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We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality planet and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is the Answer by means of Knowledge and Awareness!



WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

US anthrax attackers aimed to assassinate 
Democratic leaders Media silent on military links
By Jerry White
23 January 2002

In the more than three months since anthrax-infected letters were mailed to 
US Senators Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy, evidence has emerged about the 
source and motives of the attack which has vast political implications.

It is now generally accepted that the anthrax came from a domestic source, 
not from the Middle East. Given the fact that the intended victims were 
prominent leaders of the Democratic Party, it is clear that the perpetrators 
must be linked to right-wing organizations in the US. In December, the 
anthrax in the letters was traced to biological warfare facilities run by 
the US military.

Most recently, the Washington Post reported January 21 that at least 27 
biological warfare specimens, including anthrax bacteria, had gone 
unaccounted for at the Army's Fort Detrick, Maryland lab, prompting an 
internal investigation in 1992. Lab workers told the Post that they had 
produced anthrax in powder form, contrary to official claims that the lab 
generated only "wet" anthrax, which is less dangerous.

Citing interviews with lab personnel, the newspaper concluded: "the emerging 
details are consistent with the increasingly popular hypothesis that last 
fall's bioterrorist attacks were the work of a current or former Fort 
Detrick scientist."

In other words, the leaders of the Democratic Party were targeted for 
assassination by right-wing elements that have some connection to the 
military. This staggering fact, however, has been met with a strange silence 
by the media, government officials and the Democrats themselves, including 
the two senators who were targeted.

Investigators have determined that the letters contained weapons- grade 
anthrax, which an FBI microbiologist said was designed for "overkill." Two 
postal workers at the mail facility where the tainted letters were processed 
died after being exposed to up to 3,000 times the lethal dosage of the 
bacteria, while scores of Senate office workers were only spared because 
they were quickly treated.

The anthrax powder has been genetically traced to a single US military 
source: the Army's Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, the only facility known 
to have processed anthrax into the highly lethal powder form found in the 
letters. The spores in the letters to Daschle and Leahy were identical to 
those sent from Dugway to the Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious 
Disease (USAMRID) at Fort Detrick, in Frederick, Maryland, just outside of 
Washington, DC, and to a CIA lab in Langley, Virginia.

Within political and media circles it is generally conceded that the 
assassination plot was hatched by right-wing elements in the US. In a barely 
reported comment last month Senator Daschle told a CNN interviewer, almost 
in passing, that he believes the most likely suspect in the attacks was 
someone related to the US military. But neither Daschle, Leahy, nor any 
other Democratic Party spokesman has sought to make an issue of this 
attempted political murder.

The news media all but dropped mention of anthrax once it became clear that 
neither Osama bin Laden nor Saddam Hussein was responsible for the attacks 
and the White House could no longer use such claims to bolster its war 
effort and sweeping assault on civil liberties. As the military link to the 
attacks came to light, the media sought to blunt the significance of the 
exposure. Typical was Time magazine, which attempted to reassure its 
readers: "While the possibility of an Army connection has raised a few 
eyebrows, investigators are urging people not to jump to any conclusions."


Targets of the extreme right

Daschle and Leahy have long been targets of vitriol by the extreme right of 
the Republican Party, which considers them hardcore opponents of Bush's 
agenda. As Senate Majority Leader, Daschle is the most prominent Democratic 
officeholder and a possible challenger to Bush in the 2004 presidential 
elections. He has been the subject of a non-stop smear campaign by the Wall 
Street Journal, which accused Daschle in an editorial last November of 
"conducting his own guerilla war against Mr. Bush, blocking the President's 
[domestic] agenda at every turn." The statement was only one of many 
designed to incite reactionary elements with whom the Journal is politically 
and ideologically allied and which are tied to the Republicans and the 
military.

As chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Vermont Senator Leahy has been a 
target of anti-abortion fanatics and the most hawkish military types for 
delaying Bush's judicial appointments and raising mild criticisms over 
military tribunals and other violations of civil liberties.

During the Clinton administration the Republican Party repeatedly sought to 
incite the most reactionary elements in the military with claims the 
Democratic president was undermining military preparedness, selling nuclear 
secrets to China and engaged in other disloyal acts. In a thinly veiled 
effort to stir up violence against Clinton, North Carolina Senator Jesse 
Helms told a television interviewer that it would be dangerous for Clinton 
to visit the military bases in his state. Because of the president's views 
on gays in the military and his opposition to the Vietnam War, the senator 
said, "Mr. Clinton better watch out if he comes down here. He'd better have 
a bodyguard."

During the Monica Lewinsky affair some members of the officer corps openly 
defied laws prohibiting them from publicly expressing contempt for civilian 
political authorities. Several active-duty officers wrote letters published 
in the Navy Times and Army Times, which denounced Clinton as a "criminal," 
while others circulated petitions supporting the impeachment and removal of 
their nominal commander-in- chief.

The Republicans' theft of the 2000 presidential election relied to a great 
extent on their connections to the military brass. With the Bush camp 
fearing a recount of votes would eliminate their narrow lead in Florida, the 
Republicans mobilized military officials to supply large numbers of absentee 
ballots from armed forces personnel stationed overseas. Many of the ballots 
lacked postmarks or bore postmarks later than Election Day, suggesting that 
there was a concerted effort to solicit late votes and ship them without 
postmarks so as to conceal the fact they were illegal.

The Bush campaign then launched a witch-hunting attack on Democratic 
candidate Al Gore, portraying the efforts of the Democrats to weed out 
invalid military ballots as an anti-American attack on the armed forces. 
Montana Governor Marc Racicot, a leading spokesman for the Bush campaign, 
told a press conference: "The vice president's lawyers have gone to war, in 
my judgment, against the men and women who serve in the armed forces." 
Retired General Norman Schwarzkopf, the commander of US forces in the 
Persian Gulf War, denounced Gore for denying servicemen their right to vote.

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, Republican officials such as 
Attorney General John Ashcroft portrayed the slightest questioning of Bush's 
attacks on democratic rights as aiding and abetting the terrorists. Even 
after the anthrax attacks Daschle and Leahy continued to be targeted by 
right-wing talk show hosts and newspaper columnists who denounced them for 
undermining national security. The national conservative weekly Human Events 
ran an article about Leahy with the prominent headline "Osama's Enabler in 
Congress," sparking scores of hate messages to his office.

Daschle came under particular attack for opposing the billions more in tax 
breaks included in Bush's so-called economic stimulus package. 
Ads were circulated in Daschle's home state of South Dakota featuring 
side-by-side photographs of him and Saddam Hussein. Bush administration 
officials refused to distance themselves from the right-wing campaign, with 
Vice President Dick Cheney denouncing Daschle as an "obstructionist" on 
NBC's "Meet the Press" in mid- December, claiming the Democratic senator was 
blocking an economic recovery.


Bush's double standard

The Bush administration has clearly pursued a double standard when it comes 
to fighting the so-called war on terrorism. It has carried out a dragnet 
against Arab immigrants but has done nothing to round up right-wing domestic 
terrorists. Bush immediately held bin Laden and the Taliban responsible for 
the September 11 attack and began bombing Afghanistan, but White House 
officials now predict that finding the perpetrators of the anthrax attacks 
could take years.

The connections between the military and white supremacist and militia 
groups are well known, and there are numerous cases of weapons and 
ammunition from military bases going missing and ending up in the hands of 
the far right. But rather than pursue such an investigation, homeland 
security chief Tom Ridge has discounted the military connections to the 
anthrax attacks as just one of "multiple leads" in the case.

The World Socialist Web Site does not claim to know the exact nature of the 
anthrax attacks and to what extent they involved elements in the military. 
One thing is certain, however: there is a great need to seriously 
investigate these connections.

Anyone who thinks it is preposterous that elements within the state 
apparatus and the backers of the Bush administration could actively be 
involved in an assassination attempt or could have condoned such an act 
should consider recent history in the United States.

>From the series of shutdowns of the federal government in 1995-96, to the 
impeachment drive against Clinton and the theft of the 2000 election, the 
Republican Party has shown it no longer plays by the traditional rules of 
bourgeois democracy. After being thwarted by popular opposition during the 
1990s, the right has concluded it can only achieve its agenda through 
extra-parliamentary and illegal methods. That these forces will resort to 
violence was demonstrated during the 2000 election when a Republican mob 
attacked officials recounting votes in south Florida. At the time the Wall 
Street Journal urged Bush to use an "iron fist" against his opponents.

In the face of such attacks the Democrats have proven their unwillingness 
and incapacity to wage a genuine struggle against these fascistic forces. 
They responded with cowardice even as leaders of their party are targeted 
for assassination. At the same time the Democrats have concealed from the 
American people the extent of the danger posed by the ultra-right.

This underscores the need for working people to advance their own 
independent political struggle in defense of basic democratic rights.
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