Departing Iraq
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
June
30, 2005, was the peak of neocon delusion. On that day American
Enterprise Institute neocon Karl Zinsmeister posted his article
on the AEI online site titled: "The War is Over, and We Won."
No
sooner than Zinsmeister put delusion to paper than US military commanders
reported escalating and more sophisticated insurgency attacks. Casualties
exploded with more deadly bombings, giving meaning to Secretary
of Defense Rumsfeld’s projection of a 12-year war. The Congressional
Budget Office estimated that the conflict’s cost may exceed $700
billion.
A
University of Chicago professor published a study that concluded
suicide bombings are a response to military occupation and will
increase with the length of occupation.
Various
Iraqi politicians expressed their opinions that the insurgency was
a response to the US occupation and would not end until the Americans
withdrew.
British
polls found that overwhelming majorities blamed the London bombings
on Britain’s participation in the Iraq war.
By
July 27 the Christian Science Monitor had the headline: "Iraq
PM urges quick pullout of US forces."
The
Washington Post reported that the tone of statements by Secretary
Rumsfeld, Prime Minister Jaafari, and Gen. George Casey, US commanding
general in Iraq, "suggested a heightened urgency to planning
for the US troop reduction, despite the continuation of lethal daily
attacks by insurgents in Iraq."
We
have run out of troops and money, the rest of the world has run
out of patience with our stupidity, and the upper regions of the
Bush administration may be crumbling under pressure of a prosecutor’s
investigations and eroding public support.
Bush
administration neocons such as Wolfowitz, Perle, Feith, Libby, along
with their cheerleaders at Fox "News," the Weekly Standard,
Wall Street Journal editorial page, National Review,
and the New York Times’ Judith Miller will go down in history
as the architects and enablers of the greatest strategic blunder
in American history. The neocon dream of conquering the Middle East
and destroying Islam as a force is now in history’s trash heap of
failed adventures along with such miscalculations as Hitler’s march
into Russia and the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
In
seeking to get to the bottom of the Valerie Plame affair, federal
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald is bringing us back to the Big Question:
Who cooked the books in order to justify the invasion of Iraq? Was
the ringleader Vice President Cheney? Was it Defense Secretary Rumsfeld
and his neocon cadres? Or was it President Bush himself? What role
did Condi "Mushroom Cloud" Rice play in the orchestrated
deceit of Congress and the American public?
In
the American system, high government officials, no matter how powerful
their positions, are not the law. They are subject to the law, which
they are sworn to uphold, and when they violate the law they are
held accountable.
The
US invasion of Iraq was illegal and unwarranted. Those who conspired
to bring this war about must be identified and punished. Otherwise
the United States will sink from the rule of law into the rule of
men.
A
true patriot does not confuse government with country. A patriot’s
loyalty is to his country, and loyalty to country requires holding
government accountable.
July
28, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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