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Bush Spotted in Abu Dhabi, Should Be Considered Armed and Dangerous

By Nina Burleigh, Huffington Post. Posted January 15, 2008.


The president is visiting the Mideast as some kinds of a savior not like somebody who waged a "war on terror" that has killed Arab civilians.
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Federal and state authorities are hotly pursuing an alleged rapist/killer Marine on the run in some southeastern state. Updates on the search crawl under the CNN feed all day. Meanwhile, the screen displays a different sort of heinous American criminal, at large in, of all places, Abu Dhabi. This one, unfortunately, is unlikely to be apprehended anytime soon.

Our Commander in Chief has been striding around the Middle East talking exactly like a man whose opinion carries some Solomonic weight, not like somebody who spent the last four years waging a "war on terror" that killed hundreds of thousands of Arab civilians and displaced millions more.

Dead civilians is the first and worst charge, real felonies if the world justice system worked. Add in the civil claims against him: squandering of international trust and belief in America, domestic economic wreckage, the revolting trampling of civil rights, the thieving of the treasury by no-bid cronies, and the unleashing of a grisly, vicious war that has (read yesterday's gutsy New York Times report) made psychotic killers of our own young men, and we have a world-class criminal, on the loose.

That he chose to hide in plain sight in the Middle East is especially brazen. Working in Jerusalem in October, I drove into Bethlehem. I'm not religious, so I didn't expect to feel any sort of emotion at the gates to the historic city. The City of Peace's façade now looks exactly like a state prison, say in Joliet or Attica: looming, impenetrable gray walls, guard towers, barbed wire, men with machine guns patrolling the perimeter. Did Bush, the self-proclaimed believer, making his pilgrimage to the place of Christ's birth, notice that Bethlehem is a concentration camp? Does he even know that that sad wall went up on his watch, during which Israeli and Palestinian moderates were given no help or encouragement from his regime?

Old habits of giving the benefit of the doubt to national leaders die hard. Much like Napoleon Bonaparte's farcical proclamation of victory after failing to violently force European-style "democracy" on the Arabs in Egypt two hundred years ago (the setting and subject of my new book Mirage), Bush's too-little, too-late activity in the Middle East is a PR stunt that incredibly seems to be diverting the world from calling him out on his crimes.

In 1800, when the great French general skulked back to France, leaving his army behind to fend for themselves against plague, and Ottoman and jihadi sword, there was no radio, no CNN, no satellite phone service to relay pictures of the suffering of occupier and inhabitant alike. The defeated general was able to proclaim victory in the Orient and install himself as pro-consul, to a populace happily unburdened by the facts.

Our criminal suspect swaggers through the Middle East, cameras flashing, shaking hands with oil potentates and bruised and beaten Palestinians alike (those who will shake his hand, anyway) and the press covers it like a meaningful diplomatic victory lap, instead of what it actually is: a loser's PR tour in a part of the world where the absence of civil liberties plays in his favor. With potential protestors clamped down, he can put a gloss on seven years of illegal, disastrous policy and kleptocracy.

"Iran's actions threaten the security of nations everywhere," our suspect opined, in broad daylight, from a podium in Abu Dhabi. Actually, as his audience knew, but for fear of the mighty war machine he wields, could not say, the dubious-looking fellow at the podium has threatened the security of nations everywhere, not least of all our own.

And, no one, but no one, is bringing him to justice.


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Nina Burleigh has written for the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune and New York magazine.

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Birds of a Feather
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Jan 15, 2008 1:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't it ironic that a man who came to power by his chicanery and not the voters' choice, whose corruption and lawlessness are unprecedented in our history, goes to the Middle East and schmoozes with repressive, corrupt autocrats giving speeches extolling peace, democracy and human rights? What shameless hypocrisy! He and they all belong in Guantanamo where perhaps with the aid of the waterboard they will, for the first time in their opulent lives, tell the truth.

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» RE: Birds of a Feather Posted by: Lauren
Justice will prevail - eventually
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jan 15, 2008 3:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know it looks as if he's gotten away with his crimes, but as I have said too many times to even count:

George W. Bush will be remembered as the first (pray last) former chief executive to go to federal prison and he is going to die there.

I promise you that.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
Theodore Roosevelt: The People's President

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The Foolish Fool
Posted by: wilty on Jan 15, 2008 5:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dare I say, just the sight of that madman, George Bush sends my pulse and blood pressure
asoaring, the anger in me so close to blowing
my pressure relieve point. Never have I felt such revulsion towards anyone, but for that
outright traitor (ditto with Cheney)!!

I fervently hope that Tom Degan is right in his
prediction, but I feel that making promises such as his, at this time,leaves me with doubt.

I try to pictue myself, inside the head of a Palestinian who sees this hypocritical, corrupt little man astruttin' down the street in my tiny village, and I say to myself, "Their goes a fool, if I ever saw one!! From what desert mirage of an oasis does he come from?"

In this electronic age, with instant access to events going on around the world - in contrast to Napolean's day - it really does seem entirely ludicrous, that this man is still walking around, without any evidence of the consequences he so richly deserves, bearing down upon him.

The Congress, the MSM, the United Nations, never mind the World Court appear to be totally
oblivious to his criminality. He is the personification of death to me, and I know that there are many, many sharp eyes around the world, focused upon this fool, but with silent mouths.

Such is the case, especially here in America, where I have seen those eyes, and heard the mutterings, which sometimes seem to be more like growls. However, there is very little, if none, articulation as to what these utterances
mean.

Come on people, all of YOU people, speak up for Chrissakes!! I'm not just talking to us progressives, I would like to include everyone
citizen in this country, as part of the listening audience.

We the People must see to it, that Bush, Cheney, et. al., are impeached, convicted and tried in criminal court, for their crimes.
This will be a major change, all right, and it will be incumbent upon us all, to commence this action by making the change in ourselves; the willingness to make sacrifices, to seek courage and grow strong, trust and weightworthy spines!!

If we fail to do so, we will be the real fools.

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» RE: The Foolish Fool Posted by: shd1230
Bring Bush to Trial
Posted by: Iraqi on Jan 15, 2008 6:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
President Bush and the Neo-Cons claimed that Iraq under Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, had contacts with Al-Qaeda, and had committed violations of human rights.

But, the real reason for attacking and occupying Iraq by the US was to secure and control Iraq’s oil. (The Greenspan (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tag/greenspan-iraq ), General Wesley Clark, and other important people’s recent statements).

The results of the actions of Bush and the Neo-Cons are tantamount to GENOCIDE. Their action and their greed to steal Iraq’s oil have led to the destruction of Iraq.

The US Administration imposed sectarian policies in Iraq that have led to the destruction of the fabric of Iraqi society. The line that the US soldiers are in Iraq to save the Iraqis is a big lie. They are there to protect US policies of greed for Iraqi oil, and US strategic military basis in Iraq. They are not there for the Iraqi people.
While it is true that Saddam Hussein was a dictator (but which leader in the Third World or in Gulf Countries is not a dictator!!!). Iraqis did want true democracy, a good life, and a change that would place Iraq (with its great wealth and hundreds of thousands of highly qualified professionals) in the advanced position it deserves among countries of the world.
But, the US actions and imposed SECTARIAN policies have created the “KILLING FIELDS OF IRAQ”.
THIS IS WHAT THEY HAVE DONE TO IRAQ AND THE IRAQI PEOPLE:
Genocide:
1 200 000 civilians have been killed. (These are Non-Combat Deaths).
(http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/62728/ )
Mass Population Displacement:
2 500 000 Iraqi civilians, the cream of the crop of the educated middle class, have sought refuge in Syria and Jordan, and 2 000 000 inside Iraq, in what the United Nations calls the biggest civilian displacement catastrophe in both the 20th and 21st centuries, due to sectarian policies
Ethnic Cleansing:
Ethnic Cleansing was introduced to Iraq through the sectarian Political Process introduced and forced on Iraq by the Bush Administration, and their and Iran’s agents the Iraqi politicians that entered Iraq on American tanks.
End of page 1
Faruq Ziada

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Bring Bush to Trial
Posted by: Iraqi on Jan 15, 2008 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The destruction of Women’s Rights:
Women’s Rights in Iraq were the best amongst Third World and better than in several European Countries. During the period 1980 – 2000, 15 – 25 % of members of Parliament were elected women. Nearly 50 % of Iraqi Government staff was women. 2/3 of the staff of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was women. (United Nations Development Program’s “Arab Human Development Report “2002”).

Today, with the so called US Liberation of Iraq Women’s Rights have deteriorated to such an extent that most women can not leave their houses, have to wear a veil (including Christian Women), and have stopped working in government offices or attending schools and colleges.

Security:
Iraq had 100 % law and order and, security. Also, foreign personnel in the UN, NGOs and embassies never had a problem of security whether in Baghdad or the 18 governorates.
After the US occupation there is no security whatsoever. People do not dare leave their homes to buy the necessary living needs. In 2006 the average daily killed Iraqis was 120 civilians, (according to the United Nations).

Education:
The Education System (university and college system) was one of the best in third world countries. The university and college system has become one of the worst in third world countries. Most teachers have fled the country; students do not attend for fear of kidnapping. Shiite religious rituals are being carried out on campus grounds during study hours. Teachers who have continued to teach are constantly under threat from student abuse.
End of page 2
Faruq Ziada

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Bring Bush to Trial
Posted by: Iraqi on Jan 15, 2008 6:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Page 3
Corruption:
Iraq was considered one of the least corrupt third world countries in the world. Kickbacks during the oil for food program were diverted to the Iraqi Government and were used to pay the salaries of the civil servants throughout the country. Iraq is now one of the most corrupt countries in the world as stated in the Corruption Watchdog Transparency International 2006 Corruption Perception Index (CPI). Iraq is currently number 160 out of 163 worst countries in the world.
The US Embassy in Baghdad Report on corruption (issued in September 2007) concludes that “Currently, Iraq is not capable of even rudimentary enforcement of anticorruption Laws”.
http://www.transparency.org/content/download/24103/360214 and

Professional Staff:
Iraq had one of the best and finest professional staff in its civil service compared to other third world countries. Its civil service contained top quality and qualified staff. These professionals were able to keep the country from collapsing during the 13 years of harsh economic sanctions imposed on Iraq. Most of the professional, top quality, and qualified civil service staff have left Iraq to neighboring countries. Hundreds were assassinated.
The positions are now filled with used-to-be exiles, Governing Council, present government and party’s family members who have no civil service experience. (US Embassy Report on Corruption in Iraqi government).
According to the Report of the Ministry of Health Inspector general of 2005, 65 % of appointees had counterfeit college degrees and had not even finished primary schools.
End of page 3
Faruq Ziada

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Bring Bush to Trial
Posted by: Iraqi on Jan 15, 2008 6:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Page 4
Medical System:
(Hospitals, equipment, and doctors, which were hurt by the imposed sanctions since 1991) was being renewed to its top level position that it had among third world countries. The Medical System is completely broken and shattered. According to the Ministry of Health official Report more than 18,000 doctors have fled the country since 2003

Public Services:
The public services (electricity, water, sanitation, hospital etc.) and its infrastructure, which were destroyed in the 1991 Gulf War, were completely restored in less than one year.
Today, after nearly four years the public services are nearly non – existent, although more than (140) billion dollars have entered the Iraqi governments’ coffers since 2003.
Note: Most of the destruction was caused immediately after the fall of Baghdad in April 2003, when the US army allowed looters to loot and burn government buildings. Please, refer to Naomi Klein’s book “The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism”).
http://www.naomiklein.org/shock-doctrine
Drugs:
Iraq was free from drugs. Iraq today is rampant with drugs and drug addicts.

Sincerely,

Faruq S. Ziada (former Iraqi Ambassador)

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Justice requires the Truth...
Posted by: SevenStarHand on Jan 15, 2008 7:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hello all,

There is a way to ensure that the Bush/Cheney crew and their hidden backers receive the full measure of justice they are worthy of! Since they won't ever tell the truth, someone else must do it for them.

The truth will be a bitter pill for most (gall and wormwood...) Without it, the cancer will continue uncured and the patient (human civilization) will die a horrible and agonizing death, unless treated wisely and effectively.

Tired of waiting for politics and politicians to defeat the war monger-profiteers and their greedy and deceptive backers? What would you do if given the pivotal wisdom required to drive a stake through the heart of these evil bloodsuckers' hidden power sources?

Patience and humility...

Here is Wisdom...

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Give the man credit
Posted by: hilaryuk on Jan 15, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He does have a sense of humour - he made sure his co-war criminal, Tony Blair, was given a role in what is laughingly called the Israel/Palestine peace process. Satire is dead.

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Sadness
Posted by: saltoafronteira on Jan 15, 2008 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a sad thing to see a great nation like the USA being held hostage by such rogues.
Anyway, honor on you people that, at least, express your outrage. It proves democracy is not dead, at least in your hearts.
Many times in the past I have expressed my outrage sometimes in an harsh and almost insultuous way against america, here in alternet, and I always feel a little ashamed for that when I read such texts.
A Nation whose sons still have the hability to question themselves is still, and in spite of everything, alive.
May your beliefs and integracy prevail over the disturbed times we are living in.
In many ways, the world's destiny is in your hands, Good will Americans, and may you transport it to a safe haven.

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So...
Posted by: Artkansas on Jan 15, 2008 9:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now the country that provided the majority of the 9/11 conspirators gets a big reward while we invade a country that was uninvolved in the attack as punishment.

Foul times indeed.

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Since our Congress will do nothing
Posted by: Chloe2005 on Jan 15, 2008 9:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
can't the people of the US and people around the world take this to the World Court? Does anyone know how this works? His crimes against humanity keep growing. No need to list them, we all know what they are.

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Determine the vulnerabilities - chose your battles
Posted by: Knowmad on Jan 15, 2008 9:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As mentioned by Saltoafronteira above, I also often feel disgusted with Americans for what they've allowed to happen when I learn about the latest rape and pillage campaign their 'leadership' has embarked upon, some of which endanger the entire planet. Then I'm ashamed for feeling that way.

True American patriots, like most who post here and on like sites, are understandably appalled with their circumstances, and incredibly frustrated about the amoral children-in-charge and the seemingly endless litany of atrocities committing in their name. Thus they get incredibly angry, livid, and this basically comes out as diatribes and rants against bush, cheney and the rest of that sad lot. This may be somewhat stress relieving, but it’s apparently pretty ineffectual, as the fools act just like criminals who believe they're above the law have always acted - they ignore, even laugh and belittle, because they believe they're safe.

Americans who want to affect change must learn to identify the vulnerabilities of the enemy, and then target these with all the energy they usually dovote to 'screaming and yelling and the gnashing of teeth’. Most already know the enemy of course, it’s simply money begetting power, manifested in various guises: corporatism, a designation which represents most organized religions (e.g. Catholicism), various fear movements (e.g. NRA/Blackwater), government control entities (e.g. FBI/CIA) weird sects (e.g. the bushies) and many other so-called democratic institutions. However, most of these entities are hugely powerful, and have the loyal support of the naive, fearful, ignorant, indolent, unsophisticated and unaware (read the neotheocorp faithful). And the mainstay of this support, like that of any other social construct, is communications; in this case the sadly broken-down and turned American main stream media.

The fact that the msm, by its very nature, is involved with the delivery of information, and that it is also corporate-controlled, is actually an opportunity. If you take on the msm - justifiably, since they’ve become nothing but an electronic ‘SnowPerino’ - your very actions become information. The msm’s ability to ignore information is inversely proportional to its sensationalism. So, though the corporate powers will, as usual, censor everything ‘subversive’, eventually even that censoring can become a story, which the msm then has more trouble resisting. It’s kind of like the desperate snake who in his hunger starts eating his tail...eventually he dies, or disappears.

Anyway, this has become a rather long-winded suggestion: Pick one aspect of the enemy’s make-up - as they’re too big and complex to take on all at once - and attack it with everything you’ve got. The msm may be the ideal target, as its mandate is to report ‘big’ events, and a battle over them NOT reporting the truth could potentially become a big event.

Good luck...for all our sakes.

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If I had the opportunity to shake Bush's hand
Posted by: abbadon2007 on Jan 15, 2008 10:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would spit in his face and denounce him a murderer, fraud, war criminal and incompetent.

And I would take my tazing with pride, and accept the inevitable beatings or worse.

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Amazing the leader of the Crusaders
Posted by: donl51 on Jan 15, 2008 11:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is visiting the Middle -east when in reality he should,along w/ a few others be at the Hague facing war crimes acts! what a scared unfair world this is!!

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Yeah, if he actually had a brain
Posted by: xbj on Jan 15, 2008 12:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or if he wasn't drunk on his ass all the time to take the "edge" off the cocaine.

No, the only thing dangerous about him is how soon he and Cheney will suicide the US against the combined nuclear arsenal of China and Russia over trying to nuke Iran.

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Evil and Sickness Abound, Abound
Posted by: Mr. Terrific on Jan 15, 2008 3:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has been a while since I have posted here. I am grateful that some of us see what millions of us have created. The hundreds of millions who voted for Bush & Cheney not once but twice, are completely responsbile for every heinous act they have committed.

Surely one can say that after the first time, everyone should be forgiven for the "simple" mistake of voting for these men whom Hitler, Stalin, Lenin and others of their ilk, would be PROUD to have at their side.

However voting for them a second time and act as if you committed no wrong, shows the blackness of your souls. This link below is one of HUNDREDS that I have been archiving over the years under this administration. Please view it.

Our Presidents New Best Friend Boils People Alive

Sincerely: Terrific

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Let's Just Admit the Truth and Be Done With It
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Jan 15, 2008 5:04 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We tend to focus on individual people, practices and institutions, when this is actually a systemic problem. It's not just Bush and Cheney, it's most of the leadership of the executive branch, military and Congress. It's not just waterboarding, it's an array of techniques proscribed under the Geneva Conventions. It's not just Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, it's an international gulag archipelago.

The fact is that we have slid down an amoral slippery slope based on a perverse sort of act utilitarian reasoning. I was nauseated to see George W. Bush gleefully dancing arm in arm, holding a large sword, with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. The sword is the same type employed by His Majesty's government to lop of the heads of people who convert to Christianity or question Islam and the hands of thieves. Abdullah's country punishes women for being raped, forces them to wear chadoors, denies their right to leave home without a male relative chaperone and funds madrassas around the world which teach terrorist ideologies. And here is the American president who punishes Castro with vicious and inhumane sanctions, banning even medicines and food, dancing with the world's most absolute monarch and offering him the latest in US arms.

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» yes, it's systemic... Posted by: undrgrndgirl
There are two brave americans trying to bring them to accountiblity
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Jan 15, 2008 8:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They are presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich and Florida congressional candidate Robert Wexler. I suggest we support them with our $ and our votes or we won't have either left.

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depraved arab leaders
Posted by: fonn on Jan 17, 2008 3:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just think how depraved the arab leaders are to host such a man. If Bush's hyocritical words about democracy were ever to bear fruit in that part of the world, such leaders would disappear in no time and along with them the american presence there.

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