
What the Middle East needs instead is something like South
Africa's Truth Commission, which investigated not merely the
crimes of the agents of apartheid but the brutalities of the
African National Congress as well, with an eye far less to
punish than to understand. We need a story that begins: We're
all human, we're all complicit, and we all want to survive.
Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, is
an editor at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated
writer. You can respond to this at bkoehler@tribune.com or visit
his Web site at commonwonders.com.
Source: IslamiCity.com
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