Deranged, Disconnected, and Dangerous
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
On March 17
William Rivers Pitt wrote that Bush is "deranged, disconnected,
and dangerous." In his March 20 Cleveland speech, Bush proved
Pitt right.
Bush gave a
delusional speech that shows he is detached from reality. "We’re
going to help the Iraqis build a strong democracy that will be an
inspiration throughout the Middle East, a democracy that’ll be a
partner in the global war against the terrorists."
Has no one
told Bush that the Iraqis cannot even agree to form a government?
The day before
Bush’s delusional Cleveland speech, Iyad Allawi, the former prime
minister of one of our make-believe Iraqi governments, said that
in Iraq the casualty rate from the sectarian strife is so high that
"if this is not civil war, then God knows what civil war is."
The day of
Bush’s delusional speech, Patrick Cockburn, present on the scene
in Irbil, Iraq, gave a much more truthful account of the situation.
Writing in CounterPunch, he reported: "Iraq is a country convulsed
by fear. It is at its worst in Baghdad. Sectarian killings are commonplace.
. . . The scale of the violence is such that most of it is unreported.
. . . Unseen by the outside world, silent populations are on the
move, frightened people fleeing neighborhoods where their community
is in a minority for safer districts. There is also a growing reliance
on militias because of fears that police patrols or checkpoints
are in reality death squads hunting for victims."
Not a word
of this reality from our delusional president.
The fantasy
Iraq that Bush painted was only his warm-up. He went on to tell
his Cleveland audience that American could not be safe unless Iraq
was a democracy. What a weak, pitiful, vulnerable place Bush’s America
must be. Unless a small, devastated Middle Eastern country is a
democracy, America cannot be safe. Who in the Cleveland audience
could possibly have believed this utter nonsense.
Bush told his
audience that "the security of our country is directly linked
to the liberty of the Iraqi people, and we will settle for nothing
less than victory." What victory is he talking about? Despite
the huge sums of dollars paid by the Bush regime to all the leaders
of all the factions, Iraq cannot form a government.
Without victory,
Iraq will be "a safe haven for terrorists to plot new attacks
against our nation." Alas, there were no terrorists in Iraq
until Bush invaded the country and drew them in. The problem our
troops face in Iraq is not terrorists, but resistance fighters,
"insurgents" in the Bush regimes parlance. Democracies
lack the dictatorial, extra-legal powers to suppress terrorists.
That is why Bush is destroying civil liberties in the US. Under
Saddam Hussein, there were no terrorists and no insurgents. Bush
is modeling his no habeas corpus, torture prone, all intrusive government
on Saddam Hussein.
The security
of Americans has nothing whatsoever to do with Iraq. Iraq cannot
overthrow the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the separation
of powers, and American civil liberties. Iraq cannot illegally spy
on American citizens, declare them to be "suspects" and
detain them forever without warrant or charges. Iraq cannot put
American critics of the Bush regime on "no-fly" lists.
The real dangers
to Americans reside in the neocon Bush administration. This delusional
warmonger administration believes it has the power and the right
to dictate to Muslim countries their political and social institutions.
This extraordinary arrogance and hubris breeds opposition where
there was none. The world is not going to obey Bush and a handful
of stupid neocons.
In his speech
Bush told Cleveland that "the decision to remove Saddam Hussein
was a difficult decision." That is a lie. Bush’s Treasury Secretary,
Paul O’Neill, and a number of others have reported that Bush came
into office intending to remove Hussein. The head of British intelligence
told the British Cabinet that Bush first decided to go to war and
then created the reasons to justify his aggression against Iraq.
"Before
we acted," Bush told his audience, Hussein’s "regime was
defying U.N. resolutions calling for it to disarm. It was violating
cease-fire agreements, was firing on American and British pilots
which were enforcing no-fly zones." Gentle reader, think what
Bush is saying. As Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, a fact
that Bush has acknowledged, how could Iraq possibly have been violating
U.N. resolutions calling on it to disarm?
What cease-fire
agreements are Bush talking about? It was US and UK planes that
continued to fly over Iraqi territory and bomb Iraqis.
Do you know
what Bush means by no-fly zones? He means that US and UK jet fighters
could fly all over Iraq, but if Iraqi planes flew over Iraqi territory,
we would shoot them down.
Where
did the US get the right to tell countries that they dare not try
to control their own air space?
Americans need
to understand that terrorists are responding to America’s behavior,
or misbehavior. The only successful way to stop terrorism is to
alter our behavior. America is not God. It has no right, and it
certainly lacks the power, to impose its will on the world.
The
Bush regime cannot lead the world to democracy by tearing democracy
down at home. Not since Abraham Lincoln have American civil liberties
been so threatened as by the Bush regime. America even has an Attorney
General, a Vice President, and a Secretary of Defense who believe
in torture. How do they differ from officials in the Third Reich
or Stalin’s KGB? Anyone who believes in torture is not an American.
That person is outside our tradition. Yet, it is people who believe
in torture who occupy our highest offices.
When we get
the mote out of our own eye, then we can instruct the Middle East.
March
21, 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
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