Why Did Bush Destroy Iraq?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
March 20 is
the third anniversary of the Bush regime's invasion of Iraq. US
military casualties to date are approximately 20,000 killed, wounded,
maimed, and disabled. Iraqi civilian casualties number in the tens
of thousands. Iraq's infrastructure is in ruins. Tens of thousands
of homes have been destroyed. Fallujah, a city of 300,000 people
had 36,000 of its 50,000 homes destroyed by the US military. Half
of the city's former population are displaced persons living in
tents.
Thousands of
Iraqis have been detained in prisons and hundreds have been brutally
tortured. America's reputation in the Muslim world is ruined.
The Bush regime
expected a short "cakewalk" war to be followed by the
imposition of a puppet government and permanent US military bases.
Instead, US military forces are confronted with an insurgency that
has denied control over Iraq to the US military. Chaos rules, and
civil war may be coming on top of the insurgency.
On March 9,
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the man who has been totally
wrong about Iraq, told Congress that if the unprecedented violence
in Iraq breaks out in civil war, the US will rely primarily on Iraq's
security forces to put down civil war.
What Iraqi
security forces? Iraq does not have a security force. The Shia have
a security force. The Sunnis have a security force, and the Kurds
have a security force. The sectarian militias control the streets,
towns and cities. If civil war breaks out, the "Iraqi security
force" will dissolve into the sectarian militias, leaving the
US military in the middle of the mêlée.
Is this what
"support the troops" means?
President Bush's
determination to remain in Iraq despite the obvious failure of the
attempted occupation puts Bush at odds with the American public
and with our troops. Polls show that a majority of Americans believe
that the invasion of Iraq was a mistake and that our troops should
be withdrawn. An even larger majority of the troops themselves believe
they should be withdrawn.
Yet Bush, who
is incapable of admitting a mistake, persists in a strategic blunder
that is turning into catastrophe.
Bush's support
has fallen to 34 percent.
The war's out-of-pocket
cost to date is approximately $300 billion every dollar borrowed
from foreigners. Economic and budgetary experts have calculated
that the ultimate cost of Bush's Iraq war in terms of long-term
care for veterans, interest on borrowed money, and resources diverted
from productive uses will be between $1 trillion and $2 trillion.
What is being
achieved for this enormous sacrifice?
No one knows.
Every reason
we have been given for the Iraqi invasion has proved to be false.
Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction. Reports from
UN weapons inspectors, top level US intelligence officials, Secretary
of the Treasury Paul O'Neill, and leaked top-secret documents from
the British Cabinet all make it unequivocally clear that the Bush
régime first decided to invade Iraq and then looked around for a
reason.
Saddam Hussein
had no terrorist connection to Osama bin Laden and no role in the
9/11 attack. Hussein was a secular ruler totally at odds with bin
Laden's Islamist aims. Every informed person in the world knew this.
When the original
justifications for the US invasion collapsed, Bush said that the
reason for the invasion was to rid Iraq of a dictator and to put
a democracy in its place. Despite all the hoopla about democracy
and elections, no Iraqi government has been able to form, and the
country is on the brink of civil war. Some Middle East experts believe
that violence will spread throughout the region.
The brutal
truth is that America's responsibility is extreme. We have destroyed
a country and created political chaos for no reason whatsoever.
Seldom in history
has a government miscalculated as badly as Bush has in Iraq. More
disturbingly, Bush shows no ability to recover from his mistake.
All we get from our leader is pig-headed promises of victory that
none of our military commanders believe.
Our entire
government is lost in confusion. One day Vice President Cheney and
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld tell us that we are having great success
in training an Iraqi military and will be able to begin withdrawing
our troops in a year. The next day they tell us that we will be
fighting the war for decades.
Bush's
invasion of Iraq was a mistake. Bush's attempt to cover up his mistake
with patriotism will ultimately discredit patriotism.
America
has to be big enough to admit a mistake and to bring it to an end.
March
13, 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 LewRockwell.com
Paul
Craig Roberts Archives
|