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Yes, We Need To Talk More About
It!
by Ruben Arvizu*, July 14,2003
Bill of Rights: Amendment I
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
President Bush has dismissed already any other
discussion regarding the "mistake" by the CIA for its
misinformation on Saddam's uranium mishap cited in his State of
the Union.
Several of his top aides herded to Sunday television
shows stating: "End of story,", Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld (ABC's "This Week 7/13/03) and "The notion
that the president of the United States took the country to war
because he was concerned with one sentence about whether Saddam
Hussein sought uranium in Africa is clearly ludicrous," national
Security adviser Condolezza Rice (CBS's "Face the Nation"
7/13/03.)
But simply a presidential order or the insistence
of some officials of the Bush administration cannot erase this
issue. The consequences of misleading a nation to go to war could
be very serious. Therefore, if nothing is there to hide then nothing
is there to fear of an investigation and open dialogue with the
American people.
Foolish errors are the cause of failures in the
procedures that preceded the Iraq war. We must demand that action
be taken to correct matters. It is a very simplistic excuse to
blame the sole actions of the CIA. The mea culpa of CIA's director
George Tenet sounds too convenient, too easy. Suspicion grows
with the quick "dismissal" of the whole affair. And
it is not only the false accusations of Iraq's seeking uranium
in Africa for nuclear weapons, it is the failure to find the major
excuse for this war: the weapons of mass destruction.
The fundaments of the United States are based on
a pure democracy and the respect of its people. We must be well
informed because that way we will be able to act with assurance
and courage according to that knowledge.
Let's not fear to raise questions and to demand
explanations, let's not forget the way the American revolutionaries
acted in 1776, let's not forget the Bill of Rights. We must not
be afraid of being branded as disloyal. If the U.S. as a nation
bows its head and accepts without questioning these scandalous
acts then the U.S. will become a nation of sheep, pitiful and
weak not deserving the heritage of so many generations that have
sacrificed their lives on behalf of their fellow man.
Let's create a climate in which will flourish again
the total trust of government and institutions. The flaws in the
Bush administration are not the best cradles for that trust.
* Ruben Arvizu is Director
for Latin America of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
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