The British Smoking-Gun Memo
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Mark Danner
by Tom Engelhardt and
Mark Danner
In
its June 9 issue (on sale this week), the New York Review of
Books will be the first American print publication to publish
the full British "smoking gun" document, the secret memorandum of
the minutes of a meeting of Tony Blair's top advisors in July 2002,
eight months before the Iraq War commenced. Leaked to the London
Sunday Times, which first published it on May 1, the memo offers
irrefutable proof of the way in which the Bush administration made
its decision to invade Iraq without significant consultation,
reasonable intelligence on Iraq, or any desire to explore ways to
avoid war and well before seeking a Congressional or United
Nations mandate of any sort.
By July, as the British officials reported, the decision to invade
was already in the bag. The only real questions other than
those involving war planning were how to organize the intelligence
in such a way as to promote the war to come and how to finesse Congress
(and the UN). While people often speak of the "road to war," in
the case of the invasion of Iraq, as this document makes clear,
a more accurate phrase might be "the bum's rush to war." The Review
is also publishing an accompanying piece on the secret memo and
what to make of it by their regular Iraq correspondent, Mark Danner,
and its editors have been kind enough to allow Tomdispatch to distribute
the piece early on-line.
That the Review is the
first publication here to print the document is not only an
honorable (and important) act, but a measure of the failure of major
American papers to offer attention where it is clearly due. After
all, whole government investigations have, in the past, gone in
search of "smoking guns." In fact, the Bush administration spent
much time searching fruitlessly for its own "smoking gun" of WMD
in Iraq and this process was considered of front-page importance
in our major papers and on the TV news. That a "smoking gun" document
about the nature of the war in the making has appeared in this fashion,
not in Kyrgyzstan but in England; that no one in the British or
American governments has even bothered to dispute its provenance
or accuracy; and that, with a few honorable exceptions like columnist
Molly Ivins, that gun was allowed to lie on the ground smoking
for days, hardly commented upon (except on
the political internet, of course), tells us much about our
present moment. Should you want to consider the miserable coverage
in this country, check out FAIR's
commentary on the matter.
Congressman John Conyers has
just sent a letter, signed
by eighty-nine Democratic congressional representatives, to
the President demanding some answers to the document's revelations.
And articles by good reporters in major papers finally did start
to appear late this week but those of John
Daniszewski at the Los Angeles Times and Walter
Pincus at the Washington Post were typically tucked away
on inside pages (meant for political news jockeys), and they had
a distinctly just-the-facts-ma'am, nothing-out-of-the-ordinary feel
to them.
But shouldn't it be a front-page story that, as Danner points out
below, all the subsequent arguments we've had to endure about the
state of, and accuracy of American intelligence on Iraq, were actually
beside the point? After all, as the smoking-gun memo makes perfectly
clear, the decision to go to war was made before the intelligence
good, bad, or indifferent was even seriously put into
play. As the secret memo also makes clear, administration officials,
and the President himself, had already rolled the dice and placed
their bet on the existence of WMD in Iraq as an excuse for
the war they so desperately wanted. (Their Iraqi exile sources had,
of course, assured them that it was so and, as the Brits reported
in July 2002, they were already wondering, "For instance, what were
the consequences, if Saddam used WMD on day one [of an invasion].")
After all, it seemed so logical. Saddam had used such weapons in
the 1980s in the Iran-Iraq War and against Kurds in Iraq. American
troops and UN inspectors had found such weaponry in profusion after
our first Gulf War. So why not now as well?
Recently, Ted Rall, considering press response to a more modest
smoking-gun incident the covered up friendly-fire death of
former NFL star Pat Tillman in Afghanistan whose revelation was
reported rather reluctantly on the inside pages of papers
wrote tellingly: "For
journalists supposedly dedicated to uncovering the truth and
informing the public, this is exactly the opposite of how things
ought to be. Corrections and exposés should always run bigger,
longer and more often than initial, discredited stories."
Dream on, as we smoking-gunsters like to say.
The least commented upon aspect of the smoking-gun memo has been
its military side. It is, in significant part, a military document,
reflecting how much serious thinking and planning at the highest
levels in the U.S. and Britain had already gone into the question
of how to have a war by July 2002. The question of how technically
to launch the "military action" whether by a "generated start"
or a "running start" was, for instance, front and center.
Also addressed was the mundane but crucial issue (for the Pentagon)
of where, around Iraq, to base forces. "The US," reads the memo,
"saw the UK (and Kuwait) as essential, with basing in Diego Garcia
and Cyprus critical for either [the generated or running start]
option." Diego Garcia is the British-controlled Indian Ocean Island
that was already a stationary American "aircraft carrier" and from
which, 8 months later, B-2s
would fly on
Baghdad.
Since Danner whose book Torture
and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror does
much to explain the nature of the fix the Bush administration now
finds itself in covers the British document in great and
fascinating detail below, let me just add a final note: To me, perhaps
the most telling line in the memo, given what's happened since,
is the observation of Sir Richard Dearlove, the head of M16 (the
British CIA equivalent), just back from a U.S. visit, that "[t]here
was little discussion in Washington of the aftermath after military
action." This line not only represented the greatest gamble the
Bush administration's top officials would make, but the hubris with
which they approached the taking of Iraq. As true believers in force
– nothing impressed them more than the advanced technology of destruction
they possessed and its possible applications they were already
awed by themselves and deeply believed in the shock to come once
they hit Iraq hard. As the British smoking-gun memo indicates in
that single classic line, they placed their deepest faith in their
conviction that, once the invasion was completed successful and
Saddam had fallen, everything else in Iraq would simply fall into
place as well. Planning for a post-war occupation? What me worry?
~ Tom
Secret
Way to War
By
Mark Danner
It was October 16, 2002, and the United States Congress had just
voted to authorize the President to go to war against Iraq. When
George W. Bush came before members of his Cabinet and Congress gathered
in the East Room of the White House and addressed the American people,
he was in a somber mood befitting a leader speaking frankly to free
citizens about the gravest decision their country could make.
The 107th Congress, the President said, had just become "one of
the few called by history to authorize military action to defend
our country and the cause of peace." But, he hastened to add, no
one should assume that war was inevitable. Though "Congress has
now authorized the use of force," the President said emphatically,
"I have not ordered the use of force. I hope the use of force will
not become necessary." The President went on:
"Our
goal is to fully and finally remove a real threat to world peace
and to America. Hopefully this can be done peacefully. Hopefully
we can do this without any military action. Yet, if Iraq is to
avoid military action by the international community, it has the
obligation to prove compliance with all the world's demands. It's
the obligation of Iraq."
Iraq, the President said, still had the power to prevent war by
"declaring and destroying all its weapons of mass destruction"
but if Iraq did not declare and destroy those weapons, the President
warned, the United States would "go into battle, as a last resort."
It is safe to say that, at the time, it surprised almost no one
when the Iraqis answered the President's demand by repeating their
claim that in fact there were no weapons of mass destruction. As
we now know, the Iraqis had in fact destroyed these weapons, probably
years before George W. Bush's ultimatum: "the Iraqis" in
the words of chief U.S. weapons inspector David Kaye "were
telling the truth."
As Americans watch their young men and women fighting in the third
year of a bloody counterinsurgency war in Iraq a war that
has now killed more than 1,600 Americans and tens of thousands of
Iraqis they are left to ponder "the unanswered question"
of what would have happened if the United Nations weapons inspectors
had been allowed as all the major powers except the United
Kingdom had urged they should be to complete their work.
What would have happened if the UN weapons inspectors had been allowed
to prove, before the U.S. went "into battle," what David Kaye and
his colleagues finally proved afterward?
Thanks to a formerly secret memorandum published by the London
Sunday Times on May 1, during the run-up to the British elections,
we now have a partial answer to that question. The memo, which records
the minutes of a meeting of Prime Minister Tony Blair's senior foreign
policy and security officials, shows that even as President Bush
told Americans in October 2002 that he "hope[d] the use of force
will not become necessary" that such a decision depended
on whether or not the Iraqis complied with his demands to rid themselves
of their weapons of mass destruction the President had in
fact already definitively decided, at least three months before,
to choose this "last resort" of going "into battle" with Iraq. Whatever
the Iraqis chose to do or not do, the President's decision to go
to war had long since been made.
On July 23, 2002, eight months before American and British forces
invaded, senior British officials met with Prime Minister Tony Blair
to discuss Iraq. The gathering, similar to an American "principals
meeting," brought together Geoffrey Hoon, the defense secretary;
Jack Straw, the foreign secretary; Lord Goldsmith, the attorney
general; John Scarlett, the head of the Joint Intelligence Committee,
which advises the prime minister; Sir Richard Dearlove, also known
as "C," the head of MI6 (the equivalent of the CIA); David Manning,
the equivalent of the national security adviser; Admiral Sir Michael
Boyce, the chief of the Defense Staff (or CDS, equivalent to the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs); Jonathan Powell, Blair's chief of
staff; Alastair Campbell, director of strategy (Blair's communications
and political adviser); and Sally Morgan, director of government
relations.
After John Scarlett began the meeting with a summary of intelligence
on Iraq notably, that "the regime was tough and based on
extreme fear" and that thus the "only way to overthrow it was likely
to be by massive military action," "C" offered a report on his visit
to Washington, where he had conducted talks with George Tenet, his
counterpart at the CIA, and other high officials. This passage is
worth quoting in full:
"C
reported on his recent talks in Washington. There was a perceptible
shift in attitude. Military action was now seen as inevitable.
Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified
by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence
and facts were being fixed around the policy. The NSC had no patience
with the UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on
the Iraqi regime's record. There was little discussion in Washington
of the aftermath after military action."
Seen from today's perspective this short paragraph is a strikingly
clear template for the future, establishing these points:
- By mid-July
2002, eight months before the war began, President Bush had decided
to invade and occupy Iraq.
- Bush had
decided to "justify" the war "by the conjunction of terrorism
and WMD."
- Already
"the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy."
- Many at
the top of the administration did not want to seek approval from
the United Nations (going "the UN route").
- Few in
Washington seemed much interested in the aftermath of the war.
We have long
known, thanks to Bob Woodward and others, that military planning
for the Iraq war began as early as November 21, 2001, after the
President ordered Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to look at
"what it would take to protect America by removing Saddam Hussein
if we have to," and that Secretary Rumsfeld and General Tommy Franks,
who headed Central Command, were briefing American senior officials
on the progress of military planning during the late spring and
summer of 2002; indeed, a few days after the meeting in London leaks
about specific plans for a possible Iraq war appeared on the front
pages of the New York Times and the Washington Post.
What the Downing Street memo confirms for the first time is that
President Bush had decided, no later than July 2002, to "remove
Saddam, through military action," that war with Iraq was "inevitable"
and that what remained was simply to establish and develop
the modalities of justification; that is, to come up with a means
of "justifying" the war and "fixing" the "intelligence and facts...around
the policy." The great value of the discussion recounted in the
memo, then, is to show, for the governments of both countries, a
clear hierarchy of decision-making. By July 2002 at the latest,
war had been decided on; the question at issue now was how to justify
it how to "fix," as it were, what Blair will later call "the
political context." Specifically, though by this point in July the
President had decided to go to war, he had not yet decided to go
to the United Nations and demand inspectors; indeed, as "C" points
out, those on the National Security Council the senior security
officials of the U.S. government "had no patience with the
UN route, and no enthusiasm for publishing material on the Iraqi
regime's record." This would later change, largely as a result of
the political concerns of these very people gathered together at
10 Downing Street.
After Admiral Boyce offered a brief discussion of the war plans
then on the table and the defense secretary said a word or two about
timing "the most likely timing in US minds for military action
to begin was January, with the timeline beginning 30 days before
the US Congressional elections" Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
got to the heart of the matter: not whether or not to invade Iraq
but how to justify such an invasion:
"The
Foreign Secretary said he would discuss [the timing of the war]
with Colin Powell this week. It seemed clear that Bush had made
up his mind to take military action, even if the timing was not
yet decided. But the case was thin. Saddam was not threatening
his neighbors, and his WMD capability was less than that of Libya,
North Korea or Iran."
Given that Saddam was not threatening to attack his neighbors and
that his weapons of mass destruction program was less extensive
than those of a number of other countries, how does one justify
attacking? Foreign Secretary Straw had an idea: "We should work
up a plan for an ultimatum to Saddam to allow back in the UN weapons
inspectors. This would also help with the legal justification for
the use of force."
The British realized they needed "help with the legal justification
for the use of force" because, as the attorney general pointed out,
rather dryly, "the desire for regime change was not a legal base
for military action." Which is to say, the simple desire to overthrow
the leadership of a given sovereign country does not make it legal
to invade that country; on the contrary. And, said the attorney
general, of the "three possible legal bases: self-defence, humanitarian
intervention, or [United Nations Security Council] authorization,"
the first two "could not be the base in this case." In other words,
Iraq was not attacking the United States or the United Kingdom,
so the leaders could not claim to be acting in self-defense; nor
was Iraq's leadership in the process of committing genocide, so
the United States and the United Kingdom could not claim to be invading
for humanitarian reasons.1 This left Security
Council authorization as the only conceivable legal justification
for war. But how to get it?
At this point in the meeting Prime Minister Tony Blair weighed in.
He had heard his foreign minister's suggestion about drafting an
ultimatum demanding that Saddam let back in the United Nations inspectors.
Such an ultimatum could be politically critical, said Blair
but only if the Iraqi leader turned it down:
"The
Prime Minister said that it would make a big difference politically
and legally if Saddam refused to allow in the UN inspectors. Regime
change and WMD were linked in the sense that it was the regime
that was producing the WMD.... If the political context were right,
people would support regime change. The two key issues were whether
the military plan worked and whether we had the political strategy
to give the military plan the space to work."
Here the inspectors were introduced, but as a means to create the
missing casus belli. If the UN could be made to agree on
an ultimatum that Saddam accept inspectors, and if Saddam then refused
to accept them, the Americans and the British would be well on their
way to having a legal justification to go to war (the attorney general's
third alternative of UN Security Council authorization).
Thus, the idea of UN inspectors was introduced not as a means to
avoid war, as President Bush repeatedly assured Americans, but as
a means to make war possible. War had been decided on; the problem
under discussion here was how to make, in the prime minister's words,
"the political context ...right." The "political strategy"
at the center of which, as with the Americans, was weapons of mass
destruction, for "it was the regime that was producing the WMD"
must be strong enough to give "the military plan the space
to work." Which is to say, once the allies were victorious the war
would justify itself. The demand that Iraq accept UN inspectors,
especially if refused, could form the political bridge by which
the allies could reach their goal: "regime change" through "military
action."
But there was a problem: as the foreign secretary pointed out, "on
the political strategy, there could be US/UK differences." While
the British considered legal justification for going to war critical
they, unlike the Americans, were members of the International
Criminal Court the Americans did not. Mr. Straw suggested
that given "US resistance, we should explore discreetly the ultimatum."
The defense secretary, Geoffrey Hoon, was more blunt, arguing "that
if the Prime Minister wanted UK military involvement, he would need
to decide this early. He cautioned that many in the U.S. did not
think it worth going down the ultimatum route. It would be important
for the Prime Minister to set out the political context to Bush."
The key negotiation in view at this point, in other words, was not
with Saddam over letting in the United Nations inspectors
both parties hoped he would refuse to admit them, and thus provide
the justification for invading. The key negotiation would be between
the Americans, who had shown "resistance" to the idea of involving
the United Nations at all, and the British, who were more concerned
than their American cousins about having some kind of legal fig
leaf for attacking Iraq. Three weeks later, Foreign Secretary Straw
arrived in the Hamptons to "discreetly explore the ultimatum" with
Secretary of State Powell, perhaps the only senior American official
who shared some of the British concerns; as Straw told the secretary,
in Bob Woodward's account, "If you are really thinking about war
and you want us Brits to be a player, we cannot be unless you go
to the United Nations."2
Britain's strong support for the "UN route" that most American officials
so distrusted was critical in helping Powell in the bureaucratic
battle over going to the United Nations. As late as August 26, Vice
President Dick Cheney had appeared before a convention of the Veterans
of Foreign Wars and publicly denounced "the UN route." Asserting
that "simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has
weapons of mass destruction [and] there is no doubt that he is amassing
them to use against our friends, against our allies, and against
us," Cheney advanced the view that going to the United Nations would
itself be dangerous:
"A
return of inspectors would provide no assurance whatsoever of
his compliance with UN resolutions. On the contrary, there is
great danger that it would provide false comfort that Saddam was
somehow 'back in the box.'"
Cheney, like other administration "hard-liners," feared "the UN
route" not because it might fail but because it might succeed and
thereby prevent a war that they were convinced had to be fought.
As Woodward recounts, it would finally take a personal visit by
Blair on September 7 to persuade President Bush to go to the United
Nations:
"For
Blair the immediate question was, Would the United Nations be
used? He was keenly aware that in Britain the question was, Does
Blair believe in the UN? It was critical domestically for the
prime minister to show his own Labour Party, a pacifist party
at heart, opposed to war in principle, that he had gone the UN
route. Public opinion in the UK favored trying to make international
institutions work before resorting to force. Going through the
UN would be a large and much-needed plus."3
The President now told Blair that he had decided "to go to the UN"
and the prime minister, according to Woodward, "was relieved." After
the session with Blair, Bush later recounts to Woodward, he walked
into a conference room and told the British officials gathered there
that "your man has got cojones." ("And of course these Brits don't
know what cojones are," Bush tells Woodward.) Henceforth this particular
conference with Blair would be known, Bush declares, as "the cojones
meeting."
That September the attempt to sell the war began in earnest, for,
as White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card had told the New York
Times in an unusually candid moment, "You don't roll out a new
product in August." At the heart of the sales campaign was the United
Nations. Thanks in substantial part to Blair's prodding, George
W. Bush would come before the UN General Assembly on September 12
and, after denouncing the Iraqi regime, announce that "we will work
with the UN Security Council for the necessary resolutions." The
main phase of public diplomacy giving the war a "political
context," in Blair's phrase had begun. Though "the UN route"
would be styled as an attempt to avoid war, its essence, as the
Downing Street memo makes clear, was a strategy to make the war
possible, partly by making it politically palatable.
As it turned out, however and as Cheney and others had feared
the "UN route" to war was by no means smooth, or direct.
Though Powell managed the considerable feat of securing unanimous
approval for Security Council Resolution 1441, winning even Syria's
support, the allies differed on the key question of whether or not
the resolution gave United Nations approval for the use of force
against Saddam, as the Americans contended, or whether a second
resolution would be required, as the majority of the council, and
even the British, conceded it would. Sir Jeremy Greenstock, the
British ambassador to the UN, put this position bluntly on November
8, the day Resolution 1441 was passed:
"We
heard loud and clear during the negotiations about 'automaticity'
and 'hidden triggers' the concerns that on a decision so
crucial we should not rush into military action.... Let me be
equally clear.... There is no 'automaticity' in this Resolution.
If there is a further Iraqi breach of its disarmament obligations,
the matter will return to the Council for discussion as required....
We would expect the Security Council then to meet its responsibilities."
Vice President Cheney could have expected no worse. Having decided
to travel down "the UN route," the Americans and British would now
need a second resolution to gain the necessary approval to attack
Iraq. Worse, Saddam frustrated British and American hopes, as articulated
by Blair in the July 23 meeting, that he would simply refuse to
admit the inspectors and thereby offer the allies an immediate casus
belli. Instead, hundreds of inspectors entered Iraq, began to
search, and found...nothing. January, which Defence Secretary Hoon
had suggested was the "most likely timing in US minds for military
action to begin," came and went, and the inspectors went on searching.
On the Security Council, a majority led by France, Germany,
and Russia would push for the inspections to run their course.
President Jacques Chirac of France later put this argument succinctly
in an interview with CBS and CNN just as the war was about to begin:
"France
is not pacifist. We are not anti-American either. We are not just
going to use our veto to nag and annoy the US. But we just feel
that there is another option, another way, another more normal
way, a less dramatic way than war, and that we have to go through
that path. And we should pursue it until we've come [to] a dead
end, but that isn't the case."4
Where would this "dead end" be found, however, and who would determine
that it had been found? Would it be the French, or the Americans?
The logical flaw that threatened the administration's policy now
began to become clear. Had the inspectors found weapons, or had
they been presented with them by Saddam Hussein, many who had supported
the resolution would argue that the inspections regime it established
had indeed begun to work that by multilateral action the
world was succeeding, peacefully, in "disarming Iraq." As long as
the inspectors found no weapons, however, many would argue that
the inspectors "must be given time to do their work" until,
in Chirac's words, they "came to a dead end." However that point
might be determined, it is likely that, long before it was reached,
the failure to find weapons would have undermined the administration's
central argument for going to war ""the conjunction," as
"C" had put it that morning in July, "of terrorism and WMD." And
as we now know, the inspectors would never have found weapons of
mass destruction.
Vice President Cheney had anticipated this problem, as he had explained
frankly to Hans Blix, the chief UN weapons inspector, during an
October 30 meeting in the White House. Cheney, according to Blix,
"stated
the position that inspections, if they do not give results, cannot
go on forever, and said the U.S. was 'ready to discredit inspections
in favor of disarmament.' A pretty straight way, I thought, of
saying that if we did not soon find the weapons of mass destruction
that the US was convinced Iraq possessed (though they did not
know where), the US would be ready to say that the inspectors
were useless and embark on disarmament by other means."5
Indeed, the inspectors' failure to find any evidence of weapons
came in the wake of a very large effort launched by the administration
to put before the world evidence of Saddam's arsenal, an effort
spearheaded by George W. Bush's speech in Cincinnati on October
7, and followed by a series of increasingly lurid disclosures to
the press that reached a crescendo with Colin Powell's multimedia
presentation to the UN Security Council on February 5, 2003. Throughout
the fall and winter, the administration had "rolled out the product,"
in Card's phrase, with great skill, making use of television, radio,
and all the print press to get its message out about the imminent
threat of Saddam's arsenal. ("Think of the press," advised Josef
Goebbels, "as a great keyboard on which the government can play.")
As the gap between administration rhetoric about enormous arsenals
"we know where they are," asserted Donald Rumsfeld
and the inspectors' empty hands grew wider, that gap, as Cheney
had predicted, had the effect in many quarters of undermining the
credibility of the United Nations process itself. The inspectors'
failure to find weapons in Iraq was taken to discredit the worth
of the inspections, rather than to cast doubt on the administration's
contention that Saddam possessed large stockpiles of weapons of
mass destruction.
Oddly enough, Saddam's only effective strategy to prevent war at
this point might have been to reveal and yield up some weapons,
thus demonstrating to the world that the inspections were working.
As we now know, however, he had no weapons to yield up. As Blix
remarks, "It occurred to me [on March 7] that the Iraqis would be
in greater difficulty if...there truly were no weapons of which
they could ‘yield possession.'" The fact that, in Blix's words,
"the UN and the world had succeeded in disarming Iraq without knowing
it" that the UN process had been successful meant,
in effect, that the inspectors would be discredited and the United
States would go to war.
President Bush would do so, of course, having failed to get the
"second resolution" so desired by his friend and ally, Tony Blair.
Blair had predicted, that July morning on Downing Street, that the
"two key issues were whether the military plan worked and whether
we had the political strategy to give the military plan the space
to work." He seems to have been proved right in this. In the end
his political strategy only half worked: the Security Council's
refusal to vote a second resolution approving the use of force left
"the UN route" discussed that day incomplete, and Blair found himself
forced to follow the United States without the protection of international
approval. Had the military plan "worked" had the war been
short and decisive rather than long, bloody, and inconclusive
Blair would perhaps have escaped the political damage the war has
caused him. A week after the Downing Street memo was published in
the Sunday Times, Tony Blair was reelected, but his majority
in Parliament was reduced, from 161 to 67. The Iraq war, and the
damage it had done to his reputation for probity, was widely believed
to have been a principal cause.
In the United States, on the other hand, the Downing Street memorandum
has attracted little attention. As I write, no American newspaper
has published it and few writers have bothered to comment on it.
The war continues, and Americans have grown weary of it; few seem
much interested now in discussing how it began, and why their country
came to fight a war in the cause of destroying weapons that turned
out not to exist. For those who want answers, the Bush administration
has followed a simple and heretofore largely successful policy:
blame the intelligence agencies. Since "the intelligence and facts
were being fixed around the policy" as early as July 2002 (as "C,"
the head of British intelligence, reported upon his return from
Washington), it seems a matter of remarkable hubris, even for this
administration, that its officials now explain their misjudgments
in going to war by blaming them on "intelligence failures"
that is, on the intelligence that they themselves politicized. Still,
for the most part, Congress has cooperated. Though the Senate Intelligence
Committee investigated the failures of the CIA and other agencies
before the war, a promised second report that was to take up the
administration's political use of intelligence which is,
after all, the critical issue was postponed until after the
2004 elections, then quietly abandoned.
In the end, the Downing Street memo, and Americans' lack of interest
in what it shows, has to do with a certain attitude about facts,
or rather about where the line should be drawn between facts and
political opinion. It calls to mind an interesting observation that
an unnamed "senior advisor" to President Bush made to a New York
Times Magazine reporter last fall:
"The
aide said that guys like me [i.e., reporters and commentators]
were 'in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined
as people who 'believe that solutions emerge from your judicious
study of discernible reality.' I nodded and murmured something
about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off.
'That's not the way the world really works anymore,' he continued.
'We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality.
And while you're studying that reality judiciously, as
you will we'll act again, creating other new realities,
which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out.
We're history's actors... and you, all of you, will be left to
just study what we do.'"
Though this seems on its face to be a disquisition on religion and
faith, it is of course an argument about power, and its influence
on truth. Power, the argument runs, can shape truth: power, in the
end, can determine reality, or at least the reality that most people
accept a critical point, for the administration has been
singularly effective in its recognition that what is most politically
important is not what readers of the New York Times believe
but what most Americans are willing to believe. The last century's
most innovative authority on power and truth, Joseph Goebbels, made
the same point but rather more directly:
"There
was no point in seeking to convert the intellectuals. For intellectuals
would never be converted and would anyway always yield to the
stronger, and this will always be 'the man in the street.' Arguments
must therefore be crude, clear and forcible, and appeal to emotions
and instincts, not the intellect. Truth was unimportant and entirely
subordinate to tactics and psychology."
I
thought of this quotation when I first read the Downing Street memorandum;
but I had first looked it up several months earlier, on December
14, 2004, after I had seen the images of the newly reelected President
George W. Bush awarding the Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian
honor the United States can bestow, to George Tenet, the former
director of central intelligence; L. Paul Bremer, the former head
of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq; and General (ret.)
Tommy Franks, the commander who had led American forces during the
first phase of the Iraq war. Tenet, of course, would be known to
history as the intelligence director who had failed to detect and
prevent the attacks of September 11 and the man who had assured
President Bush that the case for Saddam's possession of weapons
of mass destruction was "a slam dunk." Franks had allowed the looting
of Baghdad and had generally done little to prepare for what would
come after the taking of Baghdad. ("There was little discussion
in Washington," as "C" told the Prime Minister on July 23, "of the
aftermath after military action.") Bremer had dissolved the Iraqi
army and the Iraqi police and thereby created 400,000 or so available
recruits for the insurgency. One might debate their ultimate responsibility
for these grave errors, but it is difficult to argue that these
officials merited the highest recognition the country could offer.
Of
course truth, as the master propagandist said, is "unimportant and
entirely subordinate to tactics and psychology." He of course would
have instantly grasped the psychological tactic embodied in that
White House ceremony, which was one more effort to reassure Americans
that the war the administration launched against Iraq has been a
success and was worth fighting. That barely four Americans in ten
are still willing to believe this suggests that as time goes on
and the gap grows between what Americans see and what they are told,
membership in the "reality-based community" may grow along with
it. We will see. Still, for those interested in the question of
how our leaders persuaded the country to become embroiled in a counterinsurgency
war in Iraq, the Downing Street memorandum offers one more confirmation
of the truth. For those, that is, who want to hear.
Notes
- The latter
charge might have been given as a reason for intervention in 1988,
for example, when the Iraqi regime was carrying out its Anfal
campaign against the Kurds; at that time, though, the Reagan administration
comprising many of the same officials who would later lead
the invasion of Iraq was supporting Saddam in his war against
Iran and kept largely silent. The second major killing campaign
of the Saddam regime came in 1991, when Iraqi troops attacked
Shiites in the south who had rebelled against the regime in the
wake of Saddam's defeat in the Gulf War; the first Bush administration,
despite President George H.W. Bush's urging Iraqis to "rise up
against the dictator, Saddam Hussein," and despite the presence
of hundreds of thousands of American troops within miles of the
killing, stood by and did nothing. See Ken Roth, "War in Iraq:
Not a Humanitarian Intervention" (Human Rights Watch, January
2004).
- See Bob
Woodward, Plan
of Attack (Simon and Schuster, 2004), p. 162.
- See Woodward,
Plan of Attack, pp. 177–178.
- See "Chirac
Makes His Case on Iraq," an interview with Christiane Amanpour,
CBS News, March 16, 2003.
- See Hans
Blix, Disarming
Iraq (Pantheon, 2004), p. 86.
This
article appears in the June 9th issue of The New York Review
of Books.
May
17, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Mark Danner, a longtime New Yorker
Staff writer, is Professor of Journalism at the University of California
at Berkeley and Henry R. Luce Professor at Bard College. His most
recent book is Torture
and Truth: America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror, which
collects his pieces on torture and Iraq that first appeared in the
New York Review of Books. His work can be found at markdanner.com
Copyright
© 2005 Mark Danner
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Engelhardt Archives
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