Shifting Realities on Iraq
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
One
of the fascinating aspects of the Iraq War has been the way in which
some people have permitted their sense of reality to shift and mutate
as circumstances have changed.
Recall that
the primary justification for supporting the war was that Saddam
Hussein was about to unleash a biological, chemical, or nuclear
attack on the United States. People were convinced they were in
danger. I recall many of them exclaiming, Im trusting
my president! He has access to information that we dont have!
After the
invasion, when it turned out that Saddam wasnt planning an
imminent WMD attack on the United States and that, in fact, he didnt
even have any WMDs, peoples mindset rapidly switched to a
new reality. The new primary reason for the invasion became to help
out the Iraqi people by spreading democracy and liberating them
from tyranny. In fact, some people, quickly shifting to the secondary
rationale for the presidents invasion, even blocked out of
their minds that the only reason that they had endorsed the
attack was because of the fear they had had that Saddam was about
to level a WMD attack against the United States.
When confronted
by information that was inconsistent with that new reality, people
simply blocked it out of their minds. For example, while then relying
on the democracy-spreading rationale, people simply ignored the
long-time U.S. support of non-democratically elected dictators,
such as Musharraf in Pakistan, Saddam in Iraq, the shah of Iran, and rulers in Egypt, Saudi Arabia,
Jordan).
There were
also the cruel and brutal U.S. and UN sanctions, which contributed to the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, without any regret or remorse from U.S. officials. There are also
the killings and maiming without any remorse of tens of thousands
of Iraqis in the recent invasion and occupation, with the Pentagon
refusing to keep track of Iraqi dead.
How can any
of this information be reconciled with a belief in a genuine concern
for the well-being of the Iraqi people? Advocates of the presidents
war simply refused to consider it because it conflicted with their
new reality of why the United States invaded Iraq.
There was
also the suggestion that Saddam conspired to commit the 9/11 attacks,
despite the fact that the president was forced to admit publicly
that no such evidence existed. Even today Saddams participation
in the 9/11 attacks is reality for some people who have apparently
convinced themselves that the president secretly knows that Saddam
was behind the attacks but cant reveal the evidence for national
security reasons.
There is the
new reality that now characterizes many U.S. troops, whose minds
are obviously being instilled with a newly issued mission statement
to justify the perpetual existence of the military-industrial complex
after U.S. troops withdraw from Iraq that theyre fighting
a worldwide war against radical Islam and Muslims who are determined
to conquer us and take over our nation. The troops have convinced
themselves that the real reason the United States is in Iraq is
to fight this new enemy, but they block out of their minds two important
points:
-
The invasion
and occupation themselves, together with all the other deadly
U.S. interventions in the Middle East for the past several decades
(i.e., unconditional support of the Israeli government, the
Persian Gulf intervention, the deadly U.S. and UN sanctions,
the stationing in U.S. troops on Islamic holy lands, and the
illegal no-fly zones over Iraq), are what have produced the
anger and hatred that have given rise to the Islamic terrorists
that theyre now saying are out to destroy us.
-
Their
invasion and occupation have installed into power the very people
the Pentagon claims to be fighting radical Islamists.
Thus, U.S. troops in Iraq are now killing and dying to preserve the radical Islamic regime in Iraq,
a regime that has aligned itself with the radical Islamic regime
in Iran, which the president is now thinking about attacking.
Finally, theres
the reality that things are going well in Iraq. The
military generals who are now revolting against Rumsfeld have thrown
a dose of cold water on that false reality, especially in military circles.
The late psychiatrist
M. Scott Peck wrote that mental health entails an unwavering commitment
to reality at all costs. Its a point that Americans would
do well to ponder as their minds gradually begin to accept the reality
of the Iraq debacle, a debacle rooted in the simple reality of a
decades-long U.S. foreign policy of overthrowing
unfavorable foreign regimes and replacing them with regimes
more palatable to U.S. officials.
April
25, 2006
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 Future of Freedom Foundation
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