Dear Dubya: Call Ahmadinejad’s Bluff!
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
DIGG THIS
Hey George,
word on the street is that you have your heart set on blowing up
Iran. Well who can blame you since you have all those GI Joes and
Cherry Bombs to play with?
Before I get
into the liquid meat and carbon fiber potatoes, I just wanted to
say what a fine job you’ve done in Iraq. You should be proud. How
many world-historical leaders have careened through time with your
legacy? Beyond a shadow of a doubt you are "Destined
for Destiny."
You see… the
gig is up in Iraq. One cannot improve on perfection. Oh sure there
are people left alive; but you want to leave a
few stragglers to tell the tale.
Even as you
blew your nose on that piece of paper known as the US Constitution
and converted America
into a sub-prime borrower, you destroyed the fragile statehood
and economy of Iraq and inspired Afghanistan to produce a bumper
crop of opium. That’s one big salami for any dictator to bite
off in six-and-a-half years.
Just four years
after you invaded, there are four million Iraqis homeless and another
million Iraqi dead. And these were the people you were trying to
"liberate!" Heaven help the ones you want to punish.
So what are
you going to do for an encore? Who am I kidding? Folks are lined
up around the Veteran’s Hall to see the Bomb Iran Show. I know you’ve
got a hard-on for this but… well… maybe there’s a better way.
Give
Iraq to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Let’s face it; this
guy has been a bee up the presidential butt just like Saddam. That
Iranian is making you look silly. (It ain’t hard). ’Fess up: That’s
the real reason you have a hankerin’ to nuke Iran.
Having announced
that the U.S. forces have lost control of Iraq, Ahmadinejad
has offered to step in to fill the power vacuum. Hmm… Did you
ever have any control to lose… Oh well, not to quibble, let Mahmoud
have the Tar
Baby.
Ahmadinejad
is bluffing! Time to call.
And I’m not
just talking in poker terms. Call Mahmoud on the damned phone. Here’s
his number. That’s right! Ahmadinejad’s operators are waiting around
the clock to take your telephone call. In an August 17th
article for The First Post, entitled Tehran
sets up hotline to quell dissent, Philip
Jacobson reports: "…in an attempt to re-establish his credentials
as a listening politician ahead of elections due next spring, Ahmadinejad
authorized the introduction of a hotline to the presidential office.
Ordinary Iranians who dial 111 will be free to grumble to their
hearts' content… Whether this will achieve much in restoring the
president's standing remains to be seen: his office is currently
struggling to cope with some 7m letters that followed his invitation
to voters to write to him about their problems."
Phew… seven
million letters and now phone complaints too! I guess I can’t expect
Ahmadinejad to get to my complaint about a defective Persian rug.
But you’re the President of the United States. A call from POTUS
might… just might… get patched through. It’s worth a shot… uh, bad
analogy.
You see how
busy Ahmadinejad is reading his own mail; I bet he hasn’t got the
time let alone the inclination to read that of his countrymen. He’s
stressed out and overworked. Imagine what the conflagration in Iraq
will do to his schedule. "Hey Mahmoud! It’s al-Sadr again!
You wanna take it or are you busy with that Oak
Ridge Alloy?"
Next thing
you do? Remove all US military personnel – Snap! – just like
that. Oh… you can leave the "private contractors," they
deserve everything that’s coming to them. But please stamp each
solider of fortune with an official disclaimer: Private contractors
do not represent the policy of the American People. Alberto
Gonzales (you’ll find him in the petunia bed, Laura hired him to
take care of your garden), will confirm that this would not be a
lie because of the sly omission of any reference to the US government
or yourself.
So, let Iran
have the place. Call it a "good will" gesture. What have
you got to lose?
Not so fast,
you bleat. What about the reasons for the war: Oil, Democracy, and
Greater Israel?
Well, I hate
to break it to you but you ain’t never gonna get the oil by force.
Remember the Rumanian and Russian oil fields during WW II? Did Hitler
keep any of the oil fields he stole? You’re just going to end up
blowing it up too. Strange as it may seem, peace and a free market
usually work best in such matters.
Israel will
do just fine. They’re building
a wall! What’s it made of, dollar
bills? Yeah, I know, that’s all the
dollar is good for – that and toilet
paper.
As for democracy…
what can I say? You’re funnier than Soupy
Sales!
But wait,
you squeal. What would happen if you pulled out all the troops?
It would be another
Vietnam slaughter fest? Whoa there cowpoke! You say we can’t
have another situation like that. Some
people would say that there was no analogy between Vietnam and
Iraq.
Remember that
April
13, 2004 Press Conference?
Question: "Thank
you, Mr. President. Mr. President, April is turning into the deadliest
month in Iraq since the fall of Baghdad, and some people are comparing
Iraq to Vietnam and talking about a quagmire. Polls show that support
for your policy is declining and that fewer than half Americans
now support it. What does that say to you and how do you answer
the Vietnam comparison?"
POTUS: "The
analogy is false."
You’re not
trying to make
up your own reality again,
are you?
Who would
run the place, you whine? Stop clowning around! You’re killing me!
Nobody runs it now so why bring up that little detail? Could Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s government start
to function? You will never know unless you give Maliki a chance.
If you’re such a big al-Maliki fan cut him lose. Let him do his
job. And if he gets toasted by some "radical" freedom
fighters… well… that’s democracy! That’s one way to make sure your
"vote" gets counted!
Oh but, what
about the Shi’ite clerics,
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim and Muqtada
al-Sadr? Heaven forefend that people
who believe in God should have a
role in government!
What your
advisors won’t tell you, probably because they don’t know is that
devout Shi’ites
pledge their loyalty to individual clerics. Ponder that. Are
the Iraqi followers of Sistani, al-Hakim or al-Sadr going to follow
Ahmadinejad or the Iranian Supreme leader Ayatollah
Sayyid Ali Khamenei? That would be like offering a double Black
Russian (vodka and Kahlua,
so it’s got alcohol and caffeine) to Brigham Young. No way.
When it comes
to considering loyalties, let’s not forget the 1980–88
Iran-Iraq War. Oh… I’m sorry George. You probably didn’t know
about that since in those years you were… uh… how shall I put this
delicately? Drunk
as a skunk. In a nutshell, US policy was to play
each side off the other while selling weapons to both. Ask your
Dad about it.
On
Dec. 20, 1983, the Washington Post reported that Donald Rumsfeld,
then Ronald Reagan's
Special Envoy to the Middle East, "visited Iraq in what U.S.
officials said was an attempt to bolster the already improving U.S.
relations with that country." Greasing Saddam’s palm with gifts
of medieval spiked hammers, a few pistols and some golden cowboy
spurs, Rumsfeld also gave Saddam the official US handshake
of approval.
But then,
in 1987, there was this teenatchee
scandal where US arms were smuggled through Nicaraguan Contra
rebels to Israel and on to guess who? Iraq’s greatest enemy: Iran.
Saddam must
have been mighty impressed by that pageant of two-faced Yankee ingenuity
– Grandpa
Prescott Bush would have been proud! Writes
Jim
Lobe, Saddam developed a " ‘complicated’ view of the U.S.
While he derived ‘prestige’ from being an enemy of the U.S., he
also considered it to be ‘equally prestigious for him to be an ally
of the United States – and regular entreaties were made… to explore
this alternative’."
With all that
fancy American footwork, no wonder that in 1993 a confused Saddam
tried
to bump off Bush the First.
Looking back,
a lot of folks died in those years. I’ll bet you a dinner for two
at Sodolak’s
Country Inn the memory is fresh
in the minds of Iranians and Iraqis alike. So do you really think
the Iraqis are going to welcome an Iranian occupation with open
arms? Guess again. Hey they don’t like your occupation!
So
it’s time to declare: "Mission Accomplished!" Bring our
boys and girls home now. Let Iran fill the power vacuum in Iraq
created by America’s departure. Give Ahmadinejad the heady sensation
of spending Iran’s lifeblood and treasure on a country run by people
whom once Woodrow
Wilson called "ungrateful."
Let’s double
dog dare Ahmadinejad to see if he can
do a better job. This will save you the trouble of having to blow
up Iran… oh I know, it won’t be as much fun. C’mon, we can watch
Apocalypse
Now instead.
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
September
3, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Tom
Chartier Archives
|