To Escape From Blunder First Acknowledge Reality
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
presidential debates are going nowhere. Why? Because both President
George Bush and Senator John Kerry are encapsulated in a big lie.
The
lie is too big to be acknowledged. Both candidates repeat the mantra
that Saddam Hussein was dangerous to America and had to be removed.
Both reaffirm that Saddam’s removal remains a good thing despite
a plethora of official reports concluding that false reasons were
given for his removal.
Kerry
gets nowhere because he says he would do the same thing Bush did,
only differently.
Bush
reminds Kerry over and over that "you saw the same intelligence
that I did" and voted for the war. Kerry’s criticism after
the event, Bush says, just shows what a flip-flopper Kerry is.
For
many Americans Bush’s answer is easier to follow than Kerry’s nuanced
argument. For the second time in his life Kerry is in the position
of turning against a war after he had joined up.
Kerry
has missed opportunity after opportunity to be candid with the American
people. By speaking frankly, Kerry can deliver a knockout blow that
would tear the debate wide open.
When
Bush chides Kerry that "you saw the same intelligence that
I did," why doesn’t Kerry reply:
"Yes,
Mr. President, the same people who misled you, misled me, the
House and the Senate and sent Colin Powell to New York to mislead
the UN. So, Mr. President, why haven’t you fired them? Is there
no accountability in your administration? How can you lead when
you don’t hold people responsible for grievous errors that have
led to the death and maiming of thousands of our troops and tens
of thousands of Iraqis, shattered our alliances, and recruited
thousands to the banners of terrorism?"
Bush
would have no answer.
Saddam
Hussein was no danger to the US. However, he was a potential check,
with Syria, on Israel’s right-wing Likud Party’s desire to expel
the Palestinians to Jordan and to seize Lebanon. The expulsion and
the Lebanon grab may yet come to fruition, because it is supported
by the neoconservatives who control the Bush administration.
Installing
a puppet regime in Iraq and constructing a dozen or more permanent
US military bases in Iraq, as the US is doing, opens a field of
conquest to Israel.
The
neoconservative goal of conquest is no secret. Neoconservative godfather
Norman Podhoretz, and others of his persuasion, have called in print
on more than one occasion for the US to launch World War IV against
the Muslim Middle East.
The
cause of Muslim terrorism is not opposition to US democracy. The
cause is opposition to US policy in the Middle East, especially
US support for Israel’s ghettoization of Palestine. Lacking military
forces with which to oppose American might, Muslims resort to terror
attacks. How can Americans be so naïve as to think that Muslims
will just sit there and take it?
The
US cannot put down terrorism with force alone unless it intends
genocide for Muslims. Saddam Hussein was not a popular ruler, but
occupying Iraq has tied down 80% of our troops and is not succeeding.
Expanding
this war, as neocons intend, requires resources that the US does
not have and would likely result in countries uniting against us.
It
is a self-defeating policy that Bush is pursuing in the Middle East.
Bush is not building democracy, but he is creating legions of insurgents
and terrorists.
The
US can defeat insurgents in battles, but cannot successfully occupy
the conquered territory. In his essays on Fourth Generation Warfare,
William Lind has clarified the advantages insurgents have over conventional
forces.
At
this point, "staying the course" in Iraq is not an option.
America’s only choices are to escalate or to withdraw.
According
to the October 9 International Herald Tribune, the US has
plans to escalate by attacking twenty to thirty Iraqi towns and
cities in hopes of regaining control:
"Pentagon
planners and military commanders have identified roughly 20 to
30 towns and cities in Iraq that must be brought under control
before elections can be held there in January."
Think
about that. Twenty to thirty more Najafs and Fallujahs?! The US
doesn’t even control Baghdad 400 yards beyond the heavily fortified
"Green Zone" where the "Iraqi government" and
its US overlords are forced to take refuge.
Imagine
the numbers of women and children who will be blown to bits by US
"precision attacks" on 20 to 30 Iraqi towns and cities.
It
is a war crime to attack civilians. The already low ratio of killed
insurgents to killed Iraqi civilians means that it is the insurgents,
not the civilians, who are the "collateral damage."
If
Bush goes through with this madness, the US military will become
known as the reincarnation of the SS.
No
American politician can talk sense when ensnared by the big lie
that the war with Iraq was necessary. It was not necessary. It was
a strategic blunder. It has started something that may already be
out of anyone’s control.
In
military matters, pretense and delusion lead to disaster. A deluded
superpower is most dangerous to itself.
Please
candidate Kerry, in the final debate do come to the point, speak
the truth, and show the leadership required if America is to recover
from the strategic blunder of invading Iraq.
October
11, 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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