A Day of Infamy
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
On
November 2 Americans blew their only chance to redeem themselves
in the eyes of the world.
The
entire world is stunned by the Bush administration’s abandonment
of a half century of US diplomacy in favor of misguided, unilateralist,
"preemptive" naked aggression on totally false pretenses
against Iraq. America’s allies are amazed at the ignorance manifested
by the Bush administration. They are resentful of Bush’s "in-your-eye"
attitude toward friends who warned Bush against leading America
into a quagmire and giving Osama bin Laden the war he wanted.
The
world was waiting hopefully for the sensible American people to
rectify the ill-advised actions of a rogue neoconservative administration.
Instead, Americans placed the stamp of approval on the least justifiable
military action since Hitler invaded Poland.
In
the eyes of the world, Bush’s reelection is proof that Ariel Sharon’s
neoconsevative allies in the Bush administration speak for America
after all.
The
world’s sympathy for America that followed the September 11 attacks
has been squandered. If the US suffers terrorist attacks in the
future, the world will say that America invited the attacks and
got what it asked for.
Europeans
and Asians will never be able to comprehend that Bush was reelected
because Americans were voting against homosexual marriage and abortion.
The
world is simply unable to believe that Americans, so enamored of
family values, would vote to send their sons, fathers, husbands,
and brothers to unprovoked war unless Americans valued empire and
control over oil as more important than their family members.
The
crude propagandistic Republican campaign against John Kerry is shocking
to Europeans. The childishness of American conservatives scares
them.
America’s
French friends, seeking to save America from making the same mistakes
that France made in the past, advised Bush not to rush into an Iraqi
invasion. American conservatives instantly and blindly perceived
French words of wisdom as proof that France was in the "against
us" camp. Conservatives announced a boycott of French fries.
Everything French was denigrated for no other reason than the French
tried to warn us.
Conservatives
quickly produced a "revisionist" book, "Our Oldest
Enemy: A History of America’s Disastrous Relationship with France,"
"proving" that France has always been America’s worst
enemy.
America’s
European allies cannot differentiate the immaturity of American
conservatives from the ignorance of the National Socialists.
As
hearts harden and minds close against America, Americans will have
to go it alone.
The
US invasion of Iraq has proved to be a disaster--exactly as the
French and everyone with a mere modicum of sense said in advance.
Eight of ten US divisions are tied down by a few thousand insurgents.
US
troops do not control towns, cities, roads, or even the fortified
Green Zone.
The
American impulse is to smash cities, thus killing women and children
and destroying the homes and livelihoods of noncombatants, while
the insurgents regroup elsewhere. The top American generals, who
were ridiculed by the Secretary of Defense and his deluded neoconservative
deputy for forthrightly stating that occupation of Iraq would require
a larger army than was available, stand vindicated.
The
price of the Bush administration’s delusion is 10,000 dead and maimed
American troops--more than three times the casualties caused by
the September 11 terrorist attacks. Bush’s declared policy of "continuing
to the end" will swell this number and bring back the draft.
The
world is amazed that Americans do not care that they have been deceived,
lied to, and incompetently led and that Americans have chosen to
continue along this path.
Bush’s
reelection has ended forever respect for America. New and unflattering
sobriquets for Americans are emerging. The American century is over.
November
6, 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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