No Case For War
9/11 Does Not Justify Invading and Occupying Iraq
by
Richard Wall
by Richard Wall
Count
me among those who do not believe that everything changed after
9/11. Or that the attacks came as a complete surprise to many high
officials of the US government.
That’s
why I cannot accept the following statement: "Any attempt
to understand the war on Iraq must begin with the profound psychological
shock caused by the destruction of the World Trade Center on September
11, 2001." Thus writes Thomas Powers in his latest
article in the December 4, 2003, issue of the New York Review
of Books, entitled The
Vanishing Case for War.
No-one
disputes that profound psychological shock of 9/11. I can even go
part of the way with Powers and accept that there was a "complete
lack of public warning before the attacks" (my emphasis).
This is true regardless of which explanation you are inclined to
accept for the events of that day.
You
may believe the official legend that from deep within a cave, thousands
of miles away, a bearded man with a publicly declared grudge against
some aspects of the imperial behavior of the United States and other
Western governments over the last 80 years masterminded the whole
operation, including the movements of 19 hijackers (for the purposes
of the legend, necessarily Muslim hijackers) who naturally detested
freedom.
Or
you may take the increasingly fashionable line that the US government
– or more precisely the Bush II administration allowed 9/11
to happen by incompetence and failure at multiple levels of its
over-bureaucratic apparatus, too prone to fatal inter-agency squabbling
and in-fighting to do its job of protection as it should.
Or
you may subscribe to the "conspiracy theory" that some
of the highest-placed "servants" of the federal government,
by deviousness and obstruction of the efforts of some brave but
powerless junior FBI people, acted in complicity with the rapacious
designs – some of them openly declared years before of assorted
war hawks, neoconservatives, neoJacobins, or a combination of any
of these.
All
these interpretations (and more) have their adherents, the "bearded
man in a cave guiding evil hijackers" explanation being the
one which still carries the sanction of "high officials,"
the federal government in general, and, to their eternal shame,
the mainstream media in the US.
We
should not be surprised. The official explanation is good enough,
it seems, for many millions, including Britney
"I’m a Slave for You" Spears ("Honestly, I
think we should just trust our president in every decision he makes
and should just support that, you know, and be faithful in what
happens"). Not, patently, because anyone is able to determine
that it is objectively true, but mainly because it is what the government
says, and it is plausibly consistent with the diet of short-term
TV news and celebrity non-events which is fed to the populace by
the presenters and pundits (‘experts’) who daily invade viewers’
homes, and with whom they have accordingly become very familiar.
Because the experts are presented to the viewer as being authoritative
in their field, the viewer is subtly intimidated into feeling uneasily
presumptuous if their reliability is in any way to be questioned.
As
it would be if any deeper investigation were to take place, or indeed
if ordinary people, instead of denying and saying "How could
you believe such a thing," would allow themselves to think,
and to exercise discriminating judgment for themselves.
Television
is not conducive to this, because instead of focussing on issues,
or even offering a genuine difference of possible explanations,
the visual medium distracts us by momentarily tweaking our instincts
for sympathy or revulsion, as in contemplating how somebody looks
on screen, e.g. "Wasn’t that mug
shot of Michael Jackson in police custody just awful? Poor guy…he
really must have something wrong with him."
A
similar principle is at work when the violence of the effects of
a bombing is shown: we are overcome by the natural revulsion we
feel. In the moment (and news TV is rarely permitted to go beyond
the moment) this prevents us from adopting the critical distance
required to enable us to understand the historical context of the
event.
Such
effects are judiciously used by the controllers of news television
(in the UK at least, the word "controller" is even in
their job title). One rather more sinister effect of TV self-censorship
is that dissident views do not get air time, because, in questioning
the official versions of events, such views clearly do not help
people to remain "faithful in what happens."
There
is a generalized fear of pursuing the vast and detailed physical
evidence of 9/11 to any radical conclusion which would put in jeopardy
the many comforting underlying psychological assumptions about the
very nature of most people’s day to day existence. That fear is
judiciously cultivated by the media through alternating doses of
more violent incidents (done of course by terrorists, usually of
the Al Qaeda brand) and unspecified threats of same, interspersed
with glamorously-packaged injunctions to fear not, go out and have
fun, feel good and spend as usual!
The
evident truth is that the events of September 11, 2001 – whoever
caused them to happen were a catalyst for actions that persons
of power and influence had long been pressing for the US government
and military to take, and for other actions that were already either
at an advanced stage of planning or had already been prepared for,
such as the invasion
of Afghanistan. Also among those planned actions was, at some
stage, the invasion and occupation of Iraq.
It
is for these reasons, and not even because I have anything new to
offer on 9/11, that I feel I have to take issue with Thomas Powers,
even as to his title "The Vanishing Case for War," which
presupposes that at a given moment there may have been a case. I
do so as follows:
Any
attempt to understand the war on Iraq must begin not with the reactions
to the events of Sept. 11th, but at the very least with the following
three episodes, dating from 1991, 1998, and 2000 respectively:
1)
The invasion and conquest of Iraq was a measure which had been contemplated
in US foreign policy and military circles at least since the Gulf
War of 1991, after which a decision was taken not to press on to
Baghdad. In their joint article for Time Magazine on March
2, 1998, entitled "Why
We Didn’t Remove Saddam," George H. W. Bush and Brent
Scowcroft stated:
"Trying
to eliminate Saddam, extending the ground war into an occupation
of Iraq, would have violated our guideline about not changing objectives
in midstream, engaging in "mission creep," and would have incurred
incalculable human and political costs. Apprehending him
was probably impossible. We had been unable to find Noriega in Panama,
which we knew intimately. We would have been forced to occupy Baghdad
and, in effect, rule Iraq".
2) In 1998 President Clinton was strongly urged to invade Iraq.
The PNAC (Project for a New American Century’s) "letter to
President Clinton on Iraq," which can be viewed at this
link, says in part:
"The
only acceptable strategy is one that eliminates the possibility
that Iraq will be able to use or threaten to use weapons of mass
destruction. In the near term, this means a willingness to undertake
military action as diplomacy is clearly failing. In the long
term, it means removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from power.
That now needs to become the aim of American foreign policy.
We
urge you to articulate this aim, and to turn your Administration's
attention to implementing a strategy for removing Saddam's regime
from power. This will require a full complement of diplomatic,
political and military efforts" (my emphasis throughout).
Signatories
to this letter were the following, most of whom are or have been
persons of power and influence, members of or advisers to the current
US federal government: Elliott Abrams, Richard L. Armitage, William
J. Bennett, Jeffrey Bergner, John Bolton, Paula Dobriansky, Francis
Fukuyama, Robert Kagan, Zalmay Khalilzad, William Kristol, Richard
Perle, Peter W. Rodman, Donald Rumsfeld, William Schneider, Jr.,
Vin Weber, Paul Wolfowitz, R. James Woolsey, and Robert B. Zoellick.
As
a footnote to this, it is also instructive to contemplate that on
the very day of the attacks, the first instinct of Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld (signatory to the 1998 letter, as we have seen above) was
to direct his staff to find ways of starting a war against Iraq
almost immediately, at a moment when certainly no evidence that
the attacks originated from or were sponsored by Saddam’s Iraq had
been made public (even if it had existed). In fact, a generalized
clamour was growing at that moment along completely different lines,
namely to the effect that "Osama did it," Osama was hiding
cowardly in a cave, and Osama had to be smoked out.
As
reported by CBS news on Sept. 4th, 2002: "CBS News
has learned that barely five hours after American Airlines
Flight 77 ploughed into the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up with plans for striking
Iraq" (see the full article at this
link).
3)
A few of the signatories to the Clinton Iraq letter were contributors
to the PNAC September 2000 report entitled "Rebuilding
America’s defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources for a New Century"
(link to PDF document). Here they had already advocated, even before
the presidential elections of that year, that the United States
should take military control of the Gulf region whether Saddam
Hussein was in power or not.
"The
United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role
in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq
provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial
American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the
regime of Saddam Hussein."
Another
phrase in that report "a new Pearl Harbor"
has already passed into the history books following September 11.
For the new century then about to begin, the report advocated the
strategic transformation of the U.S. military into an imperialistic
force of global
domination, a process which would require huge increases in
defense spending to "a minimum level of 3.5 to 3.8 percent
of gross domestic product, adding $15 billion to $20 billion to
total defense spending annually." It went on to say that "the
process of transformation would be a long one," unless there
were some "catastrophic and catalyzing event, a new Pearl Harbor."
It
does not take a genius to see that 9/11 was the new Pearl Harbor,
and that military spending has since that time risen by leaps and
bounds. For Iraq alone the current official bill is $87 billion.
"Since September 11, 2001, the president has requested, and Congress
has approved, over $110 billion in increases in military spending
and military aid" states Bill Hartung in his February 2003 The
Hidden Costs of War, quoted by Jamey
Hecht, who also writes that according to the Defense Department's
own website, the total Defense Budget authority for FY2004 is $399,683,000,000.
What
indeed is the true cost of war, and who is going to pay?
And
so I come finally to the sickening question of WMD, which is actually
the interesting part and main focus of Powers’ NYRB article.
Huge
sums of taxpayers’ money, notably to produce the David Kay/Iraq
Survey Group ‘there’s probably nothing there’ report,
and essayistic efforts of the kind that Powers undertakes, have
been expended in trying to answer the futile question "Were
there or were there not WMD or plans for WMD in Iraq?"
as if the response could actually resolve the question of whether
there was or not a case for war.
All
this is so much of a smokescreen.
For
apart from the wider issue that such weapons are a threat and a
danger to humanity wherever they may be (I certainly do not buy
the argument that it would be easier for a terrorist to obtain such
weapons in an authoritarian state, or in one which is on the "axis-of-evil"
blacklist rather than in a more open country like the US), this
type of argument betrays cynical indifference to the documented
fact that certain Western states, which are awash with WMD,
have been eager to supply all sorts of unpleasant weaponry (including
WMD) to all sorts of unsavoury regimes when it suits them.
Included
in the suppliers are the world’s largest arms-dealing states – the
US, Germany, France, and Britain and included in their client
lists, just for starters, was Saddam’s Iraq. Some states, especially
smaller regional powers like Israel, are both big clients and big
suppliers, often acting as intermediaries or surrogates in delivering
weaponry to officially banned-for-export states such as China or
Iran.
So
of course there were WMD in Iraq. And of course there will be WMD
elsewhere in the future, including in places "where they shouldn’t
be."
It
is almost elementary to remark that in international relations,
states will by their nature and constitution (on grounds of national
defense) seek to match and neutralize the power of any other
state which they perceive as a potential or known threat. This is
particularly true nowadays at the regional level, because we no
longer live in the nervously stable world of global MAD (mutually
assured destruction) which was the US vs. SU (United States vs.
Soviet Union) Cold War arrangement, but rather in a unipolar world
where the US is the biggest and beastliest bear of all, but elsewhere
there are a lot of very hot regional and potentially MAD powder-kegs.
Has everyone forgotten the global anxiety which arose in 2001/2
when India and Pakistan, their original Western suppliers now panicked
into restraining action, were threatening to unleash a nuclear holocaust
on each other?
I
mentioned earlier that I could go along with Powers’ remark that
the force of the people’s reaction to September 11 came in part
as a result of the complete lack of public warning. There are strong
reasons to doubt, however, whether the federal government intelligence
agencies and a substantial number of officers of federal and local
government were taken totally by surprise.
The
documentation of the prior warnings has become almost too voluminous
to mention. It is known and has been widely reported that extreme
anxiety about possible attack pervaded intelligence circles in the
summer of 2001. These crystallized in the presidential intelligence
briefing of August 6, 2001, in which the CIA warned the president,
among other things, that terrorists linked to bin Laden might be
planning to hijack commercial airliners. As reported at USNews.com
in May 2002, "It was also widely known in U.S. government circles
that al Qaeda had plotted to hijack planes in the past and crash
them into CIA headquarters, the Eiffel Tower, and other symbols
of the West. But U.S. officials insisted there was no warning that
terrorists were about to use the airplanes as missiles aimed at
targets in the United States."
The
list of urgent prior warnings from intelligence agencies of other
countries, including Russia, Israel, France, and Germany, has been
extensively documented in the press and on the Internet. It is a
long and troubling one, but its practical effect is clear:
the situation in Iraq and the world today represents the results,
not of any response to a surprise attack, nor even of any action
to solve the real foreign policy problems highlighted by 9/11, but
rather the coming to fruition and seizing of an opportunity to implement
projects and plans for global political and military dominance which
had begun to be laid down at least 10 or 12 years ago, most of them
published at least a year before September 11, 2001.
I
have a final niggle with Powers when he writes: "Going to
war was not something we were forced to do…."
Who
are "we"? Use of the word "we" in a context
like this assumes a uniform collective identity and purpose which
simply does not obtain. For what it’s worth, many Americans (presumably
to be included in the "we"), as well as many people of
many other nationalities, were opposed to the United States government
and military invading and occupying Iraq. Those same people were
equally opposed to the brutality of the Saddam Hussein regime. That
in no way means that in order to solve the one wrong you had to
commit another wrong. It was ever thus: two wrongs do not make a
right.
So
I say in my final words to Mr. Powers: Not we, and not in our name,
and please: begin at the beginning.
Selected
References:
- Robert
Higgs, What's
So Special About Those Killed By Hijackers on September 11, 2001?
LewRockwell.com, September 13, 2003
- Gary North,
The Unasked
Question of 9-11: What Was the Motive? – LewRockwell.com,
September 13, 2001
- Bette Stockbauer,
Rebuilding
America's Defenses' and the Project for the New American Century
AntiWar.com, June 18, 2003
- Steven
Yates, 9-11,
the Foreknowledge Question, and Why We Do Not Trust Big Government
– LewRockwell.com, June 8, 2002
December
4, 2003
Richard
Wall (send him mail) has a Master's
degree in International Relations from the London School of Economics
& Political Science, and lives in Estoril, Portugal, where he currently
works as a freelance writer and translator.
Copyright ©
2003 LewRockwell.com
Richard
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