Honesty in Iraq
By David Swanson
12/08/06 -- -- "Information
Clearing House" --- - The Minneapolis Star-Tribune recently
published an editorial that said of Bush: "His
pronouncements now bear no resemblance to reality." Now?
Oh, never mind.
Marc Sandalow, the Washington Bureau Chief for the San
Francisco Chronicle, recently wrote: "There is mounting
evidence that the world of public Bush-speak -- from his
vigorous support for al-Maliki and Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld to his rejection of direct diplomacy
with Syria and Iran -- bears little relation to what
goes on behind the scenes." Mounting? Forget it.
Robert Fisk recently asked about George W. Bush: "How
does he do it? How does he persuade himself - as he
apparently did in Amman yesterday - that the United
States will stay in Iraq 'until the job is complete'?"
Persuade himself? I give up.
Frank Rich writes that Bush "is completely untethered
from reality. It's not that he can't handle the truth
about Iraq. He doesn't know what the truth is." He
doesn't? Look at a couple of well-known Bush quotes
again:
"What's the difference? The possibility that [Saddam]
could acquire weapons, if he were to acquire weapons, he
would be the danger." (Bush on why he lied about weapons
of mass destruction.)
"I didn't want to inject a major decision about this war
in the final days of a campaign. And so the only way to
answer that question and to get you on to another
question was to give you that answer." (Bush on why he
lied about keeping Rumsfeld on.)
These are the statements of a man who knew he was lying,
a man who believes nobody should care whether he lies or
not, a man who doesn't much care himself, but still
nonetheless a sane – albeit heartless, cruel, and stupid
– human being who knew he was lying.
The media's new notion that Bush is losing his sanity
reflects more the media's developing its sanity than
Bush losing anything. He is intent on staying in Iraq
forever and lying about anything he has to lie about to
do so. This has been clear for years. That journalists
are surprised by it now suggests the degree to which the
American media, not Bush, is out of touch with the
reality of Iraq.
How often do we hear the voices of Iraqis in American
journalism? How many of us know their stories? We've
killed 650,000 of them, measured as excess deaths above
the level of deaths our sanctions were causing each year
before the war. Since the Spring of 2004 most Iraqis
have viewed America as their primary enemy. But what do
we know about their lives?
The United States has for three years now been building
permanent military bases all over Iraq. How present are
these bases in the thinking of members of the U.S.
media? How out of touch are we with that reality? Bush
strikes me as completely in touch with it.
I recently read a book called "How America Lost Iraq" by
Aaron Glantz. The author reported from Iraq during the
first year and a half of the occupation. Glantz's book
begins with an account of the difficulty he had in
persuading Pacifica Radio to use his reports in the
months following the invasion. Most of the Iraqis he
spoke to were grateful to the United States for
overthrowing Saddam Hussein. Others were engaged in
uncovering mass graves and exposing the crimes of Saddam
Hussein. But Pacifica wanted stories that weren't being
reported by the U.S. corporate media.
Later, as Iraqis turned against the United States and
demanded that the occupation end, Glantz found himself
still just reporting what most Iraqis told him, but
having his work accepted and praised as unique. Other
media outlets were not reporting it. And yet it was the
story that would determine the course of the occupation,
it was a story that had been completely predictable (and
even predicted a decade earlier by Bush's father), and
it was the result of complete disregard for the Iraqis.
When Iraqis were overjoyed at the removal of Saddam
Hussein, the new U.S. occupiers accepted their gratitude
but showed complete disdain for their needs, their
allegiance, or their potential threat, throwing them out
of work, allowing them to sell weapons on the street,
depriving them of electricity. Glantz wrote:
"This is the only story in which I am confident. If
there is no electricity next month when the temperature
goes to 130 degrees, there will be a lot of angry,
sleep-deprived Iraqis. And they will all have
Kalashnikovs they bought for a few dollars at the corner
market."
Later, when the United States began to try to move
against Muqtada al-Sadr, Glantz described it as a "huge
miscalculation," since even Iraqis who didn't like al-Sadr
would rally to his defense against foreign occupiers.
Glantz gradually moved over time from making excuses for
the occupation – based primarily on how horrific the
Saddam Hussein regime had been – to recognizing that as
long as the occupation continues the situation will go
from bad to worse, that the occupation encourages civil
war, fundamentalist leaders, terrorism training, and all
of the things defenders of the occupation warn will
result from ending it.
But here's a fundamental question: Is aggressively
attacking another nation in an illegal war something
that can be done without catastrophic results if it's
done right? Let's imagine that Bush told America and the
world the truth about the reasons for the war, and that
the reasons were not to control the Middle East and its
oil while enriching cronies and winning votes, but
rather to oust a dictator we regretted having installed
and supported. Let's imagine that the American people
insisted this be done, that the public knew Iraq was no
threat to America or even its neighbors but wanted to
act out of concern for Iraqis abused by a dictator.
Further, let's suppose that the U.S. occupation of Iraq
announced on day 1 that it would end the occupation in 6
months, built no permanent bases, threw no one out of
work, protected museums and libraries - not just oil,
hired Iraqis through honest bidding to rebuild their own
country, got basic services restored within weeks,
randomly arrested and imprisoned and tortured no one,
laid claim to no oil or resources, invested a small
fraction of what the war has actually cost in real
reconstruction, began peace negotiations with UN
assistance, kept its promises, got out in 6 months, and
announced: "Saudi Arabia, you're next!"
Even in this fantasy, the actions of the United States
would have effectively eliminated international law,
established the right of any nation to attack any other
nation aggressively, betrayed the men and women of the
U.S. military who signed up to defend their own country
and not to attack someone else's, sacrificed the lives
of all those killed in the war, and by no means assured
Iraq of developing a government better than Saddam
Hussein's.
Back in reality, we should recognize that Nuremburg's
condemnation of aggressive war was not a legal theory
but a description of facts. Following the Holocaust, the
International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg called the
waging of aggressive war "essentially an evil thing . .
. to initiate a war of aggression . . . is not only an
international crime; it is the supreme international
crime differing only from other war crimes in that it
contains within itself the accumulated evil of the
whole."
When you attack another nation you predictably do not
just attack it. You also almost certainly engage in a
number of specific war crimes: you attack civilians,
target ambulances, hospitals, and journalists, use
forbidden weapons, detain, torture, murder, spy, rape,
steal, and destroy. You do these things because they
follow from the logic of war. You avoid them not through
competence or sanity but by refraining from launching
aggressive wars.
David
Swanson is co-founder of the
www.AfterDowningStreet.org coalition, creator of
MeetWithCindy.org, and a board member of Progressive
Democrats of America, and of the Backbone Campaign. He
obtained a Master's degree in philosophy from the
University of Virginia in 1997. His website is
www.davidswanson.org.
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