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Impeach Bush Now, Before More Die

Bush's single-minded focus on the "war against terrorism" has compounded a natural disaster and turned it into the greatest calamity in American history. The US has lost its largest and most strategic port, thousands of lives, and 80% of one of America's most historic cities is under water.

If terrorists had achieved this result, it would rank as the greatest terrorist success in history.

The destruction of New Orleans is the responsibility of the most incompetent government in American history and perhaps in all history. Americans are rapidly learning that they were deceived by the superpower hubris. The powerful US military cannot successfully occupy Baghdad or control the road to the airport--and this against an insurgency based in only 20% of the Iraqi population. Bush's pointless war has left Washington so pressed for money that the federal government abandoned New Orleans to catastrophe.
Weekend Edition
September 3 / 4, 2005

Failure on Every Front

Impeach Bush Now, Before More Die

By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

The raison d'etre of the Bush administration is war in the Middle East in order to protect America from terrorism and to insure America's oil supply. On both counts the Bush administration has failed catastrophically.

Bush's single-minded focus on the "war against terrorism" has compounded a natural disaster and turned it into the greatest calamity in American history. The US has lost its largest and most strategic port, thousands of lives, and 80% of one of America's most historic cities is under water.

If terrorists had achieved this result, it would rank as the greatest terrorist success in history.

Prior to 911, the Federal Emergency Management Agency warned that New Orleans was a disaster waiting to happen. Congress authorized the Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project (SELA) in order to protect the strategic port, the refineries, and the large population.

However, after 2003 the flow of funds to SELA were diverted to the war in Iraq. During 2004 and 2005 the New Orleans Times-Picayune published nine articles citing New Orleans' loss of hurricane protection to the war in Iraq.

Every expert and newspapers as distant as Texas saw the New Orleans catastrophe coming. But President Bush and his insane government preferred war in Iraq to protecting Americans at home.

Bush's war left the Corps of Engineers only 20% of the funding to protect New Orleans from flooding from Lake Pontchartrain. On June 18, 2004, the Corps' project manager, Al Naomi, told the Times-Picayune: "the levees are sinking. If we don't get the money to raise them, we can't stay ahead of the settlement."

Despite the dire warnings delivered by the 2004 hurricane season, the Bush administration made deep budget cuts for flood control and hurricane funding for New Orleans. The US Senate, alarmed at the Bush administration's insanity, was planning to restore the funding for 2006. But now it is too late. Many multiples of the funding that would have saved the city now have to be spent to rescue it.

Not content with leaving New Orleans unprotected, it took the Bush administration five days to get the remnants of the National Guard not serving in Iraq, along with desperately needed food and water, to devastated New Orleans. This is the slowest emergency response by the US government in modern times. By the time the Bush administration could organize any resources for New Orleans, many more people had died and the city was in total chaos.

Despite the most dismal performance on record, Bush's Homeland Security Secretary, Michael Chertoff, said on Thursday that the Bush administration has done a "magnificent job."

The on-the-scene mayor of New Orleans sees it differently: "They're feeding the people a line of bull, and they are spinning and people are dying."

"They're thinking small man, and this is a major, major deal."

It is a major deal, one that will affect Americans far beyond New Orleans. According to reports, 25% of our oil and gasoline comes through the New Orleans port and refineries, all out of commission. Needed goods cannot be imported, and exports will plummet, worsening an already disastrous deficit in the balance of trade.

The increased cost of gasoline will soak up consumers' disposable incomes, with dire effects on consumer spending. US economic growth will be siphoned off into higher energy costs. American lives far from New Orleans will be adversely affected.

The destruction of New Orleans is the responsibility of the most incompetent government in American history and perhaps in all history. Americans are rapidly learning that they were deceived by the superpower hubris. The powerful US military cannot successfully occupy Baghdad or control the road to the airport--and this against an insurgency based in only 20% of the Iraqi population. Bush's pointless war has left Washington so pressed for money that the federal government abandoned New Orleans to catastrophe.

The Bush administration is damned by its gross incompetence. Bush has squandered the lives and health of thousands of people. He has run through hundreds of billions of borrowed dollars. He has lost America's reputation and its allies. With barbaric torture and destruction of our civil liberty, he has stripped America of its inherent goodness and morality. And now Bush has lost America's largest port and 25 percent of its oil supply. Why? Because Bush started a gratuitous war egged on by a clique of crazy neoconservatives who have sacrificed America's interests to their insane agenda.

The neoconservatives have brought these disasters to all Americans, Democrat and Republican alike. Now they must he held accountable. Bush and his neoconservatives are guilty of criminal negligence and must be prosecuted.

What will it take for Americans to reestablish accountability in their government? Bush has got away with lies and an illegal war of aggression, with outing CIA agents, with war crimes against Iraqi civilians, with the horrors of the Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo torture centers, and now with the destruction of New Orleans.

What disaster will next spring from Bush's incompetence?

homepage: homepage: http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts09032005.html
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Just the basic facts. 05.Sep.2005 11:24

Concerned

How the aftermath is panning out isnt making sense to a lot of Americans. Here are some points that have US puzzled, frustrated, confused and enraged. We are all becoming potential vicitms of this administration. It is the FEDERAL GOVERNMENTS CONSITUTIONAL resposibility to protect its citizens, be it enemies, foreign, domestic, and NATURAL. The Red Cross is not being allowed into New Orleans by the National Guard (Source: Red Cross website, Katrina FAQ. http://www.redcross.org/faq/0,1096,...24,00.html#4524) and the U.S. Forest Service offered water-tanker aircraft to help douse the fires in New Orleans, but they needed FEMA to authorize it and FEMA couldn't get its act together enough to do so (Source: Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, transcript available at http://www.newschannel6.tv/news/def...hownews&id=8695) and they dragged their feet on offers from Amtrak, as well (Source: Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, transcript available at http://www.newschannel6.tv/news/def...hownews&id=8695) and Phoenix, Arizona sent their Fire Department's Urban Search and Rescue team, which went to Oklahoma City after the bombing there, and to NYC after 9/11 but they were kept out of New Orleans by the National Guard (Source: Arizona Daily Sun, http://www.azdailysun.com/non_sec/n...?storyID=114689 and http://www.azcentral.com/news/artic...na-local02.html) and Chicago offered more than a hundred police officers, three dozen firefighters, more than 140 health department workers, squad cars, two boats and other equipment but all FEMA has accepted is a single tanker truck of gas (Source: Mayor Richard Daley, quoted in the Chicago Tribune, http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...ll=chi-news-hed) and South Dakota found a team of people matching qualifications requested by a sheriff in LaFourche parish but need permission from FEMA to send them in, and haven't gotten it (Source: The Argus Leader, http://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbc.../509030317/1001) and Utah offered to take a thousand refugees and sent a plane down full of supplies, but thinks it's unlikely they'll be allowed to transport anyone back, in part because they haven't been able to find anyone to ask for permission and aren't even sure if it's the governor's office or FEMA they should ask (Source: CBS-affiliated KUTV news of Salt Lake City, http://kutv.com/topstories/local_story_245191716.html) and the Sheriff's Department in Loudon County, Virginia sent two dozen volunteer emergency personnel in response to an SOS call from the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Department near New Orleans, but three hours into their drive found out they would have to turn back because government officials hadn't given approval to go in (Source: NBC news, http://www.nbc4.com/news/4932312/detail.html) and a group of doctors with experience in violence-racked international missions told FEMA on Wednesday morning that they were eager to send a team to hard-hit areas. FEMA passed them to the Red Cross, which referred them back to FEMA (Source: The Washington Post, September 3, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...5090202363.html) and the American Ambulance Association wanted to send 300 emergency vehicles from Florida to the flood zone; they were told to get permission from the General Services Administration, and the GSA said they had to have FEMA ask for it, and "as a result they weren't sent." (Source: former Senator John Breaux, quoted in the Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...90301653_4.html) and the military says that they have all kinds of supplies but can't send them without an official request from FEMA (Source: Newhouse News Service, http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs....94/1077/NEWS01). Three "state and federal officials" are saying that this is all because Louisiana didn't ask for help. A Bush official said that as of Saturday, Blanco still had not declared a state of emergency. (Source: Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...090301680.html). Now, personally, I would have thought that Blanco begging for help on national TV would constitute asking for help. But for those who really need their i's dotted and their t's crossed, Blanco declared a state of emergency on August 26th. (Source: the Louisiana state website, http://gov.louisiana.gov/Press_Rele...tail.asp?id=973) Also, she sent a detailed request for specific help to President Bush on August 28th (Source: the Louisiana state website, http://gov.louisiana.gov/Disaster%2...f%20Request.pdf) Meanwhile, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson offered Blanco help from the NM National Guard on Sunday (the day before the hurricane hit), and Blanco accepted, but the paperwork needed to get the troops out didn't come from Washington until late Thursday. (Source: AP, http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=sto..._national_guard) And there is a stockpile of firefighter gear kept by FEMA that hasn't been released because the governors of Mississippi and Louisiana haven't specifically requested it. (Source: CNN, http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/09/...gear/index.html) And there is an entire mobile hospital, designed and equipped specifically for disaster relief, sitting in Mississippi waiting to be allowed in. (Source: AP, http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050904...atrina_health_1) And according to Jefferson Parish President Broussard -- well, I will just quote him directly: "We had Wal-Mart deliver three trucks of water, trailer trucks of water. FEMA turned them back. They said we didn't need them. This was a week ago. FEMA -- we had 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel on a Coast Guard vessel docked in my parish. The Coast Guard said, "Come get the fuel right away." When we got there with our trucks, they got a word. "FEMA says don't give you the fuel." Yesterday -- yesterday -- FEMA comes in and cuts all of our emergency communication lines. They cut them without notice. Our sheriff, Harry Lee, goes back in, he reconnects the line. He posts armed guards on our line and says, "No one is getting near these lines." Sheriff Harry Lee said that if America -- American government would have responded like Wal-Mart has responded, we wouldn't be in this crisis." (Source: Jefferson Parish President Broussard on Meet the Press, transcript at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9179790/) And this is not even close to a comprehensive list. * And -- I don't even know what to say. I can't comprehend the level of callousness it would take not to expedite requests that would get desperately needed boats and rescue workers and guardsmen and doctors to the site of the worst natural disaster the U.S. has ever seen. Or to block them. Or to turn them away. I don't understand. FEMA was once a highly effective organization. "I've got to pay the administration a compliment. James Lee Witt of FEMA has done a really good job of working with governors during times of crisis," said Texas Governor George W. Bush when he was running for President in 2000. (Source: the first Bush/Gore debate, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000. Transcript at http://www.greencity.com/debate1.htm) Bush paid lip service to Witt, but then put FEMA in the charge of a man with no relevant experience, unless you count running the Arabian Horse Association. I would like to see Michael Brown charged with negligent homicide. And I would like to see Bush impeached. Bush was not the one who blocked the aid from getting in. But when you are President, the buck stops with you. When Michael Brown didn't know about the people trapped at the convention center, Bush should have called him and said, "GET THOSE PEOPLE OUT OF THERE, NOW, TODAY," rather than cheerleading for the job "Brownie" was doing. Bush couldn't turn the hurricane back to sea; I don't blame him for the hurricane. But if he'd called Brown and demanded that they get the evacuation underway immediately, it would have happened. Maybe not that hour, but that day. On Tuesday this was tragic. On Wednesday this was appalling. On Thursday this was horrifying. Friday, it was criminal. I would like to see it treated as such.