[Editor’s note: Mark Ames’ essay is a lucid overview of what the Bush administration has been up to in Central Asia and former Soviet republics since 9/11. No, not fighting “terror” — they’ve been working on a long-term oil grab by supporting dictators and gaming democratic elections in their favor, all while publicly bemoaning Russia’s “slide” back to a dictatorship. Ames’ lively writing style turns a heavy story into one of the best articles you’ll read this month.]
One of the oddest reactions to Vice President Cheney’s now-infamous speech in Lithuania, the one which many Russians believe officially heralded the start of a new Cold War, came from the mainstream American media. What was so strange? They actually did their job.
Instead of simply parroting the Administration’s latest pieties, they actually allowed themselves to smell a rat. And what a putrid, bloated, rotting-in-a-flooded-Manila-gutter rat odor it was! You’d have to have been literally brain dead not to have smelled it.
The rat of course was the insane hypocrisy of a foaming fascist like Dick Cheney suddenly getting all Amnesty International righteous over a bad regime that does bad things. The fact that Cheney flew straight to Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan right after squirting over Russia’s human rights problems turned the rank hypocrisy into a bad black comedy routine, barely fit for even a Tom Green. Kazakhstan is a country where opposition politicians and media aren’t merely jailed, exiled or cowed as they are in Russia, but are shot and dumped in forests, Miller’s Crossing-style, on behalf of a despot whose family runs the country like its own fiefdom.
Incredibly enough, a few members of the mainstream American press were shocked into action by Cheney’s crackpipe hypocrisy. On May 9th, the normally anti-Putin New York Times published an editorial titled, “Cheney as Pot, Putin as Kettle,” tepidly calling into question Cheney’s bizarre meta-irony act: “spearing Russia while flirting with its even more undemocratic neighbors confuses the message, especially when done by a vice president identified with oil interests.” Tepid, but at least a rare acknowledgement of Cheney’s insane logic.
The hypocrisy was so bizarre and brazen that even bland newswire agency AP got in on the outting bandwagon, with a May 8th article, “Analysis: Cheney promotes democratic reform everywhere but oil-rich Kazakhstan.” You’d almost think that the American media actually questions its leaders’ motives!
Even the pro-Cheney Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by Andrew Kuchins, although in a clever ruse he tried to diffuse it by pointing out how obvious it was: “Alert the media: We’ve identified double standards in U.S. foreign policy!” he sneered, before moving on to the “real” issues raised. As if obvious evil is somehow less pernicious than the kind of evil you have to look for.
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