History
Repeating, But Faster
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
US
foreign policy seems to run in ten-year cycles, with the same bloody
events repeating themselves once a generation in order to assure
that at least a sizeable segment of the population remembers nothing
from the last fiasco. Not even the country names change often enough.
Faced
with the prospect of another US troop commitment in Haiti
to keep the place from (wait for it) "descending into chaos"
I looked for a piece I did on this topic from 1994. In that intervention,
the US threw out a Hitler named Raoul Cedr to install the democratic
St. Aristide. Now, it turns out that Aristide went bad and he too
must go, in the name of human rights, etc.
I
thought it might be useful to remember all the killing and destruction
the US imposed on that country 10 years ago, but alas, this was
preweb, and so the article has not turned up. However, I did find
this little piece from 1990, entitled "The Emperor Bush Wages War."
That's right, that last Bush, and the war was on…Iraq. The last
attack on Iraq was followed by an attack on Haiti too.
So
in lieu of the ironic reprinting of my attack on Haitian intervention,
I hereby make the same point with an ironic reprinting of my attack
on Bush Sr.'s war on Iraq. As to publication, so far as I can tell,
nobody wanted to run it. This was, after all, before the web:
The
Emperor Bush Wages War (1990)
War
is to Washington what blood is to vampires. It engorges the government
and drains the people. It turns the mountebanks of the legislature
and the executive into statesmen. It suppresses dissent and legitimates
censorship. It distracts from bank bailouts and other federal crimes.
And it enables the state to gather into its ravening craw even more
of the people's wealth.
No
wonder politicians love it, for war is the apotheosis of the state.
The president's approval rating goes to 86% and every two-bit congressman
can say with Vishnu, "I am become death, the destroyer of worlds."
One
of my most vivid memories of 1989 was the stricken look on the faces
of George Bush and James Baker when the Berlin Wall came down. Who
would now serve as Official Enemy?
The
collapse of Communism was a frightening event for the Feds: the
budget might actually be cut. Not the phony cuts of the last budget
summit, but real cuts. The American people might be allowed to keep
more of their own money, and that would mean that the munitions
manufacturers so beloved of retiring generals and bribe-happy congressmen
would lose contracts. Official Washington pulled the covers over
its head and shivered.
But
no one need have worried. An unnamed Pentagon official said last
August, "You've got to give the Devil his due. Saddam Hussein
saved our budget." And at an October conference of military contractors
in Milwaukee, when a speaker said, "Thank you, Saddam Hussein,"
he got cheers, whistles, and a standing ovation.
Was
Saddam just a happy coincidence, or did Bush want a war with his
old ally from the Reagan administration? In the 1980s, after all,
the U.S. encouraged Saddam to attack Iran, and supported his aggression
with billions in subsidized food, weapons, and intelligence.
In
those days, the Ayatollah Khomeini was Hitler, so the U.S. pressured
the U.N. not to condemn Saddam's poison gas attacks on Iranian troops.
The U.S. even protected Iraqi oil tankers. When the U.S.S. Vincennes'
billion-dollar Aegis missile-aiming radar system shot down an Iranian
jetliner, killing 290 civilians, it was on pro-Saddam duty.
On
July 25th, after the massing of Iraqi troops on the Kuwaiti border,
U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie told Saddam regarding a possible invasion
of Kuwait, that "the United States has no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts,
like your border disagreement with Kuwait." "James Baker has directed
our official spokesmen to emphasize this."
On
July 26th, the Washington Post reported that "some officials"
in the White House, Pentagon, and State Department "asserted yesterday
that an Iraq attack on Kuwait would not draw a U.S. military response."
On
July 30th, assistant secretary of state John Kelly confirmed to
the House Middle East subcommittee, in response to a question by
Lee Hamilton (D-IN), that nothing obligated us to engage U.S. forces
there."
When
Saddam, acting on the winks and nods, invaded Kuwait on August 2,
he went from ally to Adolf overnight. Bush poured troops into Saudi
Arabia, but to do so, he had to twist the Saudis' arm with angry
visits from Dick Cheney and others.
Unnamed
Defense Department officials were quoted as complaining about Saudi
"wimps who don't want to defend themselves." The pressure worked,
of course, and now as Baker crows the U.S. will protect its kings
and kinglets with a "new regional security arrangement," courtesy
of the U.S. taxpayer.
Bush's
lying lips told us the troops were there for purely defensive purposes;
meanwhile he and Baker worked busily, checkbooks in hand, getting
U.N. members to authorize an attack. Then, right after the November
election, Bush doubled the number of troops, forbade rotations,
went on the offensive, and announced that he would attack if Saddam
weren't out unconditionally by January 15th.
For
home consumption, Bush announced that Baker would go to Baghdad,
and travel the "last mile for peace," on "any date between now and
the U.N. deadline of January 15th" that Iraq picked. But the offer
was fraudulent. When Saddam said OK, and picked January 12th, Bush
denounced him and cancelled the deal.
Advised
by the psychological warfare branch of his old agency, the CIA,
Bush set out to humiliate Saddam, to make sure that "Arab psychology"
would prevent a pullout. That's why Bush talked about "kicking his
ass," deliberately mispronounced his name (it's SaDOM, not SADem),
and always used contemptuous language.
Meanwhile,
all peace overtures, including the harmless idea of a Middle Eastern
peace conference (which an allegedly sacred U.N. resolution has
long called for), were dismissed as "rewarding aggression."
Yes,
Saddam is a thug, like most of the Third World pals of the U.S.
government. Yet there are real border questions between Iraq and
Kuwait, as a result of British duplicity. And even the State Department
admits that the Kuwaiti kleptocracy the Bush-blessed "legitimate
government" was drilling diagonally underneath the border
and stealing Iraq's oil.
Kuwait
had also, apparently at U.S. behest, broken the OPEC production
agreement by massively increasing its oil production over the previous
six months. This lowered the price at a time when Iraq needed more
money for reconstruction after the Iranian war.
There
would have been, in a less-bellicose administration, plenty of room
for negotiation. In fact, Iraq privately expressed a willingness
to leave Kuwait the weekend of August 45 having, in
its view, "taught Kuwait a lesson." It asked, however, that it not
be condemned by the Arab League and the U.S. Immediately, Bush gave
a denunciatory speech, and Baker pressured the Arab League to condemn
Iraq. We were off to the races.
Bush
denounced Saddam again and again as "The Dictator" and "The Aggressor."
This is the same Bush who just gave himself, by executive fiat,
dictatorial war powers over the American economy. His excuse? The
despotic Defense Production Act had expired. This is also the same
Bush who invaded Panama, causing a billion dollars in damage, and
installing a regime kept in power by U.S. troops.
Speaking
of aggressors, there are plenty among the so-called allies, including
Turkey, which seized part of Cyprus and holds it to this day through
massive U.S. foreign aid; Syria, which invaded Lebanon with U.S.
approval and is even now massacring Christians; and Red China, which
got $1.1 billion for its pro-war Security Council vote, despite
its invasion and annexation of Tibet, and planned destruction of
a free Hong Kong (also through British duplicity).
There
are also plenty of dictators in the coalition: Assad of Syria, who
makes Saddam look like Little Mary Sunshine; Mubarak of Egypt, who
got a $7.1 billion tip for his support; the hereditary dictators
of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait; and the dictator of the Soviet Union.
When
Bush talks in messianic language of the "whole world being united,
for the first time in history," behind "our" policy (world rule
through the U.N.), he includes such murderous uniters as the U.S.S.R.
Yuri
Maltsev and other Russian dissidents believe that Bush made a deal
with Gorbachev at the Helsinki summit. He would support the U.S.
war with Iraq. In return, he would get billions in aid and a free
hand in the Baltics and other captive republics. Helping Gorby keep
Stalin's conquests doesn't count as "rewarding aggression," of course.
One
of my rules is never trust a reporter in a safari jacket. And sure
enough, the press led by these types has enlisted
for the duration. It repeats, endlessly, the obvious guff that there
are virtually no Iraqi civilian casualties, and that the weapons
are working perfectly (so let's further bloat the military budget).
This
war will cost, says Sam Nunn, $86 billion, and I've never seen a
congressional estimate that couldn't be doubled and still be low.
But that doesn't count the estimated $100 billion to buy the "allied
coalition," nor the foreign aid they will demand afterwards. Israel
is already insisting on an immediate $13 billion. And this, from
a U.S. government that is running a $600 billion deficit this recessionary
fiscal year.
More
money for more weapons, in a world of no serious threats to America?
To justify this, we're shown footage of a few bombs accurately hitting
what we're told are their targets. But why isn't the press allowed
access to the thousands of other films? Some of these weapons systems
don't work in official Pentagon demonstrations, and we're supposed
to believe they're faultless in combat?
The
U.S. has, like Israel and Iraq, imposed heavy military censorship.
We learn only what the government wants us to know, when they want
us to know it. After all, notes a story in the pro-war New York
Times, "if the press had more access to unfavorable information,
evidence, say that equipment was malfunctioning or a particular
tactic had gone awry [or that there were high Iraqi civilian casualties],
the journalists would focus on it."
It
was months before we found out what really happened in Panama, where
the Defense Department lied to us about the accuracy of its mega-billion
stealth bombers and the number of civilian deaths. That is why,
on every aspect of this war, I apply another one of my rules: never
believe anything the government says; it is virtually always
lying.
But
isn't this unpatriotic? Aren't I, as a loyal American, required
to support a federal war? No, true patriotism means love of America,
her history, her people, her land, her culture, and her values
not love of their enemy, the U.S. government. But shouldn't all
the arguments stop until the shooting does? No, this is precisely
the time for the debate to be turned on high, for this is when the
state can most easily steal our freedoms and our money.
We
have no business mixing in the ancient hatreds of the Middle East not
with our taxes, not with our weapons, not with our sons and daughters.
There is only one way to "support our troops," and that is to bring
them home, and keep them out of foreign wars. As the Founding Fathers
knew, we can't have a constitutional republic at home and an empire
abroad. Yet that seems like ancient history.
If
Bush can galvanize the American people for war against a small,
poor, low-tech country whose GNP is less than 1% of ours by portraying
it as a nuclear-armed world threat, then he can get away with anything.
When the Emperor George proclaims a war tax, a draft, or a Newer
Deal, there will be hosannas. Fasten your economic seatbelt, as
this Caesar Augustus wanna-be bombs and bribes his way towards the
New World Order.
February
27, 2004
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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