911 Incongruities
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Richard
Clarke scored well with the 911 families when he apologized for
the government’s intelligence failure. But why stop there?
As
this column is written, 590 US service men and women have died in
the invasion and occupation if Iraq. Their families are due an apology.
Another 3,000 or so have been wounded, some permanently. These survivors
and their families are also due an apology.
And
what about the thousands of dead, maimed, and orphaned Iraqis? Aren’t
they and their families owed an apology?
There
are no excuses for the invasion of Iraq. Intelligence failures notwithstanding,
terrorist attacks are surprises by definition, but we knew beforehand
that Iraq had nothing to do with 911.
The
salient fact that emerges from Clarke’s book, Against
All Enemies, is that the neoconservatives who control the
Bush administration wanted to invade Iraq. The terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon gave the neoconservatives
the opportunity they wanted. All they had to do was to spin the
terrorism issue and point the finger at Saddam Hussein.
Prior
to the US invasion on March 19, 2003, Iraq was not a major problem
for the US. One year later, it is. The occupation strains our military
and budget. The US seeks to install a puppet regime, but the majority
Shi’ites are having none of it. Will civil war and the breakup of
the country come next?
A
failure of US domestic security has turned into a military and foreign
affairs blunder. The recent nine-country poll conducted by the Pew
Research Center indicates that the US is isolated internationally,
with large majorities in most countries believing that the US and
the UK lied about the reasons for invading Iraq.
Stung
by criticisms that the invasion of Iraq has undermined the war on
terrorism, the Bush administration has pressured its Pakistani puppet
to risk the stability of his own rule by sending his army into tribal
areas in search of bin Laden.
The
Pew poll found that 65% of Pakistanis have a positive view of Osama
bin Laden, but only 7% have a positive view of President Bush. A
symbolic capture of bin Laden that resulted in the overthrow of
the US puppet, Musharraf, would be a bad bargain.
The
US invasion of Iraq has made secular Middle Eastern governments
less secure. Large majorities of Muslims are opposed to the US invasion,
opening a wider gulf between them and their governments, which have
cooperated with the US. Impotence breeds anger, and Muslims’ feelings
of impotence from being turned into de facto American puppets by
their complicit governments could be explosive.
The
invasion of Iraq is a far greater intelligence failure than 911.
The mistake is too great to be acknowledged. Denial will rule while
unintended consequences play out to America’s disadvantage.
The
question for the 911 Commission is not whether the Clinton administration
missed chances to assassinate bin Laden or whether the Bush administration’s
loose immigration controls and interagency communication failures
ensured the terrorists’ success. The only question is: why does
the US persist with a foreign policy that breeds terrorism?
The
challenge for the US is to break free from the folly and arrogance
that power begets.
March
29, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, Senior
Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former
associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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