https://theintercept.com/2019/10/09/ellen-degeneres-george-bush/
Dear Ellen: The Problem With George W. Bush Is Not His
Beliefs—It’s His War Crimes
Back in November 2018, Michelle Obama described George W. Bush as “a beautiful,
funny, kind, sweet man,” shortly after images of the former first lady and the
former president sharing a cough drop went viral.
On Tuesday, talk show host Ellen DeGeneres told her audience that she is
“friends with George Bush,” after images of her laughing with the 43rd president at a Dallas
Cowboys game also went viral. In an extended monologue, she explained that she is
“friends with a lot of people who don’t share the same beliefs that I have. …
Just because I don’t agree with someone on everything doesn’t mean that I’m not
going to be friends with them.
“Be kind to everyone,” she urged her cheering studio audience, before
joking: “Thanks President Bush and Laura for a Sunday afternoon that was so
fun. By the way, you owe me $6 for the nachos.”
The comedian’s remarks won her praise from everyone from CNN’s Chris Cillizza to the
right-wing National Review to Hollywood star Reese Witherspoon to Democratic
presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard.
A double confession: I’m an admirer of Ellen, who has been a champion of refugees and a supporter of Muslims. I’m also guilty of
having favorably compared George W. Bush to
Donald J. Trump (although, to quote Jacobin’s Branko Marcetic, “next to Trump,
just about anyone compares favorably.”)
Bush should be treated as a pariah not because he is a
Republican or a conservative, but because he caused the deaths of thousands of
innocent people and tortured hundreds of others.
Yet Ellen’s specific
argument in defense of her friendship with the former president is both
nonsensical and offensive. No one is suggesting that she shouldn’t be pals with
a conservative or a Republican. Bush’s beliefs are irrelevant here; his actions are what matters.
He was one of the most destructive presidents in modern
American history; a man who has never been held to account for a long litany of
crimes, misdeeds, and abuses of power committed during his two bloodstained
terms in office. The reason “43” should be treated as a pariah is not because
he is a Republican or a conservative, but because he caused the deaths of
thousands of innocent people and tortured hundreds of others.
Ask the people of Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The so-called war on terror launched
by Bush in 2001, in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, has since
killed around 250,000 civilians in those three countries, according to a landmark Brown University study in 2018.
Remember the 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians massacred by U.S. troops in Haditha in 2005? Or the Shinwar massacre in Afghanistan in
2007, in which U.S. Marines “tore down a six-mile stretch of highway,
hitting almost anyone in their way – teenage girls in the fields, motorists in
their cars, old men as they walked along the road”? Or the more than 100
Pakistani children killed by 51 CIA drone strikes authorized by Bush
between 2004 and the start of 2009? Is it any wonder, then, that Bush’s own
former counterterrorism chief accused of him committing war crimes?
Ask the families of more than 4,200 U.S. troops who were
killed in Iraq. Bush, who conveniently avoided serving in Vietnam, sent thousands of
young people to their deaths in the Middle East in 2003, after he and
members of his administration told demonstrable lies to make the case for
an illegal war. The
then-commander-in-chief falsely claimed that Iraq had weapons of
mass destruction. He falsely claimed that Saddam Hussein was
working with Al Qaeda. He has never apologized for these falsehoods.
Ask the family of Tareq Ayoub. He was the 35-year-old Al Jazeera
correspondent who was killed when a U.S. warplane launched on airstrike on the network’s
Baghdad bureau in April 2003, less than three weeks after Bush ordered the
invasion of Iraq. You think calling journalists “fake news” is bad? According
to the U.K.’s Daily Mirror newspaper, Bush “made clear
he wanted to bomb Al Jazeera in Qatar” at a meeting with then-U.K. Prime
Minister Tony Blair just eight days after the
killing of Ayoub. Blair, according to the Mirror, had to persuade him not to.
Ask the family of Gul Rahman. As a major report by the Open Society’s
Justice Initiative documented, it was Bush who “authorized the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) to commence a secret detention program” after 9/11,
under which suspected terrorists were held incommunicado in CIA black sites
across the world, and it was also the then-president who granted the agency “expansive
authority to engage in ‘extraordinary rendition’” — or the transfer of
detainees to foreign governments for the purposes of interrogation and torture.
(Asked by aides if he was OK with torturing detainees, Bush replied: “Damn right.”)
Rahman was a suspected Afghan militant in his early 30s, who was sent by
the CIA in 2002 to a secret prison known as the Salt Pit. There, according to
the Senate Intelligence Committee report on torture,
he endured “48 hours of sleep deprivation, auditory overload, total darkness,
isolation, a cold shower, and rough treatment.” Shackled to a concrete wall,
and nude from the waist down, he froze to death — but the Bush
administration never even bothered to notify his family.
Ask Maher Arar. The 32-year-old Canadian citizen was arrested at JFK
Airport in New York in September 2002 and “rendered” to his native Syria, from where his
family had fled in 1997. Back in Damascus, President Bashar al-Assad’s
interrogators, with the assistance of questions supplied by
Bush’s CIA, beat and tortured Arar. According to the findings of an official Canadian commission of inquiry, Arar
was held in a cell the size of a grave and whipped with electrical cables.
Ask the 780 detainees who were held at the
Guantánamo Bay prison camp in Cuba, after it was opened by Bush in January
2002. Forty of them still remain behind
bars; 15 of them were juveniles; nine of them died in custody. None of
them were ever charged or convicted of a crime in a court of law. According to
former Bush administration official Lawrence Wilkerson, the then-president knew
many of the detainees at Guantánamo were innocent of any crimes but refused to
release them for political reasons.
This slow but steady rehabilitation of the former president, and
the whitewashing of his manifest crimes, cannot be left unchallenged.
Ask the families of the victims of Hurricane Katrina. “People stood on
rooftops waving their arms and pleading for help as the flood waters inundated
their communities,” recalled USA Today on the 10th anniversary of one
of this country’s worst natural disasters, and yet “day after day, George W.
Bush continued a long-planned vacation at his 1,600-acre Prairie Chapel Ranch
in Crawford, Texas. … When Katrina made landfall, Bush had been on holiday at
his ranch for 27 days.” More than 1,800 Americans died and a Republican-led special Senate report later
concluded that the Bush administration failed “at all levels to plan, prepare
for, and respond aggressively to the storm.”
Ask the parents of Larry Robison. A man who was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and considered
“completely insane” when he carried out a
series of brutal murders in 1982, Robison was one of 152 prisoners executed by Bush during his
five years as governor of Texas — a higher number of executions than under
any previous governor in modern American history. Robison’s parents begged Bush
for clemency — as did the European Union, the Pope, and the National Alliance for
the Mentally Ill — but to no avail. Bush ignored the evidence
of insanity and signed off on the execution. A year earlier, the then-Texas
governor had mimicked and mocked a clemency plea made by Karla
Faye Tucker, the first woman to be executed in the Lone Star state
since 1863, in a Talk magazine interview with Tucker Carlson. As Carlson wrote: “‘Please,’ Bush whimpers, his lips
pursed in mock desperation, ‘don’t kill me.’”
George W. Bush is not a “kind, sweet man.” There is nothing “beautiful”
about him. He was a monster as governor of Texas and a monster as president of
the United States. Nor has he become any less monstrous since retiring from politics.
In September 2018, Bush lobbied Republican senators to approve
his former staff secretary, Brett Kavanaugh, to the Supreme Court — and reaffirmed his public support for
Kavanaugh even after Christine Blasey Ford and others accused the judge of
sexual misconduct.
Yes, the 43rd president is a better husband and father, more mentally and
emotionally stable, and less of a racist or Islamophobe, than the current
president. But is that really now our benchmark for making friends or being
“kind”? If you’re not Trump, all is forgiven?
This slow but steady
rehabilitation of the former president, and the whitewashing of his manifest
crimes, cannot be left unchallenged. Bush may owe Ellen six bucks for nachos.
He owes the rest of us a prison sentence at The Hague.
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CONTACT THE AUTHOR:
Mehdi Hasan is the political director of the Huffington
Post UK and a contributing writer for the New Statesman.
© 2019 The
Intercept / First Look Media
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the
subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to
gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and
everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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