From Democracy Now
Seymour
Hersh: "We've Been Taken Over by a Cult"
Wednesday, January 26th, 2005
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/01/26/1450204
As the Senate Judiciary
Committee prepares to vote today on the nomination of Alberto
Gonzales for Attorney General, we hear a speech by Pulitzer-prize
winning investigative reporter Seymour Hersh on torture from
Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib to
Vietnam.
[includes rush transcript]
Four British citizens
have been released without charge from Guantanamo Bay
after nearly 3 years in custody. They are suing the
US
government for tens of millions of dollars in damages.
Meanwhile, on Capitol
Hill, the Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote on the
nomination of Alberto Gonzales to be Attorney General. As White House
counsel, Gonzales helped lay the legal groundwork that led to the
torture of detainees at Guantanamo
and Abu Ghraib.
We turn now to Pulitzer
prize-winning investigative journalist Seymour Hersh. Hersh first
exposed the Abu Ghraib torture scandal in the New Yorker magazine in
April 2004 and is author of "Chain of Command: The Road From
9/11 to Abu Ghraib." He spoke last month at the Steven Wise Free
Synagogue in New York.
This transcript is
available free of charge, however donations help us provide closed
captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast.
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AMY GOODMAN: We
turn now to Seymour Hersh, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, author
of the book, Chain Of Command: The Road From 9-11 to Abu Ghraib.
He spoke recently at the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in
New York.
SEYMOUR
HERSH: About
what's going on in terms of the President is that as virtuous as I
feel, you know, at The New Yorker, writing an alternative
history more or less of what's been going on in the last three years,
George Bush feels just as virtuous in what he is doing. He is
absolutely committed -- I don't know whether he thinks hes
doing God's will or what his father didn't do, or whether it's some
mandate from -- you know, I just dont know, but George Bush
thinks this is the right thing. He is going to continue doing what he
has been doing in Iraq.
He's going to expand it, I think, if he can. I think that the number
of body bags that come back will make no difference to him. The body
bags are rolling in. It makes no difference to him, because he will
see it as a price he has to pay to put America
where he thinks it should be. So, he's inured in a very strange way
to people like me, to the politicians, most of them who are too
cowardly anyway to do much. So, the day-to-day anxiety that all of us
have, and believe me, though he got 58 million votes, many of people
who voted for him werent voting for continued warfare, but I
think that's what we're going to have.
It's hard to predict the
future. And it's sort of silly to, but the question is: How do you go
to him? How do you get at him? What can you do to maybe move him off
the course that he sees as virtuous and he sees as absolutely
appropriate? All of us -- you have to -- I cant begin to
exaggerate how frightening the position is -- we're in right now,
because most of you don't understand, because the press has not done
a very good job. The Senate Intelligence Committee, the new bill that
was just passed, provoked by the 9/11 committee actually, is a little
bit of a kabuki dance, I guess is what I want to say, in that what it
really does is it consolidates an awful lot of power in the Pentagon
-- by statute now. It gives Rumsfeld the right to do an awful lot of
things he has been wanting to do, and that is basically manhunting
and killing them before they kill us, as Peter said. They did
it to us. Weve got to do it to them. That is the attitude
that -- at the very top of our government exists. And so, I'll just
tell you a couple of things that drive me nuts. We can -- you know,
there's not much more to go on with.
I think there's a way
out of it, maybe. I can tell you one thing. Let's all forget this
word insurgency. It's one of the most misleading words of
all. Insurgency assumes that we had gone to Iraq
and won the war and a group of disgruntled people began to operate
against us and we then had to do counter-action against them. That
would be an insurgency. We are fighting the people we started the war
against. We are fighting the Ba'athists plus nationalists. We are
fighting the very people that started -- they only choose to fight in
different time spans than we want them to, in different places. We
took Baghdad
easily. It wasn't because be won. We took Baghdad
because they pulled back and let us take it and decided to fight a
war that had been pre-planned that they're very actively fighting.
The frightening thing about it is, we have no intelligence. Maybe
it's -- it's -- it is frightening, we have no intelligence about what
they're doing. A year-and-a-half ago, we're up against two and
three-man teams. We estimated the cells operating against us were two
and three people, that we could not penetrate. As of now, we still
don't know what's coming next. There are 10, 15-man groups. They have
terrific communications. Somebody told me, it's -- somebody in the
system, an officer -- and by the way, the good part of it is, more
and more people are available to somebody like me.
There's a lot of anxiety
inside the -- you know, our professional military and our
intelligence people. Many of them respect the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights as much as anybody here, and individual freedom. So,
they do -- there's a tremendous sense of fear. These are punitive
people. One of the ways -- one of the things that you could say is,
the amazing thing is we are been taken over basically by a cult,
eight or nine neo-conservatives have somehow grabbed the government.
Just how and why and how they did it so efficiently, will have to
wait for much later historians and better documentation than we have
now, but they managed to overcome the bureaucracy and the Congress,
and the press, with the greatest of ease. It does say something about
how fragile our Democracy is. You do have to wonder what a Democracy
is when it comes down to a few men in the Pentagon and a few men in
the White House having their way. What they have done is neutralize
the C.I.A. because there were people there inside -- the real goal of
what Goss has done was not attack the operational people, but the
intelligence people. There were people -- serious senior analysts who
disagree with the White House, with Cheney, basically, that's what I
mean by White House, and Rumsfeld on a lot of issues, as somebody
said, the goal in the last month has been to separate the apostates
from the true believers. That's what's happening. The real target has
been diminish the agency. I'm writing about all of this
soon, so I don't want to overdo it, but there's been a tremendous sea
change in the government. A concentration of power.
On the other hand, the
facts -- there are some facts. We cant win this war. We can do
what he's doing. We can bomb them into the stone ages. Here's the
other horrifying, sort of spectacular fact that we don't really
appreciate. Since we installed our puppet government, this man,
Allawi, who was a member of the Mukabarat, the secret police of
Saddam, long before he became a critic, and is basically Saddam-lite.
Before we installed him, since we have installed him on June 28,
July, August, September, October, November, every month, one thing
happened: the number of sorties, bombing raids by one plane, and the
number of tonnage dropped has grown exponentially each month. We are
systematically bombing that country. There are no embedded
journalists at Doha,
the Air Force base I think were operating out of. No embedded
journalists at the aircraft carrier, Harry Truman. That's the
aircraft carrier that I think is doing many of the operational
fights. Theres no air defense, It's simply a turkey shoot. They
come and hit what they want. We know nothing. We don't ask. We're not
told. We know nothing about the extent of bombing. So if they're
going to carry out an election and if they're going to succeed,
bombing is going to be key to it, which means that what happened in
Fallujah, essentially Iraq
-- some of you remember Vietnam
-- Iraq
is being turn into a free-fire zone right in front of us.
Hit everything, kill everything. I have a friend in the Air Force, a
Colonel, who had the awful task of being an urban bombing planner,
planning urban bombing, to make urban bombing be as unobtrusive as
possible. I think it was three weeks ago today, three weeks ago
Sunday after Fallujah I called him at home. I'm one of the people --
I don't call people at work. I call them at home, and he has one of
those caller I.D.s, and he picked up the phone and he said,
Welcome to Stalingrad.
We know what we're doing. This is deliberate. It's being done.
They're not telling us. They're not talking about it.
We have a President that
-- and a Secretary of State that, when a trooper -- when a reporter
or journalist asked -- actually a trooper, a soldier, asked about
lack of equipment, stumbled through an answer and the President then
gets up and says, Yes, they should all have good equipment and
we're going to do it, as if somehow he wasn't involved in the
process. Words mean nothing -- nothing to George Bush. They are just
utterances. They have no meaning. Bush can say again and again,
well, we don't do torture. We know what happened. We know
about Abu Ghraib. We know, we see anecdotally. We all understand in
some profound way because so much has come out in the last few weeks,
the I.C.R.C. The ACLU put out more papers, this is not an isolated
incident whats happened with the seven kids and the horrible
photographs, Lynndie England.
That's into the not the issue is. They're fall guys. Of course, they
did wrong. But you know, when we send kids to fight, one of the
things that we do when we send our children to war is the officers
become in loco parentis. That means their job in the military
is to protect these kids, not only from getting bullets and being
blown up, but also there is nothing as stupid as a 20 or 22-year-old
kid with a weapon in a war zone. Protect them from themselves. The
spectacle of these people doing those antics night after night, for
three and a half months only stopped when one of their own soldiers
turned them in tells you all you need to know, how many officers
knew. I can just give you a timeline that will tell you all you need
to know. Abu Ghraib was reported in January of 2004 this year. In
May, I and CBS earlier also wrote an awful lot about what was going
on there. At that point, between January and May, our government did
nothing. Although Rumsfeld later acknowledged that he was briefed by
the middle of January on it and told the President. In those
three-and-a-half months before it became public, was there any
systematic effort to do anything other than to prosecute seven
bad seeds, enlisted kids, reservists from
West Virginia
and the unit they were in, by the way, Military Police. The answer
is, Ha! They were basically a bunch of kids who were taught on
traffic control, sent to Iraq,
put in charge of a prison. They knew nothing. It doesn't excuse them
from doing dumb things. But there is another framework. We're not
seeing it. Theyve gotten away with it.
So here's the upside of
the horrible story, if there is an upside. I can tell you the upside
in a funny way, in an indirect way. It comes from a Washington Post
piece this week. A young boy, a Marine, 25-year-old from somewhere in
Maryland
died. There was a funeral in the Post, a funeral in
Washington,
and the Post did a little story about it. They quoted -- his name
was Hodak. His father was quoted. He had written to a letter in the
local newspaper in Southern Virginia.
He had said about his son, he wrote a letter just describing what it
was like after his son died. He said, Today everything seems
strange. Laundry is getting done. I walked my dog. I ate breakfast.
Somehow I'm still breathing and my heart is still beating. My son
lies in a casket half a world away. There's going to be -- you
know, when I did My Lai -- I tell
this story a lot. When I did the My Lai
story, more than a generation ago, it was 35 years ago, so almost
two. When I did My Lai, one of the
things that I discovered was that they had -- for some of you, most
of you remember, but basically a group of American soldiers -- the
analogy is so much like today. Then as now, our soldiers don't see
enemies in a battlefield, they just walk on mines or they get shot by
snipers, because It's always hidden. There's inevitable anger and
rage and you dehumanize the people. We have done that with enormous
success in Iraq.
They're rag-heads. They're less than human. The casualty
count -- as in Sudan,
equally as bad. Staggering numbers that we're killing. In any case,
you know, it's -- in this case, these -- a group of soldiers in 1968
went into a village. They had been in Vietnam
for three months and lost about 10% of their people, maybe 10 or 15
to accidents, killings and bombings, and they ended up -- they
thought they would meet the enemy and there were 550 women, children
and old men and they executed them all. It took a day. They stopped
in the middle and they had lunch. One of the kids who had done a lot
of shooting. The Black and Hispanic soldiers, about 40 of them, there
were about 90 men in the unit -- the Blacks and Hispanics shot in the
air. They wouldn't shoot into the ditch. They collected people in
three ditches and just began to shoot them. The Blacks and Hispanics
shot up in the air, but the mostly White, lower middle class, the
kids who join the Army Reserve today and National Guard looking for
extra dollars, those kind of kids did the killing. One of them was a
man named Paul Medlow, who did an awful lot of shooting. The next
day, there was a moment -- one of the things that everybody
remembered, the kids who were there, one of the mothers at the bottom
of a ditch had taken a child, a boy, about two, and got him under her
stomach in such a way that he wasn't killed. When they were sitting
having the K rations -- thats what they called them --
MREs now -- the kid somehow crawled up through the [inaudible]
screaming louder and he began -- and Calley, the famous Lieutenant
Calley, the Lynndie England of that tragedy, told Medlow: Kill him,
Plug him, he said. And Medlow somehow, who had done an
awful lot as I say, 200 bullets, couldn't do it so Calley ran up as
everybody watched, with his carbine. Officers had a smaller weapon, a
rifle, and shot him in the back of the head. The next morning, Medlow
stepped on a mine and he had his foot blown off. He was being
medevacd out. As he was being medevacd out, he cursed and
everybody remembered, one of the chilling lines, he said, God
has punished me, and he's going to punish you, too.
So a year-and-a-half
later, I'm doing this story. And I hear about Medlow. I called his
mother up. He lived in New Goshen, Indiana. I said, Im
coming to see you. I dont remember where I was, I think it was
Washington State.
I flew over there and to get there, you had to go to I think
Indianapolis and then to
Terre Haute, rent a car and drive down
into the Southern Indiana, this
little farm. It was a scene out of Norman Rockwell's. Some of you
remember the Norman Rockwell paintings. It's a chicken farm. The
mother is 50, but she looks 80. Gristled, old. Way old hard
scrabble life, no man around. I said I'm here to see your son, and
she said, okay. He's in there. He knows you're coming. Then she said,
one of these great -- she said to me, I gave them a good boy.
And they sent me back a murderer. So you go on 35 years. I'm
doing in The New Yorker, the Abu Ghraib stories. I think I did
three in three weeks. If some of you know about The New Yorker,
that's unbelievable. But in the middle of all of this, I get a call
from a mother in the East coast, Northeast, working class, lower
middle class, very religious, Catholic family. She said, I have to
talk to you. I go see her. I drive somewhere, fly somewhere, and her
story is simply this. She had a daughter that was in the military
police unit that was at Abu Ghraib. And the whole unit had come back
in March, of -- The sequence is: they get there in the fall of 2003.
Their reported after doing their games in the January of 2004. In
March she is sent home. Nothing is public yet. The daughter is sent
home. The whole unit is sent home. She comes home a different person.
She had been married. She was young. She went into the Reserves, I
think it was the Army Reserves to get money, not for college or for
-- you know, these -- some of these people worked as night clerks in
pizza shops in West Virginia.
This not -- this is not very sophisticated. She came back and she
left her husband. She just had been married before. She left her
husband, moved out of the house, moved out of the city, moved out to
another home, another apartment in another city and began working a
different job. And moved away from everybody. Then over -- as the
spring went on, she would go every weekend, this daughter, and every
weekend she would go to a tattoo shop and get large black tattoos put
on her, over increasingly -- over her body, the back, the arms, the
legs, and her mother was frantic. What's going on? Comes Abu Ghraib,
and she reads the stories, and she sees it. And she says to her
daughter, Were you there? She goes to the apartment. The
daughter slams the door. The mother then goes -- the daughter had
come home -- before she had gone to Iraq,
the mother had given her a portable computer. One of the computers
that had a DVD in it, with the idea being that when she was there,
she could watch movies, you know, while she was overseas, sort of a
-- I hadn't thought about it, a great idea. Turns out a lot of people
do it. She had given her a portable computer, and when the kid came
back she had returned it, one of the things, and the mother then said
I went and looked at the computer. She knows -- she doesn't know
about depression. She doesnt know about Freud. She just said, I
was just -- I was just going to clean it up, she said. I had decided
to use it again. She wouldn't say anything more why she went to look
at it after Abu Ghraib. She opened it up, and sure enough there was a
file marked Iraq.
She hit the button. Out came 100 photographs. They were photographs
that became -- one of them was published. We published one, just one
in The New Yorker. It was about an Arab. This is something no
mother should see and daughter should see too. It was the Arab man
leaning against bars, the prisoner naked, two dogs, two shepherds,
remember, on each side of him. The New Yorker published it, a
pretty large photograph. What we didnt publish was the sequence
showed the dogs did bite the man -- pretty hard. A lot of blood. So
she saw that and she called me, and away we go. There's another
story.
For me, it's just
another story, but out of this comes a core of -- you know, we all
deal in macro in Washington.
On the macro, we're hopeless. We're nowhere. The press is nowhere.
The congress is nowhere. The military is nowhere. Every four-star
General I know is saying, Who is going to tell them we have no
clothes? Nobody is going to do it. Everybody is afraid to tell
Rumsfeld anything. That's just the way it is. It's a system built on
fear. It's not lack of integrity, it's more profound than that.
Because there is individual integrity. It's a system that's
completely been taken over -- by cultists. Anyway, what's going to
happen, I think, as the casualties mount and these stories get
around, and the mothers see the cost and the fathers see the cost, as
the kids come home. And the wounded ones come back, and there's wards
that you will never hear about. That's wards -- you know about the
terrible catastrophic injuries, but you don't know about the
vegetables. There's ward after ward of vegetables because the brain
injuries are so enormous. As you maybe read last week, there was a
new study in one of the medical journals that the number of survivors
are greater with catastrophic injuries because of their better
medical treatment and the better armor they have. So you get more
extreme injuries to extremities. We're going to learn more and I
think you're going to see, it's going to -- it's -- I'm trying to be
optimistic. We're going to see a bottom swelling from inside the
ranks. You're beginning to see it. What happened with the soldiers
asking those questions, you may see more of that. I'm not suggesting
we're going to have mutinies, but I'm going to suggest you're going
to see more dissatisfaction being expressed. Maybe that will do it.
Another salvation may be the economy. It's going to go very bad,
folks. You know, if you have not sold your stocks and bought property
in Italy,
you better do it quick. And the third thing is Europe --
Europe is not going to tolerate us
much longer. The rage there is enormous. I'm talking about our
old-fashioned allies. We could see something there, collective action
against us. Certainly, nobody -- it's going to be an awful lot of
dancing on our graves as the dollar goes bad and everybody stops
buying our bonds, our credit -- our -- we're spending $2 billion a
day to float the debt, and one of these days, the Japanese and the
Russians, everybody is going to start buying oil in Euros instead of
dollars. We're going to see enormous panic here. But he could get
through that. That will be another year, and the damage hes
going to do between then and now is enormous. Were going to
have some very bad months ahead.
AMY GOODMAN: Pulitzer
Prize winning journalist Seymour Hersh. This news just in: 31
Marines have died in a helicopter crash in Iraq.