Katrina and 9/11: Criminal Incompetence

by Alan Bock
http://antiwar.com/bock/
What has been obvious to many of us for some time should
be obvious to almost everybody in the wake of the botch
government – city, state, and local, there's plenty of
incompetence to go around – has made of Hurricane
Katrina.
The empire has no clothes.
After 9/11, the government spent countless billions
reshuffling the deck chairs on the great Ship of State.
Acknowledging implicitly that the United States is an
empire in fact if not in rhetoric (and sometimes it's
plenty imperial in rhetoric), Congress dumped all the
agencies remotely resembling protection, security, and
response into the Homeland Security Administration.
With all the billions spent and the bureaucratic flow
charts rejiggered, our elected and appointed officials
could look at the people (perhaps crossing their fingers
behind their backs if they had a sense of how things
really work in Washington, which all too many elected
officials clearly don't) and claim to have done
something about preventing and responding to disasters.
Then Katrina hit, and all the reshuffling was exposed as
the sham it was. Even a number of conservative
commentators who are not complete shills for whatever
lie the administration is floating at the moment were
understandably dismayed.
Remember, Katrina made landfall on Monday morning, Aug.
29. The 24/7 cable stations had been hyping it for a
week before that and deploying reporters to do the usual
windblown reports on "nature's fury." The formalities of
declaring a federal emergency had been completed, with
President Bush signing the relevant documents, on
Saturday the 27th. As the hurricane approached the Gulf
Coast, President Bush and FEMA Director Michael Brown
were briefed by Dr. Max Mayfield, director of the
National Hurricane Center, a briefing that included the
likelihood that the levees surrounding New Orleans would
at least overflow and possibly be breached, flooding the
city.
New Orleans Mayor Nagin issued an evacuation order, but
didn't bother to try to use the city's long-standing
evacuation plan that involved commandeering school buses
and municipal buses to help evacuate people who didn't
have cars, didn't have much money, and probably didn't
have relatives in the suburbs. On Monday, Katrina made
landfall – hitting Gulfport, Miss., directly rather than
New Orleans, causing a brief sigh of relief. But almost
immediately water started to flow over the levees. The
flooding, which would get much worse soon, had begun.
It wasn't until 11:30 that FEMA director Michael Brown,
a failed lawyer with no disaster experience, whose rise
to that position is even more scandalous than the
mainstream media have indicated, requested that the
Department of Homeland Security dispatch 1,000 people to
New Orleans. In his memo, he gave them two days to get
there. Really.
The long and short of it is that the federal
government's emergency-management capability, after all
that beefing up, after all those scenarios duly memoed
and filed, after all the empty promises, turned out to
be nothing but a muscle-bound behemoth that cold do
little but trip over its own red tape. It had no sense
of mission or urgency – Brown's first impulse was to
make sure the agency got plenty of favorable PR – and
couldn't move without 17 signatures in triplicate.
If you want more gory details than you can handle,
including truly heartrending stories of abuse at the
hands of government agents, plenty of links and a good
deal of barely controlled fury, Andrew Sullivan, on his
blog, has been fuming from the beginning (though he
occasionally gets sidetracked by a gay-marriage
development).
The administration eventually did what it usually does,
making this a military mission, and many of those
military people are doing a reasonably competent job,
finally. But the episode suggests strongly that the
United States is in an advanced condition of imperial
sclerosis with a good deal of decadence already strongly
advanced.
We are ruled by a perpetual adolescent, the second in a
row answering that description to be president, fully as
daft and divorced from reality as any of the crazy late
Roman emperors. None of the departments tasked with
doing what most Americans think government actually
ought to do, like protecting the people from disasters
foreign and domestic, is the least bit serious about
what is supposed to be its job. They are all, whether in
the Homeland Security sham or the "intelligence
community," more interested in turf battles, protecting
their secrets, and playing politics than in doing
anything remotely serious.
Faced on 9/11 with an attack by a stateless terrorist
network/organization that is decentralized and
dispersed, coordinated through the Internet and other
technologies, our government did nothing to confront the
actual enemy. Instead, it did what a country with a
capable military preferred; it found a state certain
factions had been itching to confront anyway and hyped
that third-rate dictatorship that posed no real threat
even to its neighbors into an imminent threat to the
most powerful nation-state ever to inhabit the planet.
Most of the sheeple bought it.
Four years later, Osama bin Laden is still at large and
there's not the slightest evidence that our vaunted
government operations have made even a bit or progress
in penetrating his operation. Terrorist attacks around
the world have increased, not decreased. The U.S.
military is overstretched and ill-used in an occupation
that is going so poorly the few officials in touch with
reality simply hope that it won't be too blindingly
obvious the U.S. tail is between its legs when it
leaves. Military morale and recruiting are in trouble.
Anti-Americanism is increasing around the world,
including among people who have seldom succumbed to it
in the past.
And the terrorists have been watching the stunningly
incompetent response to Katrina, rubbing their hands
that the Bush administration might well have used up
whatever good will it had left among the American
people.
The empire has no clothes.
http://antiwar.com/bock/
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