CIA officer say he hopes Norman Mailer is right
in saying
By John Pilger
New
Statesman
In Andrew Cockburn’s new
book, Rumsfeld, the gap between
rampant power and its faraway victims is closed. Donald Rumsfeld, US secretary
of defence until last year and a designer of the Iraq bloodbath, is revealed as
personally directing from his office in the Pentagon the torture of fellow human
beings, exploiting “individual phobias, such as fear of dogs, to induce stress”
and use of “a wet towel and dripping water to induce the misperception of
suffocation”.
Cockburn’s documented
evidence shows that other Bush mafiosi, such as Paul Wolfowitz, now president of
the World Bank, “had already agreed that Rumsfeld should approve all but the
most severe options, such as the wet towel, without
restriction”.
In
McGovern was the author of
the president’s daily CIA intelligence brief. I interviewed him more than three
years ago, and his prescient words are as striking today as Cockburn’s
revelation of Rumsfeld’s secret life is illuminating. His description of fascism
within a nominally free society recalls George Orwell’s warning that
totalitarianism does not require a totalitarian state.
The lies that have caused
this extremely dangerous time are understood and rejected by the majority of
humanity. This was illustrated vividly on 15-16 February 2003 when some 30
million people took to the streets of cities around the world, including the
greatest demonstration in British history. It was illustrated again the other
day in Latin America, which George W Bush on tour sought to reclaim for
There are many connections in
Latin America to the suffering in the
Elected last December with a
record landslide of votes cast by three-quarters of the eligible population –
his 11th major election victory – Hugo Chávez expresses the kind of genuine
exuberant democracy long ago abandoned in Britain, where the political class
offers instead the arthritic pirouetting of Tony Blair, a criminal, and
treasurer Gordon Brown, the paymaster of imperial adventures fought by
18-year-old soldiers who, on their return home, are so ill treated that there is
no one to change their colostomy bag.
Chávez, having all but got
rid of the deadly IMF from Latin America, dares to use the wealth from
You would not know this on
either side of the
“Rumsfeld: his rise, fall and
catastrophic legacy” by Andrew Cockburn is published in the
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