Bush Raises the Stakes in Terror War
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
Despite
fading public and Republican confidence in his performance
in Iraq and the wider "war on terror," U.S. President
George W. Bush Thursday raised the stakes by warning that a U.S.
withdrawal from Iraq would lead to a takeover by al-Qaeda and the
subversion of its pro-Western neighbors.
In
his longest and most Churchillian defense of U.S.
strategy to date, Bush insisted that Washington would persevere
in Iraq, if for no other reason than the alternative would be so
dire.
"This
enemy considers every retreat of the civilized world as an invitation
to greater violence," he declared to his audience at the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED). "In Iraq, there is no peace
without victory. We will keep our nerve and we will win that victory."
Bush
also attacked Syria and Iran by name, calling the two countries
"allies of convenience" of Islamic radicals "with
a long history of collaboration with terrorists."
Both
countries have been the subject of meetings over the past 10 days
of Bush's top national security aides, amid growing calls by neoconservatives,
in particular, to conduct military raids on targets in Syria to
stop the alleged infiltration of radical Islamic fighters across
the border into Iraq. U.S. troops are currently engaged in sweeps
in western Iraq close to the frontier.
"The
United States makes no distinction between those who commit acts
of terror and those who support and harbor them, because they're
equally as guilty of murder," Bush said in a reprise of the
pre-invasion warnings against Iraq when Washington accused Baghdad
of supporting al-Qaeda.
And,
in a further warning to Iran, Bush said he was "determined
to deny weapons of mass destruction [WMD] to outlaw regimes, and
to their terrorist allies who would use them without hesitation."
The
main message of the speech, however, appeared to be aimed primarily
at his fellow citizens, and particularly Republicans and senior
military officers who have become increasingly uneasy about the
direction of Bush's anti-terrorist campaign, especially in Iraq.
Republican
nervousness was on embarrassing display Wednesday night when, despite
repeated White House veto threats, all but nine Republican senators
joined their Democratic colleagues in attaching an amendment to
the 2006 defense appropriations bill that banned the use of torture
or inhumane treatment against detainees held by U.S. forces.
The
90-9 vote was the most one-sided repudiation of a Bush policy position
since he became president in 2001.
"Republicans
are saying that they just voted their conscience on the issue of
torture," noted one Senate aide who works for a Democrat. "But
if the war were going better, you know they wouldn't have voted
to embarrass the president in the way they just did."
Likewise,
for several months now, senior officers have repeatedly suggested
that the U.S. military presence in Iraq may actually be fueling
the insurgency there, as well as providing new recruits to al-Qaeda
elsewhere in Europe and the Islamic world, and that the most effective
way to counter both trends is to begin withdrawing troops.
Just
this past week, for example, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen.
George Casey, told a congressional panel that the continued U.S.
military presence "feeds the notion of occupation," while
his superior officer, Gen. John Abizaid, testified at the same hearing
that it was critical to "reduce our military footprint"
in the region to "make clear to the people [there] that we
have no designs on their territory and resources."
In
that context, Bush's emphatic rejection of such advice on Thursday,
however, appeared designed to quash dissension and enforce discipline,
particularly given the prominent presence in the audience of the
new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Peter Pace, as well
as his boss, Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld.
"It
may be his way of telling the generals to stop talking about drawing
down the forces," ret. Amb. David Mack, vice president of the
Middle East Institute (MEI) who served as deputy assistant secretary
of state for Near Eastern Affairs under Bush's father, told IPS.
The
fact that the NED, a bastion of neoconservatism, was the chosen
forum for Bush's speech was also significant. It was there in November
2003 that the president first spelled out his "forward strategy
of freedom" for the Middle East after his pre-invasion rationales
for going to war with Iraq its WMD and alleged links with
al-Qaeda proved to be unfounded.
Like
his 2005 Inaugural Address, that speech was optimistic in style
and tone, arguing that the construction of a democratic Iraq would
produce a domino effect on the rest of the region that would spread
freedom to Iran and the Arab world and thus reduce the resentments
and frustrations that produced Islamic radicalism.
Thursday's
speech, by contrast, was animated far more by fear than by hope,
particularly in its implicit admission that, as Mack put it, "the
tables have turned" in the almost two years that have intervened.
"Instead
of using Iraq as a way to transform the region, they now seem to
recognize that they have put organizations like al-Qaeda in a position
to transform the region in its favor. If you follow [Bush's] logic,
that's what has happened: we've gone from this great opportunity
to democratize the region to, 'oh my God, we have to prevent even
worse things from happening,'" he said.
Thus,
Bush stressed that he concurred in Osama bin Laden's own depiction
of Iraq as "the central front in the war on terror," and
warned that "the militants believe that controlling one country
will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all moderate
governments in the region, and establish a radical Islamic empire
that spans from Spain to Indonesia."
"With
greater economic and military and political power, the terrorists
would be able to advance their stated agenda: to develop weapons
of mass destruction, to destroy Israel, to intimidate Europe, to
assault the American people, and to blackmail our government into
isolation," he said.
"Some
might be tempted to dismiss these goals as fanatical and extreme.
Well, they are fanatical and extreme and they should not
be dismissed," he went on, comparing the radicals to Hitler,
Stalin, and Pol Pot, and echoing the neoconservative mantra that
"Evil men, obsessed with ambition and unburdened by conscience,
must be taken very seriously, and we must stop them before their
crimes can multiply."
Thus,
a key element of U.S. strategy must be to "deny the militants
control of any nation, which they would use as a home base and a
launching pad for terror," he said, citing U.S. military operations
against "remnants of the Taliban and their al-Qaeda allies"
in Afghanistan, as well as the fight against "regime remnants
and terrorists in Iraq," and Washington's "working with
President [Pervez] Musharraf to oppose and isolate militants in
Pakistan."
The
argument that withdrawing from Iraq would actually make it more
difficult for al-Qaeda and its allies to recruit and operate there
was a "dangerous illusion," Bush said, "refuted by
the simple question: 'Would the United States and other free nations
be more safe, or less safe, with [Abu Musab al-] Zarqawi and bin
Laden in control of Iraq, its people, and its resources?'"
Unusually
for Bush, he also warned that "this war will require more sacrifice,
more time, and more resolve."
October
7, 2005
Jim
Lobe [send him mail]
is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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