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But Foreign Aid Is Bribery! And Blackmail, Extortion, and
Theft Too!
by
Jacob G. Hornberger,
September 26, 2003
Horrors! Sen. Edward Kennedy has thrown the Washington
establishment into turmoil by making the shocking
observation that the Bush administration is using U.S.
foreign aid to bribe foreign governments to support its
occupation of Iraq. My belief is this money is
being shuffled all around to these political leaders in
all parts of the world, bribing them to send in
troops, Kennedy said, causing Republican House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay to describe the accusation as
disgusting and false.
The real reason that everyone is so upset is that Kennedy
has spoken the truth. The plain and simple truth is that
foreign aid is nothing more than an integral and perverse
part of the U.S. governments morally bankrupt
foreign policy, not only because its primary purpose is
to bribe, blackmail, and extort foreign regimes into
doing Washingtons bidding, but also because of the
enormously destructive consequences it has.
Kennedys use of Turkey is, of course, a perfect
example. Prior to its invasion of Iraq, the U.S.
government offered Turkey $26 billion to permit the
United States to use Turkey as a base of operations to
invade Iraq from the north. When the Turkish parliament
voted against the proposal, Turkey didnt get the
money. If thats not a bribe, what is it?
And lets not forget how foreign aid is used to
blackmail and extort foreign regimes that have been made
dependent by years of U.S. foreign aid largess. The
threat is a simple one: Do as we say or lose your dole.
For example, when Yemen voted against a UN resolution
authorizing United States to use force against Iraq in
1990, UN Ambassador Thomas Pickering walked over to the
Yemeni ambassador and said, Thats the most
expensive No vote you ever cast. According to
writer John Pilger, Within three days, a U.S aid
program to one of the worlds poorest countries was
stopped. Yemen suddenly had problems with the World Bank
and the IMF; and 800,000 Yemeni workers were expelled
from Saudi Arabia.
Pilger adds,
When the United States sought another resolution to
blockade Iraq, two new members of the Security Council
were duly coerced. Ecuador was warned by the US
ambassador in Quito about the devastating economic
consequences of a No vote. Zimbabwe was threatened
with new IMF conditions for its debt. The punishment of
impoverished countries that opposed the attack was
severe. Sudan, in the grip of a famine, was denied a
shipment of food aid.
Helping the poor is the standard justification for
foreign aid. In fact, its not uncommon for
supporters of foreign aid to hit foreign-aid opponents
with what has become a standard bromide employed against
opponents of all government welfare programs: You
hate the poor!
What nonsense, especially given that foreign aid not only
does not help the poor but instead actually reinforces
the poverty it is supposedly designed to combat. Consider
the following articles:
Foreign Aid: Help or Hindrance, by Doug Bandow
Turn Off Foreign Aid, by Richard Rahn
Foreign Aid: End It, Dont Mend It, by Stephen Moore
Lets also keep in mind that if the purpose of
foreign aid really was to help the worlds poor, why
would the U.S. government steadfastly maintain an
extensive web of domestic subsidies, tariffs, and import
quotas, knowing the horrific damage they cause poor people all over the globe?
Lets also not forget the perverse role that U.S.
foreign aid plays in U.S. foreign policy, specifically in
its use to prop up and strengthen the ability of
tyrannical regimes to suppress and brutalize their own
people. Consider these two articles:
Americas Pro-Terrorism Foreign-Aid
Program, by James Bovard
Americas Hypocritical, Counterproductive
Foreign Aid, by James Bovard
Consider also the large amount of military foreign aid
that is given away, which is sometimes used to brutalize
foreigners as well as citizens. A good example entailed the biological and chemical weapons that
the United States
delivered to Saddam Hussein; they
were used to kill both Iranians and Iraqis.
Of course, whenever someone objects to foreign aid to countries in the Middle East, whether Arab or Israel, aid defenders employ the same types of tactics as
those used by defenders of aid for the poor in Third World countries:
You hate Arabs or You hate Jews. In fact, its sometimes amusing to see U.S.
conservatives or even libertarians defending foreign aid to Israel while at the same time
declaiming indignantly against the food-stamp mother
standing in the grocery store line. What those
conservatives and libertarians conveniently block out of their minds is
that the same moral principles that argue against domestic
welfare apply equally to foreign welfare. That is, given
that its morally wrong for the state to take the
money of Person A to give it to Person B, it is equally
wrong for the state to take the money of Persons A and B
to give it to officials in foreign governments.
Finally, it is impossible to ignore the deep anger,
animosity, and hatred that U.S. foreign aid has
engendered among people all over the world, including
terrorists who are now bent on killing Americans. Why
would we expect it to be otherwise, especially when such
aid has often been used by so many recipient regimes in
such destructive ways?
Senator Kennedy has obviously stirred up a Washington
firestorm by stating the truth about U.S. foreign aid. It
is bribery, and its also blackmail,
extortion, and stealing. Moreover, given that God has created a universe in which evil means inevitably beget rotten consequences, how can we be surprised that the results of foreign aid have been so perverse and destructive?
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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