The
International Dictatorship of the United States
Its
Friends (Amnesty International, ISIS and the Nusra
Front) and Enemies (Hassan Nasrallah, Cuba and Ana
Montes)
By Stephen
Gowans
December 22, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
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In a speech delivered in the southern suburbs of
Beirut on October 23, 2015, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah,
the leader of Hezbollah, a resistance organization
rooted in Lebanon’s Shia community, presented a
description of US imperialism that largely comports
with that of secular leftwing anti-imperialists in
the West.
Hezbollah
was established in the early 1980s to end Israel’s
occupation of Lebanon. With Israel’s withdrawal in
2000, and a subsequent Israeli incursion in 2006
repulsed by Hezbollah fighters, the resistance
organization remains on the qui vive
against future Israeli aggressions. It is now
assisting the Syrian Arab Army in its death struggle
against extreme sectarian Sunni Islamists, among
them ISIS and Jabhat al Nusra. These al-Qaeda
offshoots pose an existential threat to the Shia
community in Lebanon, explaining why Hezbollah has
chosen to enter the conflict.
Nasrallah:
US foreign policy is driven by the owners of oil
and weapons companies, not by human rights
organizations.
The
following (in italics) is a distillation of
Nasrallah’s remarks [1].
The
United States wants the Middle East to be under its
political, military, security, economic and cultural
domination.
Washington uses Israel as a tool to promote this
agenda.
Israel
depends for its existence on the United States. If
the financial, economic and military support that
Washington grants Tel Aviv stops, Israel will cease
to exist.
The victims
of Israel are the Palestinians and the Lebanese,
both of whom have suffered occupation and massacres
at Israel’s hands.
Blame for
Israeli actions, then, lies more with Washington,
Israel’s master, than with Netanyahu and his
terrorist army.
Therefore,
Palestinians and Lebanese are the primary victims of
the US domination project in the Middle East.
US foreign
policy is aimed at plundering the region’s oil, gas
and riches. It is driven by the owners of oil and
weapons companies, not by human rights
organizations.
Indeed, all of Washington’s talk about human rights
and democracy is meaningless. The biggest
dictatorships in the region are sponsored by the
United States. These dictatorships violate human
rights and disdain elections
(a reference to US allies Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Bahrain).
US
allies in the region are nothing but local
administrations headed by a king or a president
answerable to Washington. The decisions of war,
peace, foreign policy and markets are in the hands
of their master, the United States.
The
punitive aspects of US foreign policy are aimed at
anyone who refuses to submit to US domination, which
is to say, refuses to become local extensions of the
US government (and by implication, of the large oil
and weapons companies that dominate it.) He who
takes his own decision on the basis of his country’s
interests is unacceptable to the United States.
For
example, all of Washington’s hostility to Iran is
traceable to the latter’s wanting to be a free and
independent country that owns and controls its own
economy and preserves the dignity of its people.
This rejects US hegemony and therefore is
unacceptable to Washington.
Washington launches proxy wars against those
countries that seek to become independent and
strong. The United States is waging a proxy war in
the Middle East on everyone who refuses to submit to
US domination. The proxies are the extreme sectarian
Sunni Islamist jihadists, or takfiris,
(including ISIS and the Nusra Front,
both progeny of al-Qaeda, and the latter now
reframed deceptively by US propagandists as
“moderate” rebels.) The real leader and
coordinator of the takfiris is the United States,
assisted by its regional allies (a reference to
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.)
Today,
Washington tells us that we will either be slaves of
the United States or it will besiege us and send
suicide bombers.
The ongoing war is not for the sake of reforms,
democracy, human rights, elimination of poverty or
countering ignorance, but for subjugating those who
reject the United States’ hegemonic ambitions.
Nasrallah calls Israel “an executive tool in
implementing US hegemony” in the Middle East. This
calls to mind an observation made by the Palestinian
scholar Walid Khalidi: “To many Arabs, Israel is the
beachhead of US imperialism in the Middle East and
its executor,” a not unreasonable understanding
given the evidence.
Nasrallah
describes US foreign policy as predicated on a
universalist model of US leadership that leaves
little room for other countries to define and follow
their own path. At least one person close to US
foreign policy acknowledges that this view is
accurate. Ana Montes, who on the eve of 9/11 was the
top Cuba analyst at the Pentagon, denounced US
foreign policy for having “never respected Cuba’s
right to make its own journey towards its own ideals
of equality and justice,” [2] paralleling
Nasrallah’s complaint that Washington is unwilling
to allow Iran to “be a free and independent country”
that owns and controls its economy and preserves the
dignity of its people, and that it punishes
countries “that seek to become independent and
strong.”
Montes
struggled unsuccessfully to understand why
Washington continued “to dictate how the Cubans
should select their leaders, who their leaders
cannot be, and what laws are appropriate in their
land,” as much as many Syrians must struggle to
understand, in Washington’s insistence that their
president step aside, why the United States dictates
how they should select their leaders and who their
leaders cannot be.
“Why,”
Montes wondered, “can’t we let Cuba pursue its own
internal journey, as the United States has been
doing for over two centuries?”
And why
can’t Washington let Syria and Iran do the same?
The answer,
from Nasrallah’s analysis, is clear. Neither Syria
nor Iran, anymore than Cuba, can be allowed to own
and control their own economies because this
conflicts with the aspirations of the corporate
elite that dominates policy-making in the United
States.
Troubled by
the absence in Washington of “tolerance and
understanding for the different ways of others”,
Montes followed her conscience. She fed Cuban
authorities intelligence on the eavesdropping
platforms that US spies had secretly installed in
Cuba to help undermine Cuba’s right to make its own
journey.
For her
efforts to impede an injustice, she was sentenced to
almost 25 years in prison for espionage. She has
been called “the most important spy you’ve never
heard of” [3] but is also among the most important
prisoners of conscience you’ve never heard of, and
one Amnesty International, a purported champion of
prisoners of conscience, won’t touch. This simply
adds to the tally of lapses on the side of US
imperialism that the compromised human rights
organization has become infamous for, including:
•
Criticizing Wikleaks for leaking US secrets; [4]
•
Propagating without evidence the claim that Iran has
a nuclear weapons program; [5]
•
Disappearing US sanctions against North Korea—the
most comprehensive and longstanding program of
economic warfare ever carried out in human
history–in a report on the country’s “crumbling
health care system.” Instead, Amnesty attributed
North Korea’s health care difficulties solely to
decisions taken by Pyongyang, roughly equivalent to
blaming the death of numberless Iraqi children
during the 1990s on Saddam Hussein, and not the
US-led sanctions regime; [6]
•
Appointing US State Department official Suzanne
Nossel to the post of executive director of Amnesty
International USA, a woman who supported the illegal
US invasion of Iraq as well as a military option to
coerce Iran into relinquishing its right under
international law to process uranium for peaceful
purposes; [7]
• Confining
its criticism of US military aggressions to the
question of whether they are conducted in compliance
with the rules of war and not whether they are
initiated in violation of international law. [8]
This prioritizes the concept of jus in bello
(justice in how a war is conducted) and fails to
address altogether the concept of jus ad bellum
(the justness of a war), a strategy which
spares Amnesty from calling out the most egregious
crimes of the United States and its allies, since
Washington’s wars, and those of its subalterns,
almost invariably fail to meet jus ad bellum
standards;
• Calling
for an international arms embargo on the Syrian
government but not on the rebels who are supplied by
the United States and its allies, among which is
Saudi Arabia, a human rights abomination. [9]
While
Amnesty was critical of the human rights record of
apartheid South Africa, it alone among human rights
organizations refused to denounce apartheid itself.
[10] The organization also refused to condemn the
1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia [11], even though it
was an exercise in imperial predation that denied
the rights of many innocent Yugoslavs to life,
security of the person and employment. Amnesty
excused its inaction on grounds that it is not an
antiwar organization, as if war and human rights are
not often inextricably bound. But Amnesty’s most
egregious service to the propaganda requirements of
US foreign policy came in 1991, when the rights
group released a report in the run-up to the Gulf
War claiming that Iraqi soldiers had thrown Kuwaiti
babies from incubators. This was a hoax, perpetrated
by the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the
United States, orchestrated by the public relations
firm Hill & Knowlton, which had been hired to launch
a propaganda campaign to galvanize public support
for a US war on Iraq. When US President George H.W.
Bush appeared on television to announce that he was
readying for war on Iraq, he had a copy of the
Amnesty report in his hands. [12]
Washington
promoted human rights in the 1980s as a cudgel with
which to wage a propaganda war against the Soviet
Union. It has been used since to extend the war to
countries that refuse to submit to Washington’s
hegemonic ambitions. Is it not predictable that a
Western-based human rights organization, which
apparently sees nothing amiss in appointing a former
US State Department official to head its US branch,
should take center stage in prosecuting this
propaganda battle?
The United
States and its allies are, according to the
preferred narrative—and one largely supported by
Amnesty—champions of human rights whose aggressions
abroad are aimed at enemies of human rights, and
therefore, are valid, and even laudable. The idea
that US foreign policy is inspired by human rights,
as Nasrallah shows, is complete nonsense. An
accurate description of the instrumental role played
by human rights in US foreign policy is provided by
a senior US State Department official: “The
countries that cooperate with us get at least a free
pass (on human rights), whereas other countries that
don’t cooperate, we ream them as best we can.” [13]
The
Amnesty-ignored prisoner of conscience Ana Montes
remains defiant, despite her decade and a half of
incarceration in the highest security women’s prison
in the United States. “Prison is one of the last
places I would have ever chosen to be in,” Montes
says, “but some things in life are worth going to
prison for.” [14]
How
pathetically weak-kneed and addled is the
imperialist-friendly Amnesty against the honest
analysis and courage of Ana Montes; how contemptible
is its collusion with imperialism against the
defiance of Nasrallah and the countless other
opponents of the international dictatorship of the
United States and the bankers, billionaire
investors, oil companies and weapons manufacturers
in whose service it operates and who hold sway over
it.
David Rovic’s Song for Ana Belen
Montes.
Steven
blogs at
https://gowans.wordpress.com/
1. “Zeinab
Essa, “Sayyed Nasrallah vows from Sayyed Shudadaa
Complex: We’re to defeat ‘Israel”, US-Takfiri
scheme,” Alahed, October 24, 2015.
2. Montes
statement, October 16, 2002, The Centre for
Counter-Intelligence and Security Studies, The Ana
Belen Montes Case, , Latinamericanstudies.org,
Studieshttp://www.latinamericanstudies.org/espionage/montes-articles.pdf
3. Jim
Popkin, “Ana Montes did much harm spying for Cuba.
Chances are, you haven’t heard of her,” The
Washington Post Magazine, April 18, 2013.
4. John F.
Burns and Ravi Somaiya, “WikiLeaks founder on the
run, trailed by notoriety”, The New York Times,
October 23.
5. Joe
Emersberger, “Debating Amnesty about Syria and
Double Standards”, MRZine, July 6, 2012.
6. Stephen
Gowans, “2010 Amnesty International botches blame
for North Korea’s crumbling healthcare,” what’s
left, July 20, 2010.
7.
Emersberger.
8. Daniel
Kovalick “Amnesty International and the Human Rights
Industry,” counterpunch.org, November 8, 2012.
9.
Emersberger.
10.
Francis A. Boyle and Dennis Bernstein, “Interview
with Francis Boyle. Amnesty on Jenin”, Covert Action
Quarterly, Summer, 2002.
http://cosmos.ucc.ie/cs1064/jabowen/IPSC/php/art.php?aid=4573
11.
Alexander Cockburn, “How the US State Dept.
Recruited Human Rights Groups to Cheer On the
Bombing Raids: Those Incubator Babies, Once More?”
Counterpunch, April 1-15, 1999.
http://cosmos.ucc.ie/cs1064/jabowen/IPSC/articles/article0005098.html
12. Boyle
and Bernstein.
13. Craig
Whitlock, “Niger rapidly emerging as a key U.S.
partner,” The Washington Post, April 14, 2013.
14. Popkin.
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