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In the latest
sign of a troubled American democracy, a large
majority of U.S. citizens now say they wouldn’t
mind if no weapons of mass destruction are found in
Iraq, though it was George W. Bush’s chief
rationale for war. Americans also don’t seem to
mind that Bush appears to have deceived them for
months when he claimed he hadn’t made up his mind
about invading Iraq.
As he marched the nation to
war, Bush presented himself as a Christian man of
peace who saw war only as a last resort. But in a
remarkable though little noted disclosure, Time
magazine reported that in March 2002 – a full year
before the invasion – Bush outlined his real
thinking to three U.S. senators, “Fuck Saddam,”
Bush said. “We’re taking him out.”
Time actually didn’t report
the quote exactly that way. Apparently not to offend
readers who admire Bush’s moral clarity, Time
printed the quote as “F--- Saddam. We’re taking
him out.”
Bush offered his pithy judgment
after sticking his head in the door of a White House
meeting between National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice and three senators who had been
discussing strategies for dealing with Iraq through
the United Nations. The senators laughed
uncomfortably at Bush’s remark, Time reported.
[Time story
posted March 23, 2003]
It now is clear that Bush never
intended to avoid a war in Iraq, a conflict which
has so far claimed the lives of at least 85 American
soldiers and possibly thousands of Iraqis.
As of Monday, April 7, the U.S.
military had located two suspicious caches of
chemicals that were undergoing tests, but still had
not confirmed any chemical or biological weapons.
Whatever those ultimate findings, however, there's
little doubt that the long-running drama over United
Nations inspections to ensure that Iraq had rid
itself of weapons of mass destruction was a charade
designed to mask Bush’s predetermined course of
action -- to test out his new doctrine of preemptive
war.
No Credibility
Much of the world – from
Canada to Cameroon – caught on to the
administration’s game as it sought to manipulate
international support for an invasion. Bush's lack
of credibility on the world stage left him with only
four out of 15 votes on the U.N. Security Council
for a war resolution.
The Bush administration’s
deceit was so obvious that even Washington Post
columnist David Broder spotted it. Broder, who has
built a career ignoring unpleasant realities about
Washington’s powerful, observed how Bush had
choreographed the march to war.
“Looking back, the major
landmarks of the past year appear to have been
carefully designed to leave no alternative but war
with Iraq – or an unlikely capitulation and
abdication by Hussein,” Broder wrote on the eve of
the war. Noting Bush’s post-Sept. 11th doctrine of
waging preemptive war against any nation that he
deemed a potential threat, Broder said, “It
quickly became clear that Iraq had been chosen as
the test case of the new doctrine.” [Washington
Post, March 18, 2003]
Once Bush had chosen the site,
there was virtually nothing the Iraqi government
could do to avoid war, short of total capitulation.
As a demonstration of both America’s military
might and his own itchy trigger finger, Bush had
decided to make Iraq his Alderaan, the hapless
planet in the original Star Wars movie that was
picked to show off the power of the Death Star.
“Fear will keep the local
systems in line, fear of this battle station,”
explained Death Star commander Tarkin in the movie.
“No star system will dare oppose the emperor
now.”
Similarly, the slaughter of the
outmatched Iraqi military is meant to send a message
to other countries that might try to resist Bush’s
dictates. At a Central Command briefing, Brig. Gen.
Vincent Brooks took note of this awesome power on
display as he described the decimation – or
“degrading” – of Iraqi forces south of
Baghdad.
“They’re in serious
trouble,” Brooks said. “They remain in contact
now with the most powerful force on earth.” Using
the unsavory Saddam Hussein as a foil, Bush was
unleashing hell on the Iraqis.
Caligula's Saying
This new emphasis on military
might to bring other countries into line --
occurring in tandem with the cheapening of the
democratic debate inside the United States -- may
have been described best by U.S. diplomat John Brady
Kiesling, who resigned earlier this year rather than
help give diplomatic cover to the war strategy.
"We have not seen such
systematic distortion of intelligence, such
systematic manipulation of American opinion, since
the war in Vietnam," Kiesling wrote in a
resignation letter on Feb. 27. "We spread
disproportionate terror and confusion in the public
mind, arbitrarily linking the unrelated problems of
terrorism and Iraq."
Kiesling also grasped the shift
to empire – away from republic – that is
underpinning Bush's policies. The career diplomat
asked, "Has 'oderint dum metuant' really become
our motto?" citing a favorite saying of the mad
Roman emperor Caligula, which means "Let them
hate so long as they fear."
"The policies we are now
asked to advance are incompatible not only with
American values but also with American
interests," Kiesling wrote. "When our
friends are afraid of us rather than for us, it is
time to worry."
Yet the apparent enthusiasm of
the American people for the war in Iraq – and
their lightly considered acquiescence to this
crossover to imperial power – have sent a chilling
message to the rest of the world. That message is
that the American people and their increasingly
enfeebled democratic process will not serve as a
check on George W. Bush.
God's Work
Bush apparently sees his
mission in messianic terms, believing that he is the
instrument of God as he strikes at Saddam Hussein
and other U.S. adversaries.
In a profile of Bush at war, USA Today cited
Commerce Secretary Don Evans, one of Bush’s
closest friends, describing Bush’s belief that he
was called on by God to do what he’s doing.
Bush’s obsession with Hussein
also was traced to a personal loathing for the
dictator. Bush “is convinced that the Iraqi leader
is literally insane and would gladly give terrorists
weapons to use to launch another attack on the
United States,” the newspaper reported. In that
conviction, however, Bush is at odds with CIA
analysts who concluded last year that the secular
Hussein would only share weapons with Islamic
terrorists if the United States invaded Iraq.
While assessing Hussein as
nuts, Bush has not proven to be a model of
psychological stability either. As he readied
himself for the speech announcing the start of the
war, he was behaving more like a frat boy than a
world leader undertaking a grave act that would end
the lives of thousands. He pumped his fist and
exclaimed about himself, “feel good.”
In private, Bush is even more
peevish than usual, USA Today reported. “He rarely
jokes with staffers these days and occasionally
startles them with sarcastic put-downs,” the
newspaper wrote. “He’s a critic who sees himself
as the aggrieved victim of the news media and
second-guessers.” [USA Today, April 2, 2003]
Bush's behavior seems to be
tracking with the imperial style he unveiled last
year to Bob Woodward in an interview for the book, Bush
at War. "That's the interesting thing about
being the president," Bush said. "Maybe
somebody needs to explain to me why they say
something, but I don't feel like I owe anybody an
explanation."
Flag-Waving Coverage
Still, Bush has succeeded at a
central task. Aided by a U.S. news media that sees
ratings gold in its red-white-and-blue coverage of
the war, Bush has taught the American people to
relish this one-sided annihilation of thousands of
Iraqi soldiers resisting what they and much of the
world see as an unprovoked invasion of their
country.
Bush has orchestrated a
fundamental change in the historic American spirit.
Since the days of the Revolutionary War, Americans
have rooted for the underdog. But now, apparently by
wide majorities, the American people are cheering as
U.S. troops mow down Iraqi soldiers today like
British imperial forces used modern rifles to cut
down Zulu tribesmen fighting with spears a century
ago.
This change in spirit has been
picked up in recent polls, as Americans show little
regard for international law – except when it’s
needed to protect U.S. POWs – and care little
about the deaths of Iraqis. Many respondents saw no
problem in the possibility that Bush had misled the
nation in justifying the war.
A Washington Post-ABC News poll
found that 69 percent of Americans endorsing the war
even if no weapons of mass destruction are found.
“I would not feel that I had been sold a bill of
goods by the Bush administration,” 27-year-old law
student Brad Stephens said. [Washington Post, April
5, 2003]
By contrast, people all over
the world are outraged at the U.S. invasion of Iraq,
with opinion polls registering opposition often
exceeding 90 percent.
U.S. public sentiment could
change if a low-level guerrilla conflict drags on
inflicting a growing number of American casualties.
But so far the American people seem to be buying
into the war as a kind of ultimate reality TV show.
The TV networks have responded
by trying to associate their news products with
America’s fighting men and women. On MSNBC, there
is “America’s Bravest,” mini-profiles of
citizen soldiers. On Fox News, the pro-war
propaganda is unrelenting and unapologetic. CNN,
too, puts a pro-U.S. spin on nearly every piece of
war news.
Even when American forces kill
innocent civilians – as happened near Najaf where
seven women and children were shot to death amid
confusion at a U.S. checkpoint – the Iraqi
government is held to blame, for allegedly putting
women and children in harm’s way.
Agitprop
Yet what is disturbing to many
war critics about the American reaction to the war
is that Bush secured majority backing by misleading
the U.S. public about key facts – and the majority
of American people don't seem to care.
As Lewis H. Lapham, editor of
Harper’s Magazine, observed, the pre-war debate in
the U.S. was less a reasoned discussion about a
profound redirection of America from a republic
toward an empire than it was “agitprop,” the
intelligence term for propaganda intended to agitate
a population into a pre-determined course of action.
“I don’t know how else to
characterize the Bush administration’s effort to
convince the public,” Lapham wrote. Citing the
paucity of evidence about Iraqi possession of
weapons of mass destruction. Lapham took note of
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s
instant-classic rationale for war: “The absence of
evidence is not evidence of absence.” [Harper’s
Magazine, April 2003]
When Secretary of State Colin
Powell took the propaganda campaign to the U.N.,
that absence of evidence was padded with references
to unnamed “sources” and photos of trucks and
buildings that proved nothing. Powell played an
intercepted phone call between two Iraqis shouting
Arabic at one another and then Powell added
fictitious words to the State Department’s
translation to make the case that the Iraqis were
cleaning out illegal weapons before a U.N.
inspection.
Powell read from the supposed
transcript of one Iraqi’s words: “We sent you a
message yesterday to clean out all of the areas, the
scrap areas, the abandoned areas. Make sure there is
nothing there.”
What the full
State Department transcript said, however, was:
“We sent you a message to inspect the scrap areas
and the abandoned areas.” In the full transcript
at the State Department's Web site, there was no
order to “clean out all of the areas” and there
was no instruction to “make sure there is nothing
there.” [Powell’s apparent fabrication of the
transcript was first reported by Gilbert Cranberg, a
former editor of the Des Moines Register’s
editorial pages.]
In his U.N. presentation,
Powell also hailed a British dossier that he said
described in “exquisite detail Iraqi deception
activities.” The British report, however, turned
out to be cribbed from an outdated student paper on
the Internet. Powell further shredded his personal
credibility by insisting that a communique broadcast
by al-Qaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden, which
denounced both the U.S. intentions to invade Iraq
and the Iraqi government, was proof that bin Laden
and Saddam Hussein were “in partnership.”
Two Oceans
Bush executed his own leaps of
logic intended to frighten the American people
rather than engage them in a reasoned debate. He
repeatedly cited Sept. 11 in arguing that the
terrorist attacks proved that the U.S. no longer was
protected by its two oceans. Yet for anyone who grew
up during the Cold War and remembers the images of
nuclear-tipped Soviet intercontinental ballistic
missiles, the loss of security from the two oceans
had not occurred in 2001 but more like half a
century earlier.
In the days leading up to war,
Bush and his administration continued salting their
speeches with bogus allegations, some of which had
been disproved by the U.N. and even U.S.
intelligence agencies. On March 16, Vice President
Dick Cheney trotted out the canard that Iraq had
“reconstituted nuclear weapons,” though the
International Atomic Energy Agency had debunked that
key element of the U.S. case.
The IAEA discovered that
aluminum tubes that Bush had argued were meant for
centrifuges to produce enriched uranium would not
serve that function. The IAEA also reported that a
document about Iraqi attempts to purchase uranium in
Niger was a forgery. It later turned out that CIA
analysts also had doubted the authenticity of the
Niger document, but it was still included in
Bush’s State of the Union address. [Washington
Post, March 18, 2003]
IAEA director general Mohamed
ElBaradei said inspections of Iraq had found “no
indication of resumed nuclear activity.” Yet
Iraq’s alleged nuclear program remained a scary
part of the case for war.
White Man's Burden
Ironically, as the American
political debate is shaped by endless agitprop,
another one of the war’s stated goals is to make
Iraq a model of democracy. This argument, promoted
by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, has
given the bloodshed and destruction in Iraq an
idealistic tinge.
To the administration’s
critics, however, the Wolfowitz scheme is possibly
one of the most dangerous aspects of the war, an
ideological hubris that foretells other conflicts
and the likely creation of a new generation of
anti-American terrorists who will be determined to
drive an imperial U.S. out of the Middle East.
Bestowing democracy on Iraq
through war carries a whiff of previous colonial
rationales for empire, a kind of modern-day White
Man’s Burden, the claim that imperialism was
justified because it brought civilization to dark
corners of the world.
Yet given the deception and
jingoism pervading the American war debate, many in
the world may no longer see the U.S. political
system as the preeminent model of democracy, that
shining city on the hill serving as a beacon of
freedom and reason. Instead, the world has the
picture of a U.S. president making life-and-death
decisions with schoolboy declarations, such as
"Fuck Saddam."
The agitprop, the crude lies
and the other public-relations techniques that have
rallied the nation to war make the beginning of
Bush’s "crusade" to rid the world of
"evil" look more like the Stupid White
Man’s Burden.
While at the Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s, Robert Parry broke
many of the stories now known as the Iran-Contra
Affair. His latest book is Lost History.
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