Boogeyman de Jour
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
The grand design
of George H.W. Bush and Dick Cheney was to leave Saddam Hussein
in power in Iraq after the first Gulf War that "ended"
in February of 1991. Coalition forces were poised on the banks of
the Euphrates River, ready to enter Baghdad and capture or kill
Saddam, but how can you keep Boobus
Americanus scared and into his wallet if you do not
have an appropriately scary villain?
Once Saddam
had been captured in December of ’03, some months after "major
combat operations had ended," as announced by Dubya on the
flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln, a new villain had
to be created when the insurgency refused to roll over and play
dead for the conquering hero. Materializing out of nowhere to head
the insurgency and cut off a few heads was none other than, Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi.
Several months
ago, several writers, myself included, questioned
the very existence of this ghost-like villain who was at once
everywhere, yet nowhere to be found, leading the insurgents in their
war against the wonderful forces bent on forcing democracy, at the
point of a gun, on those who had not the good sense to request it.
Now, after
a plethora of hard evidence has been published that points to Bush,
Cheney and company, as liars, torturers and leakers, others
are beginning to wonder if Zarqawi is as powerful as our government
claims.
Contacts in
the military intelligence fields have their doubts Zarqawi exists
based on some pretty sound reasoning. First of all is the 25 million
dollar reward being offered for his capture. In the war torn country
of Iraq, poverty and unemployment abound. Damn good intelligence
can be bought on the street for $100. Some people in Iraq have even
turned over members of their own family to coalition forces for
money. To believe that no one would drop a dime or an email
on Zarqawi for 25 million dollars is preposterous.
Another reason
to disbelieve the government’s line on Zarqawi is the flow of intelligence
concerning his supposed activities. The vast majority of intelligence
on Zarqawi flows from top to bottom; in other words, the intelligence
on Zarqawi comes from higher commands in the military structure
while intelligence flowing from the collection activities of the
intelligence operatives on the ground, in combat, involving Zarqawi,
are nonexistent. If Zarqawi was as active as we are led to believe,
traveling with an entourage of bodyguards, someone on the ground
would see this activity and certainly put themselves in line for
25 million. Intelligence flowing from top to bottom only, is a sure
sign of fabricated intelligence.
When U.S. Army
forces captured Abu Talha, known as the Emir of Mosul, in June of
2005, the Multi-National Force-Iraq website claimed Talha was Zarqawi’s
"most
trusted military commander." While it is believed information
obtained from Talha was directly responsible for the capture of
Abu Bara and Mullah Mehdi within a month of Talha’s capture, Talha
consistently claimed to have never even seen Zarqawi! Considering
the interrogation techniques now in vogue in our military, one would
have to believe if Talha gave up his underlings, he would surely
have given up Zarqawi, if he had any information on him at all.
Another reason
to doubt Zarqawi is leading the insurgency is our hi-tech ability
to locate anyone in the country who uses a cell phone and the ability
to direct a J-Dam laser-guided 500lb bomb to their exact location.
Cell phones are the almost exclusive form of communication used
by the insurgency in Iraq. Our signal intelligence units, traveling
throughout Iraq, are able to pinpoint the exact location of a particular
cell phone using a 10-digit grid. If the major form of communication
within the insurgency is the cell phone, and if one particular individual
(Zarqawi) is commanding the activities of his forces, he must be
using a cell phone. Inside sources tell me that was how Abu Talha
was captured.
Lies permeate
the entire Iraq fiasco, from the reasons perpetrated on the American
public to justify the invasion, to the stories of Jessica Lynch
and Pat Tillman. Can we dare believe anything that emanates from
the mouths of those connected to the state and their war machine?
A seemingly valid question would be: if the head of al-Qaeda in
Iraq does not exist, could
it be that al-Qaeda itself does not exist to the extent claimed
by the state?
But, with a
boogeyman de jour, some manufactured intelligence and a few fake
videos; Boobus will continue to toe the line and beg for protection
from those who have turned their wartime technology on him.
April
18, 2006
Michael
Gaddy [send him mail], an
Army veteran of Vietnam, Grenada, and Beirut, lives in the Four
Corners area of the American Southwest.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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