We Must Hold the Scoundrels Accountable
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
BBC reports (Nov. 17) that two former British government employees
have been charged with violating the Official Secrets Act.
The
Official Secrets Act is useful for protecting the British government
from accountability. Anyone who reveals wrongdoing by government
officials can be charged under the act.
The
two men are charged with leaking a harmless memo, "Iraq in
the Medium Term," that expresses British Foreign Office doubts
about US tactics in Iraq. The real crime is not the leak but her
Majesty’s government’s continuing support for a policy that the
British government knows to be illegal and bulging with war crimes.
It is Prime Minister Tony Blair and his ministers who should be
facing charges.
As
the publication by the London Times (May 1, 2005) of the
super secret Downing Street Memo (July 23, 2002) made clear, prior
to the US invasion of Iraq the head of British intelligence returned
from meetings in Washington to tell the British cabinet that the
Bush administration first made the decision to invade Iraq and then
manufactured the "intelligence" to justify the decision.
The
British government knew in advance that the invasion was wrong.
Members of the British cabinet were concerned that British participation
in an act of naked aggression would expose British government officials
to war crimes charges. Nevertheless, Blair insisted that the UK
had to support Bush. Little doubt but Blair was concerned that otherwise
his political retirement would not be secured with US corporate
directorships.
Consequently,
the US and UK governments invaded a country for reasons that were
different from the fabricated reasons used to make the case to the
public. Thus did the highest officials in the two governments commit
a plethora of crimes.
Under
the Nuremberg standard, it is a war crime to initiate military aggression.
It
is a criminal act both in the US and the UK to commit military forces
to action under false pretenses.
Many
aspects of the conduct of the war are criminal. Torture, murder
of civilians, corruption in contracts. Prosecutors could build a
list of charges against President George W. Bush, Vice President
Richard Cheney, Defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and Prime Minister
Blair.
In
England it is not Blair who is on trial for participating in what
he knew was a wrongful act that has resulted in thousands of deaths.
It is not the crimes committed in secret that get punished. The
people who are punished are the ones who leak memos that reveal
wrongdoing has occurred.
Blair
may escape punishment for his treachery to the British and Iraqi
people. Bush, however, may not. One of the neocon architects of
the illegal invasion, Lewis "Scooter" Libby, has been
indicted on a peripheral issue. Another of the neocon architects,
Douglas Feith, is being investigated by the inspector general of
the Department of Defense at the insistence of the Senate Armed
Services Committee and Senate Intelligence Committee. Feith is suspected
of overseeing the task of creating the false intelligence.
Bush’s
public support has plummeted. A majority of Americans believe Bush
lied about Iraq having weapons of mass destruction and now they
doubt his integrity. Trapped in their lies, Bush and Cheney are
lashing out at critics, proving once again the truth of Samuel Johnson’s
18th century observation that "patriotism is the last refuge
of a scoundrel."
Rep.
John Murtha (D, Pa.), a former marine, has had enough of the senseless
killing, maiming, and expense of the Iraq war, which he termed "a
flawed policy wrapped in illusion."
Murtha,
a strong supporter of the US military, has realized along with General
George W. Casey that US occupation, not terrorism, is the driving
force behind the Iraq insurgency.
On
November 17 Murtha declared: "We cannot continue on the present
course. It is evident that continued military action in Iraq is
not in the best interest of the United States of America, the Iraqi
people or the Persian Gulf Region."
A
new CNN/USA Today Gallup poll shows that the American public agrees
with Murtha. Fifty-two percent of respondents believe all US soldiers
should be withdrawn immediately from Iraq or over the next 12 months.
Only 38 percent believe the troops should remain in Iraq.
The
neocon architects of the war believed that the "cakewalk"
invasion of Iraq would flow seamlessly into the overthrow of the
Syrian and Iranian governments, making the Middle East safe for
whatever policy Israel wished to pursue. Instead, the invasion has
poisoned Muslims against America and created chaos and instability
that play into the hands of Osama bin Laden.
The
Bush administration believed that the euphoria of a "cakewalk"
conquest would prevent the nonexistence of weapons of mass destruction
from becoming an issue. Success would mask the lies, and the issue
of accountability would not arise.
Success,
however, was never in the cards. Congress has caught on, and pressure
is mounting to bring our troops home. The determination of the Bush
administration to discredit all critics resulted in illegal acts
and Libby’s indictment. The prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, has
announced the formation of a new grand jury to continue the investigation
of illegal acts by Bush administration high officials.
As
events unfold, we must keep in mind that matters do not end with
bringing home the troops and punishing the administration officials
who blew the cover of a covert US agent. The worst transgression
was the Bush administration’s decision to deceive our nation in
order to use a war in Iraq to pursue an undeclared agenda in the
Middle East. Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld committed treason. They still
have not told us the real reason they were so determined to invade
Iraq that they used falsified intelligence to justify a war of aggression.
We must find out their real agenda and hold them fully accountable
for their crimes.
If
low-level British government employees are to be punished for leaking
a memo that had no adverse consequences except for the reputation
of Blair and his cabinet, the monsters who started a war that has
killed and maimed tens of thousands must be held accountable.
November
21, 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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