Bush Contemplates Rebirth of Dictatorship for Iraq
By Matthew Rothschild
08/21/06 "The
Progressive" 08/17/06 -- -- There was a big clue
planted at the bottom of the very long lead article in The New York
Times of August 17.
That story noted the alarming rise in insurgent attacks against
American and Iraqi forces.
The number of IEDs in July was 2,625, just about twice what it was
back in January, when Zarqawi was still prowling around.
Clearly, his death did nothing to slow the pace down or snuff out
the insurgency.
The shelf life of Bush propaganda is only about one week these days.
But back to the clue.
The last three paragraphs of this story revealed that “senior
administration officials . . . are considering alternatives other
than democracy,” according to a military expert who was just briefed
at the White House.
Hmmm, “alternatives other than democracy.”
My, what can those be?
Monarchy? Dictatorship?
In that same edition, The New York Times ran a headline about the
death of the brutal Paraguayan strongman Alfredo Stroessner,
proclaiming him to be a “colorful dictator.”
That’s an obscenity. According to Amnesty International, “During
Stroessner's military dictatorship, gross and systematic violations
of human rights occurred. Amnesty International repeatedly expressed
concern to the Paraguayan Government about long-term prisoners of
conscience and allegations of torture, ‘disappearance’ and death in
custody of political prisoners, as well as reports of prolonged
detentions of political opponents.”
(For a glimpse at the horrors he committed, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org.)
The Bush Administration may be looking for an Iraqi Stroessner, or
another, more reliable Saddam.
That may have been what Cheney and Rumsfeld had in mind all along.
From the very beginning, they wanted to install in power Ahmad
Chalabi and his groups of exiles roosting in the Iraqi National
Congress, writes George Packer in his book The Assassin’s Gate. When
the situation in Iraq began to deteriorate, Cheney blamed those in
the Administration who refused to go along with this plan.
“In the fall of 2003, Dick Cheney approached his colleague Colin
Powell, stuck a finger in his chest, and said, ‘If you hadn’t
opposed the INC and Chalabi, we wouldn’t be in this mess,’ ” Packer
reports.
Maybe Chalabi is waiting in the wings still—or some other Saddam
wannabe.
Bush appears to be taking applications.
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