Liberty Is At Stake
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
This
presidential election is the most disturbing of the post World War
II era. The two candidates are vying on the basis of who best can
capture Osama bin Laden and kill the most terrorists.
Unless
they resort to nuclear genocide against the Muslim world, neither
candidate has any hope of killing as many terrorists as their policy
would create.
On
Tuesday November 2 the US electorate will decide whether the US
policy of breeding terrorists and isolating the US from the rest
of the world will continue or, possibly, end.
If
Bush is reelected, the small handful of neoconservatives, firmly
allied with Israel’s right-wing Likud Party, would not be held accountable
for their extraordinary incompetence or deception, which has placed
the US in a gratuitous war that cannot be won.
Bush
would see vindication and would follow the neoconservative impulse
to escalate what neoconservatives regard as World War IV.
Escalation
means the return of the draft and the internal turmoil and divisiveness
that the draft would bring.
For
the Iraqi Shi’ites and for Muslims worldwide, escalation would indicate
that the US has no intention of turning Iraq over to the majority
Shi’ites in democratic elections. The 15 million Iraqi Shi’ites
would be likely to join the insurgency and destroy our forces in
Iraq before the US can draft, train and equip the huge US force
necessary to successfully occupy the country.
Muslim
rage can easily outpace US war preparations. Middle Eastern experts,
as opposed to Fox "news" war propagandists, understand
that US puppet regimes in Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan
could easily topple and that their replacement governments would
not be democracies allied with the US.
These
countries, together with Iran, would represent a large area and
several hundred millions of hostiles. The US would be in the difficult
position of trying to hold on in Iraq and to preserve Israel against
a Middle East insurgency that would not confront the US in World
War II style battle formations.
The
neoconservatives and their puppet in the Oval Office believe that
Muslims can be beaten into submission by the exercise of US confidence,
will, and military force.
This
has not proved to be the case in Iraq. Instead of learning the lesson,
the US is repeating its mistakes with a second full scale assault
on Fallujah. Most of the insurgents will have left and be actively
killing US troops in other locations, while US troops destroy a
city and what remains of its civilian population.
Hatred
of, and disdain for, the US will grow exponentially.
War
escalation on top of the current annual trillion dollar twin deficits
could be the straw that breaks the back of the dollar as the world’s
reserve currency. Flight from a vastly overextended dollar would
result in sharply rising US interest rates and the most serious
economic turmoil since the Great Depression. Oil flows could cease.
The
Great Delusion that is the Bush administration would resort to imprisoning
"enemies," which would include all critics. The US would
be locked into a Hitlerian fight to the end regardless of the costs.
Deluded
patriots demanding blood can destroy any country. If Kerry is elected,
the chances of escalation are lower. Kerry’s supporters do not believe
that the US can overthrow Islam. Kerry’s supporters are not allied
with Christian fundamentalists, who look forward to war in the Middle
East as the "end times" when they will be wafted up to
heaven. Kerry’s supporters want an end to the war, not its expansion.
For Kerry to restore the draft and expand the war, he would have
to desert his party and become Republican.
The
dynamics propelling Kerry to continue the war are far less certain
than those propelling Bush.
Considering
the extraordinary ignorance and blind emotion at large in the US
electorate, the election could easily turn on the libertarian vote.
Principled men and women who are too pure to vote for either unworthy
candidate can, by failing to hold Bush accountable, bring the experiment
with liberty to an end.
The
stakes are far too high for ideological self-indulgence.
November
2, 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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