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Bush and Blair and the Big Lie
A torrent of propaganda deceiving Americans into believing
Iraq was armed to the teeth with WMDs, somehow responsible for 9/11,
and intending, as Bush repeatedly claimed, to attack the U.S.
By
ERIC MARGOLIS -- Toronto Sun: 04/20/03
A California superior court judge sent me the
following quotation, which is well worth pondering:
"We must make clear to the Germans that the wrong for which their
leaders are on trial is not that they lost the war, but that they
started it. And we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into a trial
of the causes of the war, for our position is that no grievances or
policies will justify resort to aggressive war. It is utterly
renounced and condemned as an instrument of policy."
This declaration was made by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert H.
Jackson, America's senior representative at the 1945 Nuremberg war
crimes trials, and the tribunal's chief prosecutor.
Those now exulting America's conquest of Iraq should ponder Judge
Jackson's majestic words. Particularly now that the U.S.-British
justifications for invading Iraq are being revealed as distortions.
Every nook and cranny of Iraq has yet to be searched, but so far
nothing incriminating has been discovered to validate lurid claims
made by President George Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair. Let's
review the big ones:
"The Iraqi regime continues to possess and conceal some of the
most lethal weapons ever devised," said President Bush, warning
Iraq was intent on attacking the U.S. But Mohamed el-Baradei, chief of
the UN nuclear weapons inspection agency (IAEA), concluded in March:
"No evidence or plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear
weapons program in Iraq." The same for gas and germs.
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed before the UN, backed up
by a dossier from British intelligence, that Washington and London had
a long list of sites in Iraq containing weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).
When inspected by the UN, and, later, U.S. troops, none contained any
WMDs. Part of London's damning dossier on Iraq was revealed to have
been plagiarized from a 10-year-old graduate thesis.
"Iraq is trying to procure uranium," thundered Colin Powell
at the UN. Washington and London claimed Iraq imported yellowcake
uranium from Niger to make nuclear weapons. In March, UN experts
concluded the documents purportedly confirming the uranium sales were
"not authentic" and in fact "crude fabrications."
Fictitious uranium
Bush: "Iraq has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminium
tubes for gas centrifuges, which are used to enrich uranium for
nuclear weapons." The uranium to be enriched was, of course, the
same fictitious uranium from Niger. UN inspectors found the tubes were
for short-range, 81-mm artillery rockets.
The U.S. claimed Iraq was an ally of al-Qaida. No terrorist links have
so far been found. Just a retired Palestinian thug, Abu Abbas. The
notorious Ansar al-Islam "terror and poison camp" turned out
to be mud huts occupied by motley Islamists who regularly denounced
bin Laden.
The mobile germ warfare trucks Powell warned about - a.k.a. "Winnebagos
of Death" - turned out to be mobile food inspection labs. Iraq's
"drones of death" that Bush warned might fly off ships to
attack the U.S. with pestilence were, on inspection, two rickety model
airplanes.
The Bush administration concealed from Americans that in 1995 Saddam
Hussein's son-in-law, Gen. Hussein Kamel, had told the UN arms
inspection agency and the CIA he had personally supervised destruction
of all of Iraq's biological and chemical weapons (mostly supplied by
the U.S. and Britain in the 1980s). Glen Rangwala, of Cambridge
University, who exposed London's plagiarized Iraq dossier, obtained
the transcript of the Kamel interview.
Torrent of propaganda
And so it went. A torrent of propaganda deceiving Americans into
believing Iraq was armed to the teeth with WMDs, somehow responsible
for 9/11, and intending, as Bush repeatedly claimed, to attack the
U.S.
Inspectors found no WMDs. So far, neither have U.S. occupation forces.
No nukes. No poison gas and dispersing systems. No Scud missiles. No
al-Qaida camps. Just lots of palaces filled with hideous Mesopotamian
baroque furniture and a ruined, destitute nation.
The U.S. has refused to readmit UN inspectors to Iraq. Two teams of
U.S. intelligence specialists are sifting through the wreckage. Cynics
suspect the U.S. will shortly "discover" a smoking gun to
justify the invasion, even if one must be created. Otherwise, why
would the U.S. refuse to allow UN inspectors to join the hunt? Doing
so would authenticate any future U.S. claims.
No one, least of all this writer, who spent a harrowing time in Iraq
under Saddam's brutal, sinister, megalo-despotism, mourns him. But in
their lust to invade Iraq, the Bush administration and Tony Blair
deeply discredited their own nations' moral standing, credibility, and
democratic ideals by outrageously misleading their own people and
whipping them into mass hysteria to justify an imperial war.
http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_apr20.html
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