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Author Topic: The Devil's Work: Bush Minority Appointments  (Read 9890 times)
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« on: November 26, 2004, 10:39:41 PM »

By Liaquat Ali Khan

The Bush administration is making history  in hiring minorities to perform high-profile jobs. Colin Powell  was the first black man to head the State Department, Condoleezza  Rice the first black woman to be the National Security Advisor,  and soon Secretary of State. Alberto Gonzales, if confirmed by  the Senate, would be the first Hispanic to be crowned as the  United States Attorney General. The induction of these and other minorities into what has been a game of white monopoly is bewitching  in that it tells the world that President Bush values both equality  and diversity and that racial prejudices, actively wired in American  power grids, are falling apart. No longer are Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians confined to dirty jobs, such as cleaning private quarters  of the white establishment. See, says the Administration--now  sons and daughters of the people of color are being actively  recruited for leading the world.

Cynicism aside, however, the  Thanksgiving dinner for this great achievement is infested with  flies. The willing coalition of black, brown, and other faces  of color appears to have been summoned to whitewash foreign invasions,  occupations, deportations, detentions, disappearances, and even  commission of war crimes such as torture and extra-judicial executions.  Minorities are cast as big-headed puppets to speak daggers on behalf of a producer/director who, we are told, believes in God,  democracy, and liberation.

Take Dr. Condoleezza Rice,  known as Condi (which means sweet). Born in the same year the  famous Brown case outlawing segregation was decided, raised in  the Deep South where lynching of the innocent had been the way  to vent hatred, and scarred with memories of her schoolmate killed  in the bombing of a black church by white supremacists, Condi  has come a long way indeed to champion abusive harshness against  the enemy. Of all the presidents men and women, Condi, a pastors  daughter, has been the most combative in her rhetoric of warfare.  It was Condi, the brilliant professor on the Bush Cabinet, who  wrote a column in the New York Times to tell the world that "Why  we know Iraq is lying about weapons of mass destruction, concluding her piece with ominous words "time is running out. The time  did run out on Iraq, UN inspectors, and the world calling for  restraint, though Condi knew little about the truth of her crusade.  One wonders how Condi would employ her militaristic strategies  in her new role as America,s chief diplomat.

Another Bush minority, Alberto  Gonzalez, has gathered equally impressive credentials to promote  abusive harshness at home and abroad. Rising from a humble Mexican  family in Texas, going to college against all odds of a working  class household, and graduating from Harvard Law School, Alberto  has endeared himself to Administrations tough guys. As the White  House Counsel, Alberto envisioned a lawless prison for the so-called  enemy combatants captured in Afghanistan. He denied them the  protection of Geneva Conventions, arguing that some of law,s  provisions are obsolete. In 2002, Alberto cleared a legal memo  allowing torture as an acceptable means to investigate enemy  combatants unless torture results in "death, organ failure,  or serious impairment of bodily functions. Discarding restraints  of international law, since the tough guys had no use for them,  Alberto,s memos most certainly contributed to abominable abuses  at Abu Gharib (which perchance was under the general command  of General Ricardo Sanchez, another Bush minority supervising  the slaughter of Iraqi civilians). Seeing law as an instrument of power, Alberto has constructed a notion of White House legality  with no intrinsic morality. It remains to be seen how Alberto,  if confirmed by the Senate, would lead the Department of Justice  whose job is not simply to please the White House but to enforce  laws and protect civil liberties.

The story of Viet Dinh, perhaps  the most brilliant Bush minority, is no less compelling. Born  in Saigon when bombs were falling all over Vietnam, Viet entered America as a refugee. Graduating magna cum laude from Harvard  Law School , clerking with Supreme Court Justice Sandra O, Connor,  and later teaching at the Georgetown Law Center, Viet was ripe  in 2001 to serve the public. As the irony would have it, the  glory of authoring the Patriot Act fell on this Asian refugee.  The Act he authored is an inscrutable text, neither elegant nor  candid, but one hammered together to sneak and peek (on the theory  that while the cat,s away the mice will play), gag , detain,  and even criminally implicate speech protected under the First  Amendment. In his media encounters, Viet defends the Act as a  wonderful security gift to Americans (Muslim Americans excluded), and labels the grassroots movement against the Act as "hysteria  and fury signifying nothing.

Far more pompous than Condi,  Alberto, and Viet is Colin Powell who has served his boss with  shrewd skepticism instead of foolish fervor. Powell hasgaining the reputation of a man of conscience who has resisted to be  totally subservient to the tough guys. That is why, the argument  goes, he first lost his power, then his job. That might be so.  But it was this Bush minority who deceived the Security Council  about pictures of Iraqi trucks hauling the weapons of mass destruction.  Powell seemingly disapproved the war but nonetheless continued  to support it for years. This is no conscience. In any event,  Colin has aided and abetted a dirty foreign policy far too long  to claim any purity.

Of course, there exists no  proof that the White House has launched a deliberate policy of  hiring minorities for illegal and immoral assignments. But who  needs proof these days; mere accusation would suffice. It sure seems intriguing that Bush minorities are collectively chanting  the mantras of "security at home" and "liberty abroad to play dirty with law---affirming an unfortunate message  that even the people of color, when given the responsibility  to run affairs of the state, act no differently than white males---a  species much maligned in critical race literature as the paragon  of brutality and cold-heartedness.

Thus a chapter is being written  in American history the theme of which is dirty diversity. Non-white  faces have been hired for big-ticket jobs so that a black woman vouches for an unjust war, a black man defends it, an Hispanic  supervises the slaughter of civilians while another justifies  the use of torture, and a Vietnamese refugee writes the law to  maim civil liberties in America.

Ali Khan is a professor of law at Washburn  University School of Law in Topeka, Kansas. His book, A Theory  of International Terrorism, will be published in 2005 by Martinus  Nijhoff Publishers. Please send your comments to ali.khan@washburn.edu
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