Americans Have Lost Their Country
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
The Bush-Cheney
regime is America’s first neoconservative regime. In a few short
years, the regime has destroyed the Bill of Rights, the separation
of powers, the Geneva Conventions, and the remains of America’s
moral reputation along with the infrastructures of two Muslim countries
and countless thousands of Islamic civilians. Plans have been prepared,
and forces moved into place, for an attack on a third Islamic country,
Iran, and perhaps Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon as well.
This extraordinary
aggressiveness toward the US Constitution, international law, and
the Islamic world is the work, not of a vast movement, but of a
handful of ideologues – principally Vice President Dick Cheney,
Donald Rumsfeld, Lewis Libby, Douglas Feith, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard
Perle, Elliott Abrams, Zalmay Khalilzad, John Bolton, Philip Zelikow,
and Attorney General Gonzales. These are the main operatives who
have controlled policy. They have been supported by their media
shills at the Weekly Standard, National Review, Fox
News, New York Times, CNN, and the Wall Street Journal
editorial page and by "scholars" in assorted think tanks
such as the American Enterprise Institute.
The entirety
of their success in miring the United States in what could become
permanent conflict in the Middle East is based on the power of propaganda
and the big lie.
Initially,
the 9/11 attack was blamed on Osama bin Laden, but after an American
puppet was installed in Afghanistan, the blame for 9/11 was shifted
to Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, who was said to have weapons of mass destruction
that would be used against America. The regime sent Secretary of
State Colin Powell to tell the lie to the UN that the Bush-Cheney
regime had conclusive proof of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.
Having conned
the UN, Congress, and the American people, the regime invaded Iraq
under totally false pretenses and with totally false expectations.
The regime’s occupation of Iraq has failed in a military sense,
but the neoconservatives are turning their failure into a strategic
advantage. At the beginning of this year President Bush began blaming
Iran for America’s embarrassing defeat by a few thousand lightly
armed insurgents in Iraq.
Bush accuses
Iran of arming the Iraqi insurgents, a charge that experts regard
as improbable. The Iraqi insurgents are Sunni. They inflict casualties
on our troops, but spend most of their energy killing Iraqi Shi’ites,
who are closely allied with Iran, which is Shi’ite. Bush’s accusation
requires us to believe that Iran is arming the enemies of its allies.
On the basis
of this absurd accusation – a pure invention – Bush has ordered
a heavy concentration of aircraft carrier attack forces off Iran’s
coast, and he has moved US attack planes to Turkish bases and other
US bases in countries contingent to Iran. In testimony before Congress
on February 1 of this year, former National Security Adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski said that he expected the regime to orchestrate a "head-on
conflict with Iran and with much of the world of Islam at large."
He said a plausible scenario was "a terrorist act blamed on
Iran, culminating in a ‘defensive’ US military action against Iran."
He said that the neoconservative propaganda machine was already
articulating a "mythical historical narrative" for widening
their war against Islam.
Why is the
US spending one trillion dollars on wars, the reasons for which
are patently false. What is going on?
There are several
parts to the answer. Like their forebears among the Jacobins of
the French Revolution, the Bolsheviks of the communist revolution,
and the National Socialists of Hitler’s revolution, neoconservatives
believe that they have a monopoly on virtue and the right to impose
hegemony on the rest of the world. Neoconservative conquests began
in the Middle East because oil and Israel, with which neocons are
closely allied, are both in the Middle East. The American oil giant,
UNOCAL, had plans for an oil and gas pipeline through Afghanistan,
but the Taliban were not sufficiently cooperative. The US invasion
of Afghanistan was used to install Hamid Karzai, who had been on
UNOCAL’s payroll, as puppet prime minister. US neoconservative Zalmay
Khalilzad, who also had been on UNOCAL’s payroll, was installed
as US ambassador to Afghanistan.
Two years later
Khalilzad was appointed US ambassador to Iraq. American oil companies
have been given control over the exploitation of Iraq’s oil resources.
The Israeli
relationship is perhaps even more important. In 1996 Richard Perle
and the usual collection of neocons proposed that all of Israel’s
enemies in the Middle East be overthrown. "Israel’s enemies"
consist of the Muslim countries not in the hands of US puppets or
allies. For decades Israel has been stealing Palestine from the
Palestinians such that today there is not enough of Palestine left
to comprise an independent country. The US and Israeli governments
blame Iran, Iraq, and Syria for aiding and abetting Palestinian
resistance.
The Bush-Cheney
regime came to power with the plans drawn to attack the remaining
independent countries in the Middle East and with neoconservatives
in office to implement the plans. However, an excuse was required.
Neoconservatives had called for "a new Pearl Harbor,"
and 9/11 provided the propaganda event needed in order to stampede
the public and Congress into war. Neoconservative Philip Zelikow
was put in charge of the 9/11 Commission Report to make certain
no uncomfortable facts emerged.
The neoconservatives
have had enormous help from the corporate media, from Christian
evangelicals, particularly from the "Rapture Evangelicals,"
from flag-waving superpatriots, and from the military- industrial
complex whose profits have prospered. But the fact remains that
the dozen men named in the second paragraph above were able to overthrow
the US Constitution and launch military aggression under the guise
of a preventive/preemptive "war against terrorism."
When
the American people caught on that the "war on terror"
was a cloak for wars of aggression, they put Democrats in control
of Congress in order to apply a brake to the regime’s warmongering.
However, the Democrats have proven to be impotent to stop the neoconservative
drive to wider war and, perhaps, world conflagration. We are witnessing
the triumph of a dozen evil men over American democracy and a free
press.
March
1, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and testified before
Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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