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Nature & Politics
by Alexander Cockburn
Stupid Leaders, Useless Spies, Angry World
The stark fact that significant portions of our planet are under the
supervision of quite exceptionally stupid and ill-formed people is
provoking unwonted expressions of anger and alarm. It is hard to think of
people more demure in rhetorical comportment than senior envoys of the
United Nations or of the British foreign office. Yet here we have Lakhdar
Brahimi, a UN undersecretary general and special advisor to Kofi Annan
erupting in Baghdad like a soapbox orator.
"There is no doubt," Brahimi told French Inter radio two weeks ago, "that
the great poison in the region is this Israeli policy of domination and the
suffering imposed on the Palestinians, as well as the perception of all of
the population in the region and beyond of the injustice of this policy
andthe equally unjust support...of the United States for this
policy...There are quite a few other people on this planet and the
Americans should also make an effort to learn how to live with them."
Then a couple of days later Brahimi was at it again, this time on ABC,
talking to George Stephanopoulos. "I think that there is unanimity in the
Arab World, and indeed in much of the rest of the world that...Israeli
policy is brutal, repressive, and that they are not interested in peace no
matter what you seem to believe in America...What I hear [here in Iraq] is
that...these Americans who are occupying us are the Americans who are
giving this blanket support to Israel to do whatever they like. So how can
we believe that the Americans want anything good for us?"
Of course there was a tactical motive in both Brahimi's outbursts. As the
Baghdad-based executive of the UN's role as after-sales service provider
for the United States, Brahimi is trying to establish some street cred with
Iraqis as he labors to cobble together a puppet government, with roll-out
ceremonies scheduled for the end of June. So he can afford to thumb his
nose as protests about his indiscretions roll in from New York and
Washington, not to mention Tel Aviv.
Brahimi's ripe denunciations were echoed by a squadron of 52 retired
British diplomats--former British ambassadors, high commissioners,
governors, and senior international officials--who fired off an
unprecedented Striped-Pant Manifesto to Bush's poodle in 10 Downing Street
at the start of this week. They denounced Bush's recent endorsement of
Sharon's plans as "one-sided and illegal" and as an "abandonment of
principle" occurring in the midst of what is "rightly or
wrongly...portrayed throughout the Arab and Muslim world as...an illegal
and brutal occupation in Iraq." After further withering denunciation of the
leadership and conduct of the Coalition in Iraq the diplomats warned Blair
that "there is no case for supporting policies which are doomed to
failure." Anyone questioning the charge that we are enduring exceptionally
stupid leaders (with no relief in sight, given John Kerry's recent public
statements on the Middle East) need only skip through Bob Woodward's
account in his latest respectful Palace hand-out, "A Plan of Attack," of
the Bush administration's march towards the attack in Iraq. There are a few
interesting disclosures, such as that my heroine, Laura Bush, was deeply
opposed to the war, but the prime impression one carries away from
Woodward's airless pages is of a White House utterly secluded from reality.
If George Bush had marched out of the front gate onto Pennsylvania Avenue,
hailed any taxi, and asked its driver to give him a briefing on the world
situation, he would have done better than with what was served up to him by
his staff on a daily basis.
Now, all evidence suggests that Bush doesn't want to hear any briefing that
might perturb his fixed opinions. He consults only God and Dick Cheney. But
even if the President had ever displayed any unwonted curiosity it would
have remained unslaked. You have only to read the declassified and
ridiculous Presidential Daily Briefing of August 9, 2001, on Osama bin
Laden to see that. On page after earnest page Woodward has the president
being served up dossiers marked Secret, or Top Secret, or being briefed in
underground chambers by intelligence officials. It's all rubbish, most
aptly resumed in the tremulous pages Woodward allocates to the effort just
as the attack on Iraq was starting, to "decapitate" the regime by killing
Saddam along with his family.
A CIA officer in the Kurdish zone in northern Iraq has secured, by dint of
colossal cash bribes, Iraqi informants inside Saddam's security apparatus.
Along with the hundred of thousands of dollars he dispenses on a weekly
basis he gives these informants cell phones. They report that Saddam and
his sons are headed for a farm outside Baghdad. They tell him they have
paced out the dimensions of a bunker at the farm and relay it to the CIA
man who relays it to the CIA HQ, whence the details are rushed to the White
House, whence Bush finally relays the order from Cheney to have F-117s bomb
the farm. Graphic descriptions of Saddam being hauled from the debris are
duly relayed from the informants. As the CIA officer finds when he inspects
the farm, there was no bunker.
On October 2, 2003, The Guardian published an interesting piece by another
retired senior British diplomat, Sir Peter Heap, asserting that on his
observation in several embassies around the world the whole system of
secret intelligence gathering was pretty much useless as regards the
provision of useful information. Year after year he had watched MI6
officers professionally eager to inflate their resourcefulness ladling out
off-the-books money to informants with every incentive to inflate their
discoveries. Sometimes the MI6 officers would simply copy out stories from
the local paper and remit it to London as top-secret info. Nor were
electronic intercepts much better.
"Working twice in London on Foreign Office desks dealing with countries at
war," Sir Peter wrote, "I saw a flood of intercepts which retrospectively
quite often accurately forecast what was about to happen. But since there
were countless other intercepted reports that predicted events wrongly, it
was virtually impossible to choose in advance the accurate from the false.
Moreover, intercepts were usually fairly random and rarely worked when
planned." Moral: reduce America's intelligence agencies to a hundredth of
their present size and budget, tell the spies to become taxi drivers.
There have been stupid, poorly informed leaders throughout history. But
seldom if ever has the world been afforded, as we are now, with the
unfolding disasters in Iraq and Israel, the knowledge of this savage
stupidity and misinformation on a real time basis, with absolutely no
relief in sight. As the Englishman said, when the American asked him to
admire the velocity of the water pouring over the Niagara Falls, "What is
to stop it?"
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