Where It All Began
by Jude Wanniski
by Jude Wanniski
In case you
have not noticed, the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal
has continued to justify its ardent support for the pre-emptive
war against Iraq even though no weapons of mass destruction have
been found and no links between Saddam and Al Qaeda have been found.
The latest rationale is that the 24 million people of Iraq are better
off for the war, although the editors do not include the tens of
thousands of Iraqi civilians and military who have died in the course
of their liberation.
Yesterday's
editpage goes much further, with a
commentary by a senior vice president of Dow Jones & Co., L.
Gordon Crovitz, who takes the rationale for pre-emptive war
all the way back to June 1981, when the Israeli Air Force bombed
the almost-completed billion-dollar nuclear-power plant outside
Baghdad. As you will see in his review of a new book celebrating
that event, Crovitz notes that the entire world condemned the clear
act of aggression by Israel, with even the United States casting
its vote in the United Nations against Israel. The only EXCEPTION
was the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, which
praised the bombing on the grounds that Iraq was most certainly
building an atom bomb.
In fact, for
all these years, when it comes to all issues involving national
security in general and the Middle East in particular, the Journal's
editorial page has served as the personal fiefdom of Richard Perle
and Paul Wolfowitz. Crovitz of course knows that as well as I do,
having worked his way up to his present status at Dow Jones through
the editpage. Trained as a lawyer, he became editor of the editorial
page of the Journal's Asian edition, which took its cues
from New York on all matters of national security. In reading his
commentary, note what he does not tell his readers:
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Iraq had
signed the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, which entitled
it to receive assistance from the nuclear powers in building
plants to generate electrical power. The Osiraq plant was constructed
by the French, which had built an identical plant for Israel,
which had not signed the NPT and provided the fissile material
for its plant through its own sources. The difference is that
NPT signators who received assistance had to also agree to frequent
inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
to make sure none of the fissile material used for power production
was diverted to a weapons program.
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Just as
we now know Iraq had no WMD when we attacked it last year, we
now know Iraq had no nuclear weapons program at the time of
the Osiraq bombing and that it was the bombing that led Baghdad
to initiate a clandestine weapons program outside the purview
of the IAEA a program that ended in complete failure
in any event.
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Although
the U.S. officially condemned the Israeli attack on Osiraq,
for which Iraq was never compensated financially, the Pentagon
gave Israel what assistance it could in planning the airstrike
through a special office established soon after Ronald Reagan's
inauguration in January 1981. The man assigned to the office
was Richard Perle, who has since congratulated himself for the
timely success of the bombing hastily arranged so the
plant could be destroyed before it had been fitted with nuclear
material or the nuclear fallout would have contaminated
the area and caused much more loss of life than the few workers
killed in the strike.
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The headline
on his story, "Everyone now agrees it was right to attack Iraq
pre-emptively," is the Journal's way of saying that it
would have been much more difficult to subdue Iraq in the 1991
Gulf War if its power plant had not been destroyed and Saddam
had found a way to sneak fissile material past the IAEA inspectors
to build an Islamic bomb. Another way of looking at it is that
Time magazine was right in stating: "Israel has vastly
compounded the difficulties of procuring a peaceful settlement
of the confrontation in the Middle East."
-
Crovitz
does not tell us that Israel has been seriously considering
a pre-emptive bombing of the Iranian nuclear power plant outside
Tehran, which the neo-cons in the Bush administration and the
Journal's editors would of course celebrate as well.
June
3, 2004
Jude
Wanniski [send him mail]
runs the financial/political advisory service Wanniski.com.
(If you subscribe,
and check LewRockwell.com in the referring website pull-down,
LRC gets 10%).
Copyright
© 2004 Jude Wanniski
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