Excuses Keep on Coming
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
The evolution
of excuses for blundering into and maintaining the Iraq War is becoming
comical.
The first
excuse was weapons of mass destruction. Do you remember the constant
talk about weapons of mass destruction, "the worst weapons
in the hands of the worst dictator"? Do you remember how President
Bush said the sole reason for the war was to disarm Saddam Hussein?
Do you remember how we were warned about a smoking gun that could
be a mushroom cloud? Do you remember how Iraq was an "imminent"
threat to the world? Do you remember how a 65-year-old dictator,
widely acknowledged as not the smartest guy in the world, was compared
to Hitler, who had put together a regime and an army that conquered
Europe?
Well, oops.
Not a single weapon of mass destruction was found in the country.
Furthermore, the Iraqis had said there were no weapons of mass destruction.
To cover their behinds, U.S. officials started peddling the story
that Saddam wanted people to believe he had weapons of mass destruction.
That U.S. lie didn't fly because Saddam and his government repeatedly
denied that the weapons existed. Furthermore, Iraq had invited in
U.N. inspectors who were verifying the absence of weapons, which
was one reason Bush forced the inspectors out by going to war. He
had to start his war before the inspectors proved his bogus intelligence
amounted to a pack of lies.
Enter the
second excuse: Bush wants to spread democracy in the Middle East,
starting with Iraq. That never progressed past elections because,
as everyone familiar with the country knew or should have known,
a vote would elect a Shia majority with two fractious minorities,
Kurds and Sunnis. This is the government that has proven to be totally
ineffective. It also greatly increased the influence of Iran. It
has sparked the civil war in Iraq.
Bush lately
has hinted that his faith in democracy is weakening by implying
that a reasonable authority would be acceptable. Trouble is, the
U.S. can't even find a dictator willing to take the job, given the
present situation.
Now, when
the issue has become getting Americans home from a war that has
lasted longer than World War II, the final excuse is to trot out
the empire's favorite ambiguity: stability. If we leave Iraq, instability
will result. It's hard to believe anyone can say that with a straight
face. Iraq is unstable already. It's in the midst of civil war,
with a million refugees and displaced people, hundreds of thousands
of dead and wounded, its economy a total wreck, and virtually all
work on repairing the infrastructure at a standstill.
Ironically,
the last time Iraq was stable was when Saddam was in power. Iraq
is unstable because we made it unstable. We destroyed Iraq's infrastructure,
its economy and its government. We did. One of the most shameful
lies peddled by the Bush administration has been to blame the poor
state of Iraq's infrastructure on Saddam. We destroyed that infrastructure
with wars, bombings and medieval sanctions. The miracle is that
with all we were doing, Saddam managed to produce more electricity
and more oil than our occupation has been able to produce.
Finally, how
is it the U.S. can claim that after four years, there is no trained
Iraqi army and police force able to handle security? We send kids
into combat with about 16 weeks of training. And why is the U.S.
building the largest embassy in the world in a Third World country
that is in chaos?
What
"Herbert Hoover" Bush has done is destroy the credibility
of the U.S., sully our reputation almost beyond repair, demonstrate
the weakness of our leadership and the vulnerability of our military,
and convince many people in the world that we are an evil nation
of idiots led by fools. Let's at least hope that he destroys the
Republican Party, too. It deserves a zero existence.
July
16, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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