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Democrats and Other False Friends: The Crimes of Jimmy Carter |
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by Paul D'Amato Counter Punch Entered into the database on Wednesday, January 18th, 2006 @ 15:27:46 MST |
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Noam Chomsky recently made an incisive comment about the peculiar political situation
we find ourselves in. When asked by Alternet's Geov Parrish, "Is George Bush in political trouble?"
Chomsky responded: "George Bush would be in severe political trouble if there were an
opposition political party in the country. Just about every day, they're
shooting themselves in the foot. The striking fact about contemporary American
politics is that the Democrats are making almost no gain from this. The
only gain that they're getting is that the Republicans are losing support. "Now, again, an opposition party would be making hay, but the Democrats
are so close in policy to the Republicans that they can't do anything about
it. When they try to say something about Iraq, George Bush turns back to
them, or Karl Rove turns back to them, and says, 'How can you criticize
it? You all voted for it.' And, yeah, they're basically correct." Chomsky has hit on the key reason why--in spite of a swirl of problems that
continue to trip up the Bush administration and the Republican Party, from Iraq
to a host of political and financial scandals at home--they're still on their
feet. That doesn't mean that there aren't any Democrats criticizing Bush. But the
parameters of the argument are extremely narrow, hinging on the idea that the
occupation of Iraq is being "mishandled." The semi-oppositional stance of the Democrats to Bush takes as its
starting point a common agreement between the two parties that the U.S. should
be able to dominate the world. The worry is that Bush, despite the rhetoric,
isn't doing a very good job. Former Democratic President Jimmy Carter is one of those critics. He wrote
a piece in mid-November expressing his growing concern over "a host of
radical government policies that now threaten many basic principles espoused
by all previous administrations, Democratic and Republican." What really bothers Carter about this administration is that "Regardless
of the costs, there are determined efforts by top U.S. leaders to exert American
imperial dominance throughout the world." Carter may come across today as a sort of benign and liberal old sage, but
these statements are in flat contradiction to his practice as the 39th president
from 1977-1981. When asked if the U.S. should rebuild Vietnam, a country it
destroyed at a cost of three million Vietnamese lives and 58,000 U.S., his glib
response was, "Well, the destruction was mutual." The Shah Pahlevi regime, which had come to power in Iran in a CIA-sponsored
coup in 1953, was renowned for the murderous brutality of its secret police.
Carter visited the Shah in 1979 and praised him for his "progressive administration"
at a time when the Shah's military was gunning down thousands of unarmed demonstrators. In response to the Shah's fall in the 1979 revolution, Carter, in his 1980
State of the Union address, set forth his Carter Doctrine: "Let our position
be absolutely clear: An attempt by any outside force to gain control of the
Persian Gulf region will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of
the United States of America, and such an assault will be repelled by any means
necessary, including military force." Paul D'Amato is the Associate Editor of the International
Socialist Review. He can be reached at: pdamato@isreview.org |