The Five Morons Revisited
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
When the neocons
launched the Bush administration’s invasions of Afghanistan and
Iraq and announced plans for invading Syria and Iran, I labeled
Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Rice "the five Morons."
With the passage of time I see that I over-estimated their mental
capabilities.
The "cakewalk"
war has now lasted longer than World War II with Nazi Germany, and
no end is in sight. It has cost the US taxpayers $310 billion in
out-of-pocket costs with many additional hundreds of billions coming
due in veterans’ medical bills and other expenses yet to be paid.
To carry on
the pointless war, which has achieved nothing but death, destruction,
and hatred of America, Bush has had to call up inactive reserves
who long ago completed their active duty service to their country
and have managed to get on with their lives. It is well known that
the older one gets the harder it is to find employment or the energy
to restart a mothballed business. But Bush is too busy saving us
from terrorism to care about people’s lives.
Despite the
lack of US troops and Bush’s inability to prevail in Afghanistan
and Iraq, neocons in Bush’s government are working around the clock
to instigate war with Iran and Syria.
I thought that
I had Rumsfeld pegged as the complete dolt, but I was stunned when
I read Associated
Press reporter Robert Burns' account of what Rumsfeld told 200
Navy aviators in a question and answer session at Fallon Naval Air
Station on August 28. "The thing that keeps me up at night,"
said Rumsfeld, is the success of terrorist groups in "manipulating
the media."
Rumsfeld told
the pilots that terrorists "are actively manipulating the media
in this country" by falsely blaming US troops for civilian
deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan. All that "collateral damage"
we hear about, the tens of thousands of dead and maimed civilians,
is just terrorist propaganda. "The enemy lies constantly .
. . and with impunity. . . . The enemy is so much better at communicating."
Rumsfeld made similar remarks to the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention
in Reno, Nevada, where he was presented the Dwight D. Eisenhower
Distinguished Service Award. Eisenhower must be rolling over in
his grave.
Now I get it.
When Fox News’ Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilley assured us that Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction that would be used against
us if we didn’t strike first, they were being manipulated by Osama
bin Laden, who used America to get rid of the secular Saddam Hussein
and to create a new training and recruitment ground for al Qaeda
and fundamentalist fanatics.
When the New
York Times let Judith Miller serve as a propagandist for war with
Iraq, the Times was being manipulated by Muslim terrorists, not
by neocons.
When CNN, the
networks and columnists like Ann Coulter and Michelle Malkin reassure
us that we will win the war unless we pull out prematurely, they
are being manipulated by terrorists. Finally I understand what the
Weekly Standard, National Review, the Wall Street Journal editorial
page, AEI, and the online site Frontpage are all about.
The terrorists
are so clever at manipulation that Americans cannot perceive that
we have been sucked deep into a war that is creating the Islamic
fundamentalism that we so desperately fear.
Obviously,
I misjudged Rumsfeld’s intelligence. Anyone who can figure out the
Muslim conspiracy is off the charts. What I can’t figure is why
Rumsfeld is willing for America to continue to be sucked in. Don’t
tell me that terrorists are manipulating Rumsfeld, too!
I keep waiting
for the money appeal from AIPAC. I already know what it is going
to say: "Although AIPAC is undisputedly the most powerful lobby
in America and can determine with impunity the fate of every elected
official, we cannot match the terrorists’ ability to manipulate
the media. Polls show that terrorists’ manipulation of the US media
is causing American support for the war to dwindle away. Please
send more millions to counter the terrorists’ control of the American
media. We are winning in the Middle East but losing at home."
One of the
lessons one learns in life is that things are not always what they
seem to be. Before I watched Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer’s
National Press Club broadcast on C-Span (August 28), I regarded
AIPAC as Israel’s friend and promoter. Now I realize that I was
wrong. As the two distinguished professors made perfectly clear,
anyone who cares about the survival of Israel should scorn the bribes,
threats, and blandishments of AIPAC.
AIPAC led the
Israeli government onto a path where diplomacy is no longer a tool
that Israel can use. Backed into a corner with no tool but violence,
Israel faces hundreds of millions of increasingly angry Muslims.
If Bush were
a true friend of Israel, he would never have let Israel again destroy
Lebanon, this time under the pretext of striking at Hezbollah.
AIPAC and Bush
have allowed, or caused, Israel to do itself so much damage in the
eyes of Muslims and the wider world that a peaceful resolution in
the Middle East is no longer in people’s thoughts. With the mighty
US military checked in Iraq by a handful of Sunnis, and the mighty
Israeli army checked in Lebanon by a handful of Hezbollah, violence
is unlikely to settle the matter in a way that the US and Israel
would like.
The
only hope is that Bush and Olmert miraculously turn into grown men,
admit their mistakes, apologize, send reparations and commit to
winning acceptance of Israel and America based on Israel’s and America’s
good behavior. It would be nice to see in operation some of the
superior morality that the two claim.
Considering
the extraordinary hubris and self-righteousness of neocons, nothing
like this can possibly happen. Israel, the US, and the Muslim world
will continue to bleed.
August
30, 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 was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is the
co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Paul
Craig Roberts Archives
|