| Heading for the Bush By Achal Mehra
It’s
time Americans rise up to reclaim their freedoms and
courage from the hands of a president whose instinctive
reaction in a crisis was to race for the bush.
Winston
Churchill perched on the roof of the Air Ministry in
the midst of the deadly Blitz of London by German warplanes
“to watch the fireworks,” as he famously quipped, is
among the most elevating mental snapshot of World War
II.
Long after the staged “Top Gun” style landing by President
George W. Bush on an aircraft carrier has receded from
the ephemeral public memory, the presidential images
that will endure from 9/11 will be those of Vice President
Dick Cheney being grabbed by Secret Service agents and
whisked off to an underground bunker under the White
House, where he has seemingly taken semi-permanent shelter
since, and of President Bush being secreted away at
airforce bases in Louisiana and Nebraska.
There were eminent security reasons for both men to
be cautious against an enemy whose identity was originally
unknown, as indeed there were for Churchill to avoid
the roof of the Air Ministry, because of a deadly and
all too well known enemy. Indeed, the threat to Churchill
in overruling his security detail was real and imminent.
By contrast, there was never any credible threat to
either Bush or Cheney. London was a mighty dangerous
place during the Blitz of late 1940 through mid 1941.
Close to a million buildings in London took a hit from
Nazi planes and tens of thousands of Londoners were
killed in the air strikes.
Churchill’s courage in defying the Nazi planes was not
just a testament to his bravery, but it also epitomized
leadership in a time of war, and as Bush constantly
keeps harping, this is war.
Bush’s and Cheney’s fear and paranoia, by contrast,
embody the cowardice of their leadership and policy
in the wake of 9/11. The made-for-TV images of cowboy
Bush with the bullhorn at Ground Zero and the Top Gun
style landing sketched by his handlers are designed
to construct a fiction of Bush’s presidential courage.
In truth, Bush’s cowardice in the immediate aftermath
of 9/11, and his administration’s policies since, have
fed the public hysteria and fear so rampant in the country,
which in turn is prodding Americans to surrender their
most cherished democratic principles and traditions
at the altar of security.
Given America’s military might, there was never a question
of the country capitulating to terrorists on the physical
front. The real question is whether America will continue
to live up to its ideals. The engine of hate that Al
Qaeda and their ilk feel toward America is borne not
from its military superiority, but rather its celebration
of the human spirit and individual liberty, which these
Islamic extremists mistake for licentiousness and promiscuity.
As president, Bush could have defied the terrorists
by standing resolute in preserving the most open society
in human history that we have ever fashioned. He fell
prey instead to the fear and paranoia that engulfed
him and his administration at the start of this crisis.
The ruthless and illegal rounding up of hundreds of
innocent Muslims, the detentions of suspected terrorists
in Guantanamo Bay in conditions that violate both the
minimal norms of democratic societies, as well as the
Geneva Convention, the unAmerican PATRIOT Act, the ludicrous
color warning system and crass displays of police power
in public squares are designed to keep Americans on
edge and in a perpetual state of anxiety.
Whatever the original motivations may have been for
these tactical responses, they now serve only crass
political purpose. The real war on terror is, and has
to be, fought with precision and intelligence, and for
the most part, quietly. The purpose of this all too
public war and the frontal assault against the civil
liberties of citizens and non citizens alike in this
country is to mask Bush abysmal failures in dealing
with both the economy as well as his much-touted war
on terror. It’s time Americans rise up to reclaim their
freedoms and courage from the hands of those whose instinctive
reaction in a crisis was to race for the bush.
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