True Confessions
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
On
October 19, 2005, the American Secretary of State, aka the Tea Lady,
did something extraordinary for the Bush administration. She told
the truth. According to the October 20 Washington Times,
in testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Miss Rice
said
that it was
always the Bush administration’s intent to redesign the Middle
East after the September 11 attacks, which exposed a "deep
malignancy growing" in the region, and that Iraq was part
of that plan.
Well.
There we have it. It’s now official: Saddam’s eternally elusive
Weapons of Mass Destruction were just eyewash. The decision to invade
Iraq came first, and the various contrived justifications came after.
Those Iraqi WMDs were as real as Polish attacks on Germany in 1939,
and as cynical. The cynicism is, if anything, even more brazen:
Herr Ribbentrop never testified to the Reichstag that "Polish
aggression" was just a set-up, even if everyone knew.
Does
it matter? To the American press and people, apparently not. Miss
Rice’s official confirmation of everyone’s suspicions got virtually
no coverage. After all, the NFL season has started.
But
in other respects, I think it does matter. It matters, first, because
it reveals this administration’s utter cynicism, a cynicism born
of the neo-cons, who seldom met a lie they didn’t like. In effect,
Miss Rice testified, "Yea, we lied. So what?"
Well,
beyond 2000 dead and 15,000 wounded, so cavalier an attitude toward
the truth suggests the lies have probably continued. As they have:
the administration routinely engages in (illegal) domestic propaganda,
puffing anything it can call a "success" in Iraq while
classifying or otherwise burying the bad news. The latest example
is the spin on the Iraqi constitutional referendum. The Bushies
are hailing it an "another victory of democracy," when
in fact the outcome could not have been worse. The Sunnis pulled
out all their stops and still lost, telling them the system is stacked
so heavily against them they have no political future. Where ballots
fail, bullets still offer promise.
Another
reason the WMD lie matters is that the real reason the administration
invaded Iraq, "to redesign the Middle East," reveals (officially)
a truly breathtaking hubris, coupled to a monumental ignorance of
the region in question. Redesign the Middle East? What do the Bushies
think it is, a Chevrolet?
At
it happens, the war in Iraq is redesigning the Middle East, but
not exactly in a planned fashion. Just as the calling of the Estates
General in 1789 opened the door to the French Revolution, so the
American destruction of the Iraqi state has opened the door to a
broader collapse of the state system in that region, an outcome
the administration is now pushing in Syria as well. Osama, sitting
in his cave, no doubt continues to thank Allah for President George
W. Bush.
Finally,
the official revelation, in Congressional testimony no less, that
the Bush administration’s motto is "Lies R US" will matter
politically, as the American people begin to come to grips with
the fact of a lost war. That may happen by the elections of 2006;
it will certainly happen by 2008. It is safe to say that the public
will not be happy, and the realization that they were lied into
the lost war won’t make them any happier. As Republican Members
of Congress are beginning to realize, the blowback may be of historic
proportions. Anyone seen any Whigs lately? (The fact that the Democrats
continue to offer a profile in cowardice on the war might even open
the door to a serious third party, God willing. There have to be
some real, small-r republicans out there still.)
And
so Wilsonianism will come full circle. Wilson lied America into
World War I, with fables of German soldiers bayonetting Belgian
babies. The result was Lenin, Hitler and World War II. But the experience
did give America a lesson in minding her own business and, for a
time, a foreign policy for Americans (first). This time, Wilsonianism
will give us a vastly disordered Middle East, the greatest Islamic
victory since the fall of Constantinople and oil prices that might
make the Trabant America’s best-selling car. Will it also give us,
again, a foreign policy for Americans, as Senator Robert A. Taft
put it? We can hope, we can hope.
October
28, 2005
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2005 William S. Lind
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