The Adulation of Ignorance
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
After three
years of war in Iraq, reporting and debate continue to ignore the
key fact: The US invasion was a mistake.
President Bush
himself acknowledges this. He says the war was based on intelligence
and the intelligence was wrong. So, then, what is right about the
war? If we believe Bush, he would not have taken America and Iraq
to war if he had been given correct, instead of incorrect, intelligence
about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and connections to al Qaeda.
In view of
this, why is Bush intent on continuing the war? Why is it important
to win a war that should not have happened and only happened because
US intelligence was mistaken?
The war is
extremely expensive. It has cost thousands of dead and maimed Americans
and tens of thousands of dead and maimed Iraqis. The war has already
cost $200$300 billion and is being financed by foreign borrowing.
Distinguished economists put the long-term cost of the war to the
US in the $1$2 trillion range.
This is an
enormous sum to spend on a war that President Bush says is based
on mistaken intelligence. Why, then, does Bush continue to fight
the war?
The mistaken
war has damaged America’s reputation, harmed our alliances, enraged
Muslims against us, and radicalized Middle Eastern politics. The
CIA reports that the war has provided al Qaeda with recruitment
and a training ground. The US military is trying to ascertain whether
its attempted occupation of Iraq is creating insurgents faster than
they are being killed.
In view of
the available facts, how can Bush in his state of the union address
tell Congress and the world that the US is winning in Iraq? Why
did Congress stand and applaud? What does it mean to win a war that
should not have been started?
Having admitted
that his invasion of Iraq is based on incorrect intelligence, why
did Bush claim in his state of the union address that his war in
Iraq is central to the war against terrorism? He must mean that
his mistake created terrorism where it did not exist, and, having
created the terrorism, he must now fight it even if doing so creates
yet more terrorists.
A rational
response to Bush’s mistake would be to remove the cause of the insurgency
by apologizing for the mistake and withdrawing US military forces.
Neoconservatives say that the US cannot withdraw because Iraq would
fall into civil war. This is an admission that by removing Saddam
Hussein, Bush created the conditions for civil war in Iraq. How,
then, was removing Saddam Hussein a good thing?
The US invasion
and occupation of Iraq have destroyed Iraq’s infrastructure, entire
villages and towns, families, careers, and public safety. What America
has done to Iraq is a monstrous crime. And Bush says it is because
of a mistake in intelligence.
A mistake in
intelligence in more ways than one.
It is extraordinary
that after admitting to erroneously starting a war, Bush wants to
do it all over again this time against a more formidable foe, Iran.
America’s adulation
of ignorance gives Bush a free hand to repeat his mistake on a larger
scale. Karl Rove used 9/11 to recast Bush as the archetypal hero
vowing retribution on those who struck at innocent America. Enamored
of this role, Americans have ceased to think.
There is no
sign of intelligence or accurate reporting on Iran in the newspapers,
on television or even over PBS radio. It is never made clear that
Iran’s "defiance" is one orchestrated by the US government,
or that the "defiance" is limited to Iran’s development
of nuclear energy, not a weapons program. When Americans hear "nuclear
defiance" over and over, they conclude that Iran is making
nuclear weapons. Instead of informing the people, the media drive
them toward acceptance of another war.
Bush has been
picking a fight with Iran for a long time. He declared Iran to be
part of an "axis of evil." He constantly demonizes Iran
and threatens Iran with sanctions and military attack. Israel announced
that if Bush doesn’t attack Iran, Israel will. Bush disrupted Iran’s
cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, whose inspectors
have found no weapons program in Iran. The media misreport it all
as Iran’s bad behavior, bad behavior that reflects bad intentions.
The explosive
situation in the Middle East needs to be defused, not aggravated.
The United States gains nothing by confirming its image as the hegemonic
Great Satan.
Nothing is
gained by the deaths and maiming of thousands and tens of thousands
more people whose lives are thrown away to the purposes of blind
propaganda.
Nothing
is gained by the US wasting more hundreds of billions dollars that
are desperately needed for important and legitimate purposes.
Nothing is
gained by the US pressuring with threats and bribes other countries
to line up with what they know to be a wrong and dangerous policy.
Nothing
is gained by endangering oil flows and a western transportation
system dependent on the internal combustion engine.
Bush’s approach
is insane. It serves no legitimate purpose. There is no reason for
it.
Why is it happening?
February
10, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of 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
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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