Vidal
also attacks the American media's
failure to discuss 11 September
and its consequences:
'Apparently, "conspiracy stuff"
is now shorthand for unspeakable
truth.'
| London, Sunday, October 27,
2002 Gore
Vidal Claims 'Bush Junta' Complicit In
9/11 By Sunder
Katwala The
Observer America's
most controversial novelist calls for
an investigation into whether the Bush
administration deliberately allowed the
terrorist attacks to happen... AMERICA'S most
controversial writer Gore Vidal has
launched the most scathing attack to date
on George W Bush's Presidency,
calling for an investigation into the
events of 9/11 to discover whether the
Bush administration deliberately chose not
to act on warnings of Al-Qaeda's
plans. Vidal's highly controversial 7000 word
polemic titled 'The Enemy Within' --
published in the print edition of The
Observer today -- argues that what he
calls a 'Bush junta' used the terrorist
attacks as a pretext to enact a
pre-existing agenda to invade Afghanistan
and crack down on civil liberties at
home. Vidal writes: 'We still don't know by
whom we were struck that infamous Tuesday,
or for what true purpose. But it is fairly
plain to many civil libertarians that 9/11
put paid not only to much of our fragile
Bill of Rights but also to our once-envied
system of government which had taken a
mortal blow the previous year when the
Supreme Court did a little dance in 5/4
time and replaced a popularly elected
President with the oil and gas Bush-Cheney
junta.' Vidal argues
that the real motive for the
Afghanistan war was to control the
gateway to Eurasia and Central Asia's
energy riches. He quotes extensively
from a 1997 analysis of the region by
Zgibniew Brzezinski, formerly
national security adviser to
President Carter, in support of
this theory. But, Vidal argues, US
administrations, both Democrat and
Republican, were aware that the
American public would resist any war in
Afghanistan without a truly massive and
widely perceived external
threat. 'Osama
was chosen on aesthetic grounds to be the
frightening logo for our long-contemplated
invasion and conquest of Afghanistan ...
[because] the administration is
convinced that Americans are so
simple-minded that they can deal with no
scenario more complex than the venerable,
lone, crazed killer (this time with zombie
helpers) who does evil just for the fun of
it 'cause he hates us because we're rich
'n free 'n he's not.' Vidal also attacks
the American media's failure to discuss 11
September and its consequences:
'Apparently, "conspiracy stuff" is now
shorthand for unspeakable truth.' 'It is an article of faith that there
are no conspiracies in American life. Yet,
a year or so ago, who would have thought
that most of corporate America had been
conspiring with accountants to cook their
books since -- well, at least the bright
dawn of the era of Reagan and
deregulation.'
AT THE heart of the essay are questions
about the events of 9/11 itself and the
two hours after the planes were hijacked.
Vidal writes that 'astonished military
experts cannot fathom why the government's
"automatic standard order of procedure in
the event of a hijacking" was not
followed'. These procedures, says Vidal, determine
that fighter planes should automatically
be sent aloft as soon as a plane has
deviated from its flight plan.
Presidential authority is not required
until a plane is to be shot down. But, on
11 September, no decision to start
launching planes was taken until 9.40am,
eighty minutes after air controllers first
knew that Flight 11 had been hijacked and
fifty minutes after the first plane had
struck the North Tower. 'By law, the fighters should have been
up at around 8.15. If they had, all the
hijacked planes might have been diverted
and shot down.' Vidal
asks why Bush, as Commander-in-Chief,
stayed in a Florida classroom as news of
the attacks broke: 'The behaviour of
President Bush on 11 September certainly
gives rise to not unnatural suspicions.'
He also attacks the 'nonchalance' of
General Richard B Myers, acting
Joint Chief of Staff, in failing to
respond until the planes had crashed into
the twin towers. Asking whether these failures to act
expeditiously were down to conspiracy,
coincidence or error, Vidal notes that
incompetence would usually lead to
reprimands for those responsible, writing
that 'It is interesting how often in our
history, when disaster strikes,
incompetence is considered a better alibi
than .... Well, yes, there are worse
things.' Vidal draws comparisons with another
'day of infamy' in American history,
writing that 'The truth about Pearl
Harbour is obscured to this day. But it
has been much studied. 11 September, it is
plain, is never going to be investigated
if Bush has anything to say about it.' He
quotes CNN reports that Bush personally
asked Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle to limit Congressional
investigation of the day itself,
ostensibly on grounds of not diverting
resources from the anti-terror
campaign. Vidal calls bin Laden an
'Islamic zealot' and 'evil doer' but
argues that 'war' cannot be waged on the
abstraction of 'terrorism'. He says that
'Every nation knows how -- if it has the
means and will -- to protect itself from
thugs of the sort that brought us 9/11 ...
You put a price on their heads and hunt
them down. In recent years, Italy has been
doing that with the Sicilian Mafia; and
no-one has suggested bombing Palermo.' Vidal also highlights the role of
American and Pakistani intelligence in
creating the fundamentalist terrorist
threat: 'Apparently, Pakistan did do it --
or some of it' but with American support.
"From 1979, the largest covert operation
in the history of the CIA was launched in
response to the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan ... the CIA covertly trained
and sponsored these warriors.' Vidal also quotes the highly respected
defence journal Jane's Defence
Weekly on how this support for Islamic
fundamentalism continued after the
emergence of bin Laden: 'In 1988, with US
knowledge, bin Laden created Al-Qaeda (The
Base); a conglomerate of quasi-independent
Islamic terrorist cells spread across 26
or so countries. Washington turned a blind
eye to Al-Qaeda.' Vidal, 77, and internationally renowned
for his award-winning novels and plays,
has long been a ferocious, and often
isolated, critic of the Bush
administration at home and abroad. He now
lives in Italy. In Vidal's most recent
book, The Last Empire, he argued that
'Americans have no idea of the extent of
their government's mischief ... the number
of military strikes we have made
unprovoked, against other countries, since
1947 is more than 250.' ©
Guardian Newspapers Limited
2002
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