A Precious Trait
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Credibility
is a precious trait, but once it is lost, it's darned difficult
to restore. That's the main problem of the Bush administration.
After the outrageously false claims about Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction, it has no credibility. Hence, its new claims that the
Iranian government is supplying weapons to the insurgents in Iraq
are rightly met with great skepticism.
I notice that
some of the television news outlets have already fallen into the
administration's trap. In this case, the administration wants us
to accept as fact that the weapons are from Iran but argue about
whether they were sent with the complicity of the government. This
is an easy argument for the administration to win, since the Iranian
government is tightly controlled.
But the claim
that the weapons came from Iran is not an established fact. Look
at the peculiar circumstances of the briefing in Baghdad on the
subject. Cameras and recorders were barred. Officials conducting
the briefing are to remain anonymous. No direct evidence that the
weapons came from Iran was presented. Instead, reporters were told
that this was "inferred from other intelligence."
One question
I have that hasn't been answered is why a mortar shell allegedly
from Iran would have markings written in English. The English writing
is plain to see in the photographs.
As for the
claim that the U.S. has traced the serial numbers back to Iran,
how does the United States have access to Iranian serial numbers?
And why, presumably, were the numbers written in the system used
by the West, instead of in Farsi? Part of the great fun of traveling
in the Middle East on an expense account is to come home and dump
a large package of receipts all written in Arabic
on the company accountant's desk. The glyphs used in Iran are known
as East Arabic-Indic.
The administration
also made much of the fact that some of these munitions were what
is known as shaped charges, which are designed to penetrate heavy
armor. It was implied that this was new on the battlefield. In fact,
shaped charges have been around for decades. Since Saddam Hussein
had the fourth-largest army in the world before our wars and sanctions,
it's dead certain that there were tens of thousands of shaped charges
in the form of tank and artillery rounds in his arsenals.
Here we come
back to another strategic blunder. There were so few U.S. soldiers
in Iraq that we lacked the manpower to guard and dispose of all
of the arsenals we found. Many of these were looted. There are two
things Iraq has never been short of weapons and people who
know how to use them.
Another reason
for suspicion is the timing. Claims that Iran was sending weapons
to Iraq surfaced 16 months ago. The British stopped making the claims
for lack of evidence. So why did the Bush administration choose
this particular time to make the charge, and why did it do so in
such a way as to ensure skepticism? The way to restore credibility
is to lay all the evidence out in a transparent manner and to say
truthfully what is known and what is not known.
The American
people must be careful not to let this administration lead them
into yet another war, this time with Iran, with the same kinds of
deception it used to justify the Iraq War.
Perhaps
the Iranians are supplying some weapons to Shiite militias, but
the Bush administration has yet to prove it.
February
17, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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