Bush
Is Right to Link 9/11 With Iraq
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
Even
though the Iraqi people and their ruler, Saddam Hussein, had nothing
to do with the 9/11 attacks, President Bush was correct in once
again linking 9/11 with his invasion and occupation of Iraq in his
speech to the nation last night. Why? Because the motivation behind
the 9/11 attacks was the same as the motivation behind the insurgency
in Iraq: U.S. foreign policy.
Contrary to what Bush has long maintained, the 9/11 terrorists,
like their predecessors who attacked the World Trade Center in 1993,
were motivated not by hatred for America’s “freedom and values”
but instead by anger arising from the bad things that the U.S. government
has done to people overseas, especially in the Middle East, including:
-
The cruel
and brutal sanctions imposed against Iraq for more than
a decade, which contributed to the deaths and misery of hundreds
of thousands of innocent Iraqi children, along with the callous
indifference of U.S. officials to their horrific consequences.
The goal of the sanctions and therefore the rationale
for all the deaths and misery they produced was nothing
more than “regime change” that is, the ouster of Saddam
Hussein from power and his replacement by a U.S.-approved regime,
which continued to be the goal as President Bush’s forces invaded
Iraq, as the recently disclosed Downing Street Memo implies;
-
The arrogant
stationing of U.S. troops on Islamic holy lands in Saudi Arabia,
troops that Bush hoped could simply be transferred to permanent
bases in Iraq after “regime change” in Iraq was accomplished;
-
The unconditional
U.S.-taxpayer subsidization, both financial and military, of
the Israeli government, regardless of its policies.
President Bush’s attack on Iraq was nothing more than part and parcel
of the pro-empire, pro-interventionist, pro-militarist foreign policy
that has long generated deep anger and hatred among people of the
Middle East against the United States. Thus, why should it surprise
anyone that an invasion and occupation that have produced not only
the deaths of countless more innocent people but also additional
misery and devastation for the Iraqi people would generate the deep
anger and resistance that similar-type U.S. policies have produced
in the past?
For decades, the U.S. government’s pro-empire position has been
that it has the right to “maintain a presence” and impose its will
in the Middle East, by force if necessary. Those foreigners who
resist its presence and its policies are then extinguished by imperial
troops for being “bad guys” or “terrorists.”
In Bush’s mind, this is the “freedom” for which sacrifices must
continue to be made in Iraq the “freedom” of the U.S. empire
to continue imposing its will on the people of the world, especially
those in the Middle East. Make no mistake about it: those sacrifices
both in terms of lives and treasure, not to mention moral
principles are for nothing more than international power
politics and not for “democracy and freedom,” as the U.S. government’s
ardent support of such cruel and brutal dictators as Pervez Musharraf
of Pakistan and Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan (and, previously,
Saddam Hussein) reflects.
While it is certainly possible that President Bush will yet pull
the rabbit out of the hat in Iraq, it increasingly appears that
his war will prove to be one of the biggest debacles in U.S. history.
If so, both Republicans and Democrats will undoubtedly be encouraging
Americans to “stay the course” by simply being more selective with
respect to future wars that their Cold War military empire elects
to wage.
It is up to us libertarians to continue raising the vision of the
American people to a higher level encouraging them to reject
the entire pro-empire, pro-interventionist, pro-militarist, pro-big-government
paradigm by which conservatives, neoconservatives, and leftists
have guided our nation for the past several decades.
It is up to us libertarians to encourage our fellow Americans to
lead the world to a freer, more peaceful and harmonious place through
the restoration of the philosophy of individual liberty, free markets,
limited government, noninterventionism,
nonmilitarism,
and republic that guided
our forefathers.
What better way to ensure that all the innocent people, both Iraqi
and American, who have lost their lives or limbs in Iraq for more
than a decade will not have died or been maimed in vain? What greater
gift for the American people to give to their children and to the
world?
June
30, 2005
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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