Can Obama Level with the People?
Another terrorist outrage – this one in Paris – is spreading fear
and fury across Europe. Which makes this a key moment for President
Obama to finally level with the American people about how U.S.
“allies” — such as Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar — have been aiding
and abetting extremistsBy Robert Parry
November 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"
- The atrocities in Paris, killing more than 120 people, have
brought forth the usual condemnations against terrorism and
expressions of sympathy for the victims, but the larger question is
whether this latest shock will finally force Western leaders to
address the true root causes of the problem.
Will President Barack Obama and other leaders
finally level with the American people and the world about what the
underlying reasons for this madness are? Will Obama explain how U.S.
“allies” in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar,
have been fueling this Sunni extremism for years? Will he dare
recognize that Israeli repression of the Palestinians is a major
contributing factor, too?
On a practical level, will Obama finally release
those 28 pages from the congressional 9/11 report that addressed
evidence of Saudi support for the hijackers who attacked New York
and Washington in 2001?
Does he have the courage to explain how this
scourge of Sunni terrorism can be traced back even further to the
late 1970s when President Jimmy Carter started a small-scale covert
operation in Afghanistan to destabilize a Moscow-backed secular
regime in Kabul and that President Ronald Reagan then vastly
expanded the program with the help of the Saudis, pouring in a total
of $1 billion a year and giving rise to Saudi militant Osama bin
Laden and Al Qaeda?
Can Obama be convinced that telling hard truths to
the American people is not only vital to a democratic Republic in a
philosophical way but can have the practical effect of creating
crucial public support for rational policies? Will he realize that
propaganda schemes or
“strategic communications” may be clever short-term tricks to
manipulate the American people but they are ultimately
counterproductive and dangerous?
Will Obama finally take on Official Washington’s
well-entrenched neoconservatives and their “liberal interventionist”
junior varsity by challenging their innumerable false narratives?
Will he pointedly blame the neocons and the liberal hawks, including
those who run the editorial pages of The Washington Post and The New
York Times, for the disastrous Iraq War? Will he take on the “deep
state” dug in at the big-name think tanks, not just at neocon
havens like the American Enterprise Institute but at the
center-left Brookings Institution?
Can the President muster the courage to ally
himself with the American people, arming them with real information,
so they can act like true citizens in a Republic rather than cattle
being herded toward the slaughterhouse? Can he shake his own elitism
or his fear of social ostracism to somehow become a true leader in
his last year in office, rather than a timid follower of the
prevailing “group think”?
Just because the “important people” have fancy
credentials and went to the “right” schools, doesn’t mean that they
have any monopoly on wisdom. Indeed, in my nearly four decades
covering Official Washington, these “smart” folks have been wrong a
lot more than they have been right. A leader of historic dimensions
recognizes that reality and takes on the know-it-alls. In this case,
a leader who enlists the American public by giving them
reliable information could change this depressing dynamic.
If Obama could muster such courage and show trust
in the people, he could bend the prevailing false narratives in the
direction of truth and reality. On a practical level, he could help
make the current Syrian peace talks succeed by stopping his endless
repeating of the neocon/liberal-hawk mantra blaming President Bashar
al-Assad for the entire mess and insisting that “Assad must go.”
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “Hidden
Origins of Syria’s Civil War.”]
Twist Some Arms
Instead, Obama could twist the arms of his Saudi,
Qatari and Turkish “friends” to get them to halt their financing and
military support for Sunni jihadists associated with Al Qaeda and
its various spin-offs, like the Islamic State and al-Nusra Front.
And he could work cooperatively with Russian President Vladimir
Putin to squeeze concessions out of both the Assad regime and the
U.S.-financed “moderate” opposition so a unity government can begin
to restore order in Syria and isolate the extremists.
Once some security is achieved, the Syrian people
could hold elections to decide their own future and pick their own
leaders. That should not be the business of either Obama or Putin.
As part of this effort, Obama could finally
release the U.S. intelligence analyses on both jihadist funding and
the circumstances surrounding the lethal sarin attack outside
Damascus on Aug. 21, 2013, which the Obama administration hastily
blamed on Assad’s regime although later evidence pointed toward a
likely a provocation by Sunni extremists. [See Consortiumnews.com’s
“The
Collapsing Syria Sarin Case.”]
To create crucial space for cooperating with
Putin, Obama also could let the American people in on the reality
about the Ukraine crisis in 2014, which was used by the neocons and
liberal hawks to drive a wedge between Obama and Putin. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “What
Neocons Want from Ukraine Crisis.”]
U.S. intelligence analysts know a lot about key
turning points in that conflict, including the Feb. 20, 2014 sniper
attacks, which set the stage for ousting elected President Viktor
Yanukovych two days later, and the July 17, 2014 shoot-down of
Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was used to build an anti-Putin
hysteria. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “MH-17:
The Dog Still Not Barking.”]
I’m told that these tragedies became propaganda
weapons to deploy against Assad, Yanukovych and Putin rather than
horrific crimes that deserved serious investigation and
accountability. But whatever the ultimate conclusion about who is to
blame for these crimes, why has Obama withheld from the American
people what U.S. intelligence analysts know about those three
incidents?
It was Obama, after all, who talked so much about
“transparency” and trusting the American people as a candidate and
during his first days in office. But since then, he has conformed to
the elitist Orwellian approach of managing our perceptions rather
than giving us the facts.
Yet, if Obama could get his cooperation with Putin
back on track – recognizing how useful it was in 2013 when Putin
helped Obama get Assad to surrender all his chemical weapons and
assisted in wresting important concessions from Iran about its
nuclear program – then the two powers could also weigh in on
securing a peace agreement between the Israelis and the
Palestinians, another major irritant to peace in the region.
Indeed, it appears that the possibility of Obama
and Putin working together to force the Israelis to make meaningful
concessions for peace was a factor in the neocon determination to
turn an eminently manageable political dispute in Ukraine – over the
pace of its integration into Europe without rending its ties to
Russia – into the dangerous frontlines of a new Cold War.
The neocons and liberal hawks outmaneuvered Obama
who fell in line with the Putin-bashing, all the better to fit
within Official Washington’s in-crowd.
Thus, the Syrian crisis was left to fester with
Obama acquiescing to neocon/liberal-hawk demands for arming and
training “moderate” rebels although the President recognized that
the idea was a “fantasy.” He also resisted some of the more extreme
ideas, like an outright U.S. military invasion of Syria framed as a
humanitarian “safe zone.”
But the Paris tragedy is another reminder that it
is well past time for Obama to resurrect his helpful relationship
with Putin and restore the teamwork that held such promise toward
settling conflicts through negotiations, along the lines of the Iran
nuclear deal.
If Obama were to choose that route – which could
be implemented through a combination of truth-telling to the
American people and pragmatic big-power diplomacy with Russia – he
could at least start addressing the underlying causes of the
violence tearing apart the Middle East and now spreading into
Europe.
Or will Obama’s reaction to the Paris attacks be
just more of the same – more tough-guy talk about “resolve,” more
“targeted” killings that slaughter many innocents as “collateral
damage,” more tolerance of Saudi-Turkish-Qatari support for Sunni
militants in Syria and elsewhere, more acceptance of hard-line
Israeli repression of the Palestinians, more giving in to neocon/liberal-hawk
demands for “regime change” in the neocons’ preferred list of
countries?
If the history of the past seven years is any
guide, there’s little doubt which direction President Obama will
choose. He will go with Official Washington’s flow; he’ll worry
about what the editorialists at the Post and Times might think of
him; he’ll accommodate the neocons and liberal hawks who remain
influential inside his own administration. In short, he’ll continue
down the road toward destruction.
Investigative
reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The
Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest
book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an
e-book (from
Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its
connections to various right-wing operatives for only $34. The
trilogy includes America’s Stolen Narrative. For
details on this offer,
click here.