Better Late Than Never?
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
In the November
13, 2005 issue of The Washington Post, former senator and
vice presidential candidate John Edwards penned a mea culpa
concerning his previous support for the Iraq War.
He writes:
"It
was a mistake to vote for this war in 2002. I take responsibility
for that mistake. It has been hard to say these words because
those who didn’t make a mistake the men and women of our
armed forces and their families have performed heroically
and paid a dear price."
He then proceeds
to discuss how the administration’s fabrication of intelligence
misled him into taking a pro-war stance.
While I am
always glad to see folks come to their senses, a careful reading
of Edwards’ column raises a few red flags. Those of us who have
been in the antiwar trenches since before the invasion should look
skeptically at his conversion, because some very important issues
are at stake.
First, and
perhaps least important, are the issues of sincerity and courage.
Now that the war has turned into an unpopular debacle, it is relatively
easy for politicians to speak out against the invasion. A conversion
at this point is like the Frenchman who suddenly decided to join
the resistance in 1944. Partisans who had spent the previous four
years fighting the occupiers could be excused for viewing such a
change with a jaundiced eye.
America was
in desperate need of courageous leadership back in 2002 when war
plans were being hatched. Without doubt, the political situation
at the time would have made such a stand quite perilous for the
senator’s future ambitions. But that is the price of true leadership.
Coming out now against the war does precious little for those who
have already been maimed or killed. When America really needed him,
John Edwards was nowhere to be found.
I am also skeptical
of his assertion that the administration’s phony intelligence somehow
excuses his support for the war.
He states:
"The
intelligence was deeply flawed and, in some cases, manipulated
to fit a political agenda."
John Edwards
was a U.S. Senator at the time, and is allegedly a reasonably intelligent
man. Anyone with rudimentary knowledge of American history knows
that presidents routinely mete out lies and propaganda in order
to garner support for their wars. This has been our government’s
standard modus operandi for over a century, stretching back
through the Gulf of Tonkin incident, FDR, Woodrow Wilson, and to
the sinking of the Maine.
The Bush administration
was shoveling manure fast and deep because they had a pre-existing
plan to enact "regime change" in Iraq. Anything and everything
they said during the run-up to the war should have been viewed
with intense skepticism by any responsible leader. Thus, Senator
Edwards’ "we wuz deceived" line is a little disingenuous.
Given the sordid history of American interventionism, he had the
responsibility to investigate and critically examine the administration’s
contentions.
Unfortunately,
he didn’t.
Second, the
newly christened anti-war Democrats are all talking about the pre-war
intelligence as if it was unanimous and inarguable at the time.
They are acting as if the only information available consisted of
the lies spread by President Bush and his dark cabal of Sith Lords.
The reality
of the situation was quite different. There were many people
both inside and outside our government who were openly critical
of the administration’s intelligence. Folks like former UN weapons
inspector Scott Ritter and former ambassador Joe Wilson were shouting
from the rooftops that the intelligence was faulty. It is dishonest
for John Edwards (and other newly converted antiwar politicians)
to act as if everyone on the planet believed that Iraq had
WMDs. If Edwards had taken the time to chat with informed opponents
of the war, he would have found plenty of cause to doubt the administration’s
assertions. (And he might also have asked himself why teams of UN
weapons inspectors were unable to find any of the weapons that the
neocons insisted were in Iraq. Furthermore, if Bush and the neocons
knew where the weapons were…why didn’t they tell the inspectors?
Apparently, this question was too abstract to enter the senator’s
consciousness).
While these
issues expose a curious lack of skepticism on the part of Senator
Edwards, there is an even more fundamental problem with his article.
Namely, by claiming that revelations concerning fabricated prewar
intelligence led him to change his stance on the war, he is directly
implying that the invasion would have been morally and legally justified
if we had, in fact, found WMDs in Iraq.
If our soldiers
had found a few drums of mustard gas sitting in the Iraqi desert
somewhere, does anyone really believe that our military situation
would be any better than it is now? Would this discovery have magically
transformed our invasion into a legitimate endeavor?
Of course not.
Rationalizing
his pro-war stance by pointing at the administration’s WMD lies
is disingenuous because it concedes the central moral controversy
of this war to the neocons. Namely, he essentially admits his
belief that America had the right to unilaterally invade a sovereign
nation based solely on our suspicion of WMDs.
Senator Edward’s
article is thus an attempt to rhetorically slither around one of
the major points of contention in American politics today. Specifically,
America’s bipartisan political class holds a nearly unanimous consensus
that our nation has the right and the responsibility to rule the
world. America spends nearly half a trillion dollars per year
on its military-industrial complex. We have bases in over 120 nations
strewn around the globe. We routinely interfere in the internal
affairs of nations which are only remotely relevant to the well-being
of the American people. The foreign policy leadership of both political
parties from Madeline Albright to Paul Wolfowitz is
united in this hubristic ideology.
Frankly, I
believe that the major reason why the governing classes are starting
to attack President Bush has less to do with the dishonesty surrounding
the invasion than it does with their anger at his clumsy execution
of the policy. I don’t believe that this administration’s actions
leading up to the invasion were significantly different than those
of previous presidents. But this administration’s lies and manipulations
were so transparent that they have exposed the entire governing
class (and its interventionist ideology) to the light of public
scrutiny.
This is something
that cannot be tolerated.
Thus, I look
for more members of our ruling elite to begin criticizing the Iraq
War in a manner similar to Senator Edwards. By channeling our national
discussion into a criticism of lies and fabricated intelligence,
the establishment hopes to contain the damage and prevent a populist
revolt which might demand an end to American globalist interventionism.
As this war
continues on its hideously destructive path, a struggle will ensue
to shape the public’s impression of exactly what went wrong and
why.
If we in the
antiwar movement hope to change the paradigm which governs American
foreign policy, we cannot allow the establishment to spin its way
out of this. We must keep our eye on the ball and hammer home the
truth, or this atrocity will happen again.
November
17, 2005
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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