War
by Accident?
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
Cheney
lives, and he wants more war.
According to former CIA officer Phil Giraldi, Cheney remains hard
at work fomenting some kind of attack or even war with Iran – and
beyond that, he and George W. Bush don’t believe their own CIA’s
latest intelligence assessment on Iran, indicating, in short that
when it comes to Iran, we have little to fear but fear itself.
It may not
matter what George W. Bush believes, or thinks. He defers to Dick
on national security matters. But Dick Cheney is apparently determined
to make his mark before the election of the next American president,
who, if Ron Paul, will
immediately work to end our foreign policy fiascos, and if it is
one of the remaining Democratic contenders, will slowly and more
slowly, hesitantly and more hesitantly, try to begin to withdraw
from the Bush wars.
Any new president
is bad news for Cheney, who operates without legal, political or
moral constraints, and wishes to continue to fight everyone he can
in the Middle East and beyond. But the world community and hometown
America won’t stomach the selling of yet another unnecessary war
in the Middle East so soon. War by accident, to quote a phrase used
by Phil
Giraldi in his Antiwar.com interview on January 24th, seems
to be Cheney’s preferred pathway towards destruction in Iran.
Our government
in Washington, D.C. has a serious appetite, and a million dead Iraqis
and thousands more dead Afghanis cannot quench it.
This appetite
cannot be for democracy, as neither Afghanistan nor Iraq exist in
any condition resembling democracy, and Iran already has a working
democracy, with multiple constraints on executive power through
a complex balance of political and religious governmental systems.
It can’t be an appetite for revenge – because as George W. Bush
famously said years ago, he isn’t
that worried about Bin Laden, and we long ago set up our own
Unocal-friendly puppet in Kabul, presumably eliminating any need
for revenge against the Taliban for 9/11. As we all know, Iraq had
nothing to do with 9/11; even the President has admitted this. And
we’ve already hanged our errant former ally Saddam Hussein, ostensibly
closing that case.
Surely, it
is not an appetite for either justice or national security. The
reasons given for the ongoing wars – namely that Afghanistan’s government
and later Iraq posed a threat to us directly – was always laughable.
That superficial reason upon which "everyone
could agree" today seems ancient history. Yet still we
find echoes of this lifeless rationale in the administration’s public
and private statements on Iran, most recently in the latest "state
of the union" address, and in recent Bush and Rice harangues
to our remaining Middle Eastern allies.
So what is
it all about? What other appetites consume our nation? What other
hunger seizes our Congress? What does Cheney and the American Enterprise
Institute crave? Why does Washington threaten countries like Iraq,
Iran, and behave despicably towards non-threatening small countries
like Russia and Venezuela? Why do we obsess about Turkey and worry
about Saudi Arabia? Why do we subsidize both rich and poor nuclear-capable
states in the Middle East, while occupying and harassing poor non-nuclear
states?
I certainly
don’t know the answers. But the New Testament offers an explanation
worth considering, with "For
where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Saddam Hussein
may have sealed his death warrant in November 2000, when he announced
Iraq would cease oil sales in dollars and deal exclusively in euros.
It was a business decision, as Saddam sold most Iraqi oil to EU
countries; yet it must have been satisfying for the bombed out and
politically castrated Hussein to show his contempt for the almighty
dollar. Iran – even as we collaborate with and oblige Iranian-influenced
Shia leaders in Iraq, trying at one point to emplace an Iranian-influenced
Shia leader named Chalabi as next Iraqi dictator – has endured Washington’s
shrillest complaints concurrent with Iran’s intentions and actions
to leave the dollar for other world currencies.
Turkey is in
the news today, because the
highest levels of the Bush administration casually committed treason
in revealing nuclear intelligence secrets to the Turkish government,
for both fun and profit. Former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds, instead
of being called into the White House to share what she knows about
spies and security leaks that endanger American lives during a "war
on terror," was instead judicially gagged by this administration
from speaking to anyone about anything she knows.
But Turkey
should also be in the news today as a
launching pad for more U.S.-desired war, and as a recent target
of American anger for its material
support of financial transactions by the dollar-rejecting Iranian
government.
Why does the
Bush-Cheney administration, with a congressional chorus in full-throated
cheer, threaten oil producers Venezuela and Russia? And come to
think of it, what happened to communications cables in the Mediterranean
and the Persian
Gulf last week?
Cheney apparently
hopes for an accidental war, an engineered provocation that would
rise above the level of Borat
on a radio, and so avoid public complaint about lame duck crazies
and murder most foul. But to think that any of the wars of the Bush
administration have been accidental would be naïve. The new
network of U.S. military bases – intended
from the beginning to be permanent – has been no accident. The
timing of verbal and physical attacks on Afghanistan, Iraq and possibly
in the future, Iran, were not and will not be accidental. Instead,
these wars are the result of a clear vision on the part of the Washington,
D.C. establishment – facilitated by popular neoconservative rhetoric
on democracy, global values, evil axes, and the defense of Israel.
This
vision – remarkably crass and ridiculous even as it is compelling
and dangerous – is that the dollar, and Washington’s ability to
keep printing it without anyone noticing the inflation, the lack
of faith, and the criminality of it all, must be supported by the
rest of the world.
World faith
in the dollar no longer rests on substantive reality, but on an
illusion that most of the world’s inhabitants, and all of its bankers,
now see through. Unfortunately, it is an illusion that the Washington
establishment, secretly applauding the Bush/Cheney crusade against
uppity oil producers, intends to enforce militarily.
February
5, 2008
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
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Copyright ©
2008 Karen Kwiatkowski
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