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Saturday, March 07, 2009

writing/rewriting history

It's about politics

One of the problems we humans have is our tendency to rewrite history as we wish it had been rather than how it was. This plays havoc with our history books especially since the ones who lost a war are often not around to tell their story. Political correctness in one generation can lead to historic rewriting that is nothing like what happened-- but suits a new political agenda.

Currently this tendency has been irking me as much as anything with the latest brouhaha from the political right as they attempt to rewrite the last eight years and in particular the war with Iraq. They are doing this while the actual footage of certain events is still on YouTube. Obviously this particular rewriting works best with those for whom Ann Coulter is their favorite historian.

There are many books about the run-up to the war with Iraq, the treatment of the war, the motivations, and one particularly interesting one is by the right wing's best friend, Richard Clarke's book Against all Enemies. Clarke, who was in the administration as a continuation from Clinton's, describes discussions where the main emphasis was what excuse can we use to attack Iraq. From the 2001 Inauguration, he has said his attempts to get them to take seriously the threat from al Qaeda, were met with little interest. Yes, it was Clarke's story but he's not the only one who wrote such books.

Many have written of warnings delivered to Bush in the summer of 2001 from intelligence agencies regarding plots by bin Laden. In August one intelligence officer said he went to the Texas ranch; and after he gave his report, Bush said, you have covered your ---, now get out of here. In short, quit ruining my vacation. For those, like Condoleeza Rice, who would later claim no one could have imagined a terrorist using an airplane that way, those warnings had been out there from the '90s: The Dangers.

This is not an attempt to say the Bush people wanted such an attack. We may never know the full truth of what they thought in those months. It is saying they were warned, and they could have done more had they taken the warnings seriously.

So what about after 9/11? Did citizens blame Bush for the attack since it happened on his watch? Was that when approval ratings dipped? You know I am being facetious. He had 80% approval ratings for some time after the attacks and used them for what would come next.

For those who say it's okay to disrespect Obama now, they use Bush's eventual low approval ratings. Bush earned those. It took time before people realized the full extent of what Bush had done with cherry picking data to make the case for war, ignoring anything that conflicted that data, claiming the war would be without cost to Americans, hiding much of what was being done to 'gather' information.

Even when Bush landed on that aircraft carrier with the big sign Mission Accomplished, the country wanted to think it was true. It took awhile for the average American to learn that an invasion wasn't the same as an occupation. Bush's father had known it when he refused to occupy Iraq after Desert Storm. He said it would be a quagmire. Powell knew it when he warned Bush if you break it, you own it.

Bush heard none of those warnings. They were drowned out by a higher cause. He was listening to his Father in heaven, not on earth. Bush was a man on a mission, and Americans saw that mission change from weapons to a dictator to democracy, to a claim that Iraq would influence the whole Middle East. It might have, but not as the Bush people had claimed.

The failure to find weapons of mass destruction is another rewriting of history. Bush still claims everybody thought they were there. Remember at the time there were inspectors on the ground. The United States told them sites to check based on their reliable sources like tortured al Qaeda suspects and Chalibi types who wanted us to invade for their own reasons none of which related to 9/11 or weapons. Chalibi, a Shiite and linked to Iran, had his own reasons. As with so much of this, they had nothing to do with 9/11.

Besides the loss of life and economic cost in Iraq where the end result is still unknown, Americans were facing another reason to lose faith in Bush. The suspicions of his usurpation of power was growing. Today we know from recently revealed memos exactly how close we came to a dictatorship. These memos told Bush that he had the power to suspend the First and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution if he decided he had cause. Keep this in mind, if he alone decided-- remember how he bragged he was the decider. Little did Americans know how far he thought that went.

To Bush's credit, even under pressure from his own side, he didn't take that drastic last step. He did negate the right to a trial which is in our Bill of Rights (should make any American nervous), authorized torture against international agreements, used signing statements and executive orders to override Congress's laws, and in short acted above the law (which many presidents have believed they were).

Before the Inauguration of President Obama, Bush lawyers said they didn't really believe the president had absolute powers. Interesting that they figured that out right before a new president would be taking over those powers. For anyone not wanting to rewrite recent history, Bush earned his disapproval by doing things that he never once said he would do when he ran.

While Bush did misuse his power (or enable others like Karl Rove to do so for political reasons) I give him full credit for his final act. I might even add, I think he showed patriotic courage. Despite pressure from the right to do so, he did not pardon all those involved in the Iraqi war lies, the outing of a covert agent, firing of US attorneys (who were also Republicans remember) who didn't follow exactly the party line, the authorization to use torture, and many other questionable actions of the last eight years.

Bravely, and it was brave as it could lead to him also facing charges, Bush has left the country free to do what it needs to do if proof comes along of crimes. He didn't have to do that. He did have the power to block any criminal proceedings. We could have had all the hearings we had wanted; but without the possibility of actual criminal charges, they would have been meaningless.

Actually I have never blamed Bush totally for what he did. Self-titled conservatives gave him absolute power because they saw his power as their power. Now they don't want to mention his name and would like the blame to all fall on him. Sorry, it belongs to all who unthinkingly supported him through it. Power was the corrupter.

From his interest in giving his take on history, Oliver Stone decided to bring out 'W' before Bush had even left office. Movies often define or even rewrite history but this one, like some during WWII came out while the events were still ongoing. I was interested in seeing it and last week, we did.

'W' sticks pretty much to publicly known events, using news footage, and weaving actual quotes into the dialogue not necessarily where they might have been historically but to fit the demands of film and keep the tone true to what happened. The film stars Josh Brolin, who captures Bush's strengths and weaknesses. It is not a caricature, and really is an astonishing portrayal considering how the real man is still around for us to compare.

I suppose a lot of right wingers won't see the film because it's directed by Stone (on some of their enemy lists); but it's not a film to be feared on distortion of the record. I would say it's fair to Bush (which some lefties doubtless won't like). It presents the view that he wanted to do right. That he did try, thought he had, but his own personality flaws were particularly destructive in this situation.

The story of his father and their relationship was beautiful and also sad. And yet for those difficulties, there was and is much love there. I understand people like them as I came from a family that didn't find love easy to express in words. I worked to do better with my own children.

I recommend the movie to both those who do and don't like Bush. It makes him human and the story Shakespearean. I have said it many times. I think if Republicans had held Bush more accountable, he'd have been a better president. By the time, they did, it was probably too late to turn any of it around. We should not make the same mistake with Obama.

As people, we all have this tendency to rewrite even our own history, make excuses for ourselves, justify others. We do ourselves a disservice when we do. Better is to face the truth of what has and is happening and learn from it. Power is a poor substitute for truth.

13 comments:

Greybeard said...

So Rain, just push the "Overcharge" button!

Darlene said...

Rain,I think it has been very well documented that the gang that surrounded "W" (Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Pearl) were talking about waging a war with Iraq when they were in the Reagan administration. 9/11 and the Republicans in the majority provided them with the perfect opportunity. Bush Sr. didn't stay in Iraq and that was disappointing to them.

The reason for the war was to provide a foothold in the Middle East. The reason? - Three little letters OIL.

Anonymous said...

I say to judge Obama on his merits or demerits. Give the man a fair chance. I hear some people gush when he is mentioned. He isn't a Lincoln yet and most likely never will be. That being said, if he is a good President I will be satisfied - but folks give him time!

Rain Trueax said...

Which thing were you thinking amounted to an overcharge, graybeard?

And I agree, Paul. Time will tell on Obama but following him unthinkingly won't make him a better president. There is a quote out there about FDR where a group came to him wanting him to do something and he said it sounded good-- now make me do it. Americans should not expect to sit back and let any leader have free rein.

Rain Trueax said...

And it is documented, Darlene, but it is already being rewritten by the right. Some they didn't want to admit at the time and now as more evidence comes out on one misuse after another, the more they will try to defend and deny.

Greybeard said...

Buffoons, Rain!
Condi, who speaks Russian, would not have been embarrassed this way.

Rain Trueax said...

Thanks for explaining it, graybeard. I had seen that Clinton goofed, saw a photo, but hadn't taken time to read the story (this was a family week-end with some time at preschool event and a little babysitting *s* so although I had this blog already written, I hadn't been looking at anything new).

For me as she takes over as Secretary of State, I wouldn't prejudge Clinton yet; but that was one of those things that politicians do to be 'cute' that makes everybody else cringe. Silly even if it hadn't had a different message in Russian. A good laugh that it does :) Lucky it wasn't something offensive though, huh!

As for Rice's abilities, a lot thought she did misjudge the Russians which surprised people given her eduction was all aimed at understanding them. I already mentioned in that piece other things she goofed on things that mattered a lot more. How much of that was loyalty and love for Bush though? (I always admired her style btw, lovely woman. The actress who played her in W was lovely but didn't capture her charm. There's something about Rice that is that undefinable thing that draws eyes to the person.)

Rain Trueax said...

This was Dowd with more about Obama early goofs as seen by the English. :) It's a winding road out there that these politicians must travel :) Good fodder for Daily Show though

Diane Widler Wenzel said...

Wonderfully researched article. As for Dowd, she gives an interesting perspective of how British sensitivities are being slightly bruised by acts like Obama returning the gift given to Bush - the Churchill's bust.
Like the Brits my attention was rivited to Michelle's arms. But then when I thought about it, I think my granddaughters would be healthier if they make her arms and brains a role model as opposed to Barbie's breasts and skinny body.
As for writing history, I like the Chinese concept of it being the highest form of literature. History is never the actual events but a reflection of what happened. The events of history is the sun and the writers are the moon's reflection. History is writen by scholars who in leisure time over tea talk together about what is instructive in the past for the future. We the bloggers of today are like the Chinese Scholars. We have, in addition, online resources to replay the events themselves. I think the Internet is a great tool for all of us to write history and make change from the people an not from leaders above.

Ingineer66 said...

I am interested to see "W". I know that it is an Oliver Stone movie and not a documentary. No different than JFK or Nixon. As for Nixon, I did not think it portrayed him in a bad light, but many people did.

Some of what Obama and his administration is doing sure looks like amateur hour. Like offending the British. Many on the left derided Bush for making our enemies hate us. But so far Obama has been making our friends dislike us. Personally I am less worried about offending our enemies than I am by offending our friends.

Rain Trueax said...

The things the British, not the government but the media, took offense were like a wrongly chosen gift for the children of the PM and returning the bust of Churchill. Then there is the silliness of what Hillary did, but are the Russians our friends period?

I think that what is being made a big deal about right now is rather like the flag pin during the campaign. Silly stuff that the right is hanging on. I have a lot of things that I might be concerned about but that the English gave the Obama kids clothes of finer quality and the Obamas gave the PM's kids toy helicopters isn't exactly on my list. If it is on the list of the English, it would say more about them than the gifts. I suspect it's the English media which is known for its tabloid quality. I would wait and see how the relationships go before worrying about the equivalent of flag pins

Ingineer66 said...

I agree on the British Media. And the thing with Hillary is just funny. But if it becomes a continuous stream of gaffes then the foreign leaders will think less of us. I am also worried about how she is handling herself with the Israeli leaders. With China doing saber rattling it is not a good time to be irritating our allies or even our arms-length sort of, maybe friends in Russia.

Rain Trueax said...

Well these aren't real gaffes yet, just a figuring how this works. We have elected a president and his wife who are outside the system or were. Yeah two years in the Senate but they kept their home in Chicago; so this is like us going to Washington and learning the protocol for foreign visitors. Likely they didn't realize gifts were even required. Obama knows a lot more about governing from his time in Illinois and running the campaign than he does the niceties of international relationships. I think most countries understand that and on most things he's been a quick study. That won't happen again.

I worry more about substantive things than whether the niceties get properly observed. You know like Afghanistan and do we actually leave Iraq if they are still terrorist bombing each other? You know that an army can't stop that without doing what Israel did-- fences around all those who would do it. In Iraq that would be impossible (which is why Bush the first and Powell didn't like occupying it to start). Now what can we do about it?

I don't think McCain had better answers either on any of it. It's a mess. We made a mistake going there to being but now what? We might have to admit we can't resolve their problems and pull back from daily police work.

I wondered also what Obama was talking about regarding a moderate Taliban to talk to. There is one?

Bush offended a lot more foreign governments with his roughshod ways, invasions without agreements, incomprehensible reasons for what we did, secret prisons, etc.; and that didn't seem to worry Bush supporters. Now do they worry about a toy gift that the kids might have loved btw, but didn't please the British press and likely not all of them but just their tabloid arm... I guess if there are any English who get this far with reading the comments, it would be appreciated to know. Did it offend the English people? Should he have kept the bust of Churchill even though he was using Lincoln's and the other would have gone into storage?