Is Iraq a Captive Nation?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
US Dept of Defense has requested an additional $50 billion to continue
its torture, killing and abuse of Iraqis in the name of "freedom
and democracy." The US government has a long tradition of wasting
borrowed money, but do we really want to squander billions of dollars
building our war criminal dossier?
Iraqis
have made it clear that they are fed up with American arrogance.
They did not choose us to remake their society, draft their constitution,
pick their leaders, and make sure that their religion plays no part
in their political life. They certainly did not ask us to occupy
their country for years to come in order to make certain that Iraqis
adhere to America’s plan for Iraq.
There
have been ample opportunities for reality to dent the delusional
minds of President Bush and Prime Minister Blair. But, alas, delusion
remains the operational principle of Anglo-American Middle Eastern
policy.
On
May 17, the head of the Iraqi "Governing Council," a front
group for the US which governs nothing, was assassinated. The UK
Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, said: "What this shows is the terrorists
and insurgents in Iraq are trying to disrupt the peaceful transfer
of power from the occupiers to the Iraqi people and that these are
enemies of Iraqi people themselves."
Foreign
secretaries have been known to issue idiotic statements, but Straw’s
remark is a "10" on the scale of the all-time stupidest.
What the assassination shows is that Iraqis are not going to permit
the US and the UK to impose a puppet government. Whoever we install
will be assassinated.
A
deluge of delusional statements from the US and British governments
further cloud the murky understanding of the media. On May 17 the
BBC reported, in one breath, that Bush and Blair plan to speed up
the turnover of sovereignty to Iraq, but UK and US troops will remain
in Iraq for years!
Does
the US really want to be the Soviet Union of the Middle East? How
does "freedom and democracy" reconcile with "occupied
sovereignty"? When the Soviet Union occupied Eastern Europe,
the West called the countries "Soviet satellites." Some
of the Soviet occupied lands even had memberships in international
organizations, but the minute their governments acted independently,
Soviet tanks crushed the sovereign action, as in Hungary 1956 and
Czechoslovakia 1968.
When
will Americans realize that the US invasion of Iraq was a political
reelection strategy that went wrong? September 11 got President
Bush off the defensive and gave him "the war on terror"
with which to bind the country to him.
Do
something big and decisive, Karl Rove advised, and patriotism will
protect you from the Democrats. This advice fit perfectly with neoconservative
plans to make the Middle East safe for Israel. No strategy could
have done more to enrage Muslims and inspire terrorism.
Tens
of thousands of people have been killed and maimed and $200 billion
squandered in a gratuitous invasion of Iraq. There were no weapons
of mass destruction, no reconstituted nuclear weapons, no terrorists
links between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden.
All
of this was known by the "morally superior" US government
prior to the invasion. The deception of the American public and
the United Nations was unprecedented. Even a government as incompetent
as the US would not assemble 150,000 troops in a tiny area adjacent
to Iraq if the country about to be invaded really had weapons of
mass destruction. One or two weapons of mass destruction and there
goes our entire army with no troops available to replace them.
Whether
from incompetence or intention, Iraq was invaded under false pretenses.
The invasion was a crime and a strategic blunder. Unless we hold
accountable those who are responsible, the US will be no different
from the tyrant countries of the 20th century.
May
19, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy 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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