Now
Available from
CounterPunch for Only $11.50 (S/H Included)
Today's
Stories
Jan.
31 / Feb 1, 2004
Conn
Hallinan
Nepal, Bush & Real WMDs
January
30, 2004
Saul
Landau
Cuba High on Neo-Con Hit List
Michael
Donnelly
Bush's Second Front: The War in
the Woods
Elaine
Cassel
Worse Than Jacko: Child Abuse at Gitmo
David Vest
More Halliburton News, Brought to You by Halliburton
Mike
Whitney
The Kay Report: Still Defending Aggression
David
Miller
The Hutton Whitewash
Sam
Husseini
How Many People Must Die Because of This "Mistake",
Senator Kerry?
January 29, 2004
Patricia
Nelson Limerick
John Ehrlichman, Environmentalist
Ron
Jacobs
Homeland Security and "Legalized"
Immigration
Rahul Mahajan
New Hampshire v. Iraq
Greg
Weiher
Bush Calls for Preemptive Strike on
Moon and Mars
Norman
Solomon
The State of the Media Union
Cockburn
/ St. Clair
Does NH Mean Anything?
January
28, 2004
Kathy
Kelly
Bearing Witness Against Teachers of
Torture and Assassination

January
27, 2004
Steve
Philion
Ritter Was Right: My Exchange with
CNN's Aaron Brown
Daniel
Ellsberg
Leak Against This War: Expose the
Lies from the Inside
C.G.
Estabrook
Can George Ever Really be Elected
President?
Josh
Frank
Hot Coals in Vermont: Dean's Smoke
Screens
Greg
Moses
Racism 101 All Over Again
Gilad
Atzmon
Blood, Soil and Art
Mike
Ferner
"We're All Lied To": an
Interview with Bruce Cockburn in Baghdad
Hammond
Guthrie
General Disorders of the Day
January
26, 2004
Sean
Donahue
The Toxic Career of Rand Beers: Kerry's
Drug War Zealot
Gary
Leupp
David Kay's Admission
January
24/5, 2004
Patrick
Cockburn
Iraq's Shia: "Our Day Has
Come"
Laura
Flanders
State of the Conservative Union
Simon Helweg-Larsen
Enter Berger: Signs of Hope in
Guatemala
Dave
Lindorff
Ground Control to Maj. George
Susan Davis
The Birdwatcher Menace
Alexander
Cockburn
The Fog of Cop Out: McNamara 10,
Morris 0
January
23, 2004
Yonathan
Shapira
An Israeli Pilot Speaks Out
Standard
Schaefer
Italian Philosopher Giorgio Agamben
Protests US Travel Policy
Josh
Frank
In Defense of Polluters: Howard Dean's
Vermont
William
A. Cook
Rule by the Corrupt and the Capricious
January
22, 2004
Sam
Smith
Howards End?
Patricia
Koyce Wanniski
Lost in Space
Alexander
Lukin
Putin and the Clans
Katherine
van Wormer
Dry Drunk Confirmed: O'Neill's
Revelations and Bush's Mind
Forrest
Hylton
The Prisoner, the President and the
Mafia
January 19, 2004
Justin E. H. Smith
Inside
America's Prisons: From Corrections to Retribution
Richard W. Behan
The GOP, Inc.
Ray McGovern
Bush's
State of the Union: Humility or More Hyperbole?
Werther
SOTUS:
the Stalin Moment of America's Nomenklatura
Phillip Cryan
Media Collusion in Colombia's War
Lee Sustar
A New Strategy to Reverse Labor's Decline?
Arthur Versluis
Great Lakes as Commodity: Privatizing Water
Uri Avnery
Anti-Semitism:
a Practical Manual
Steve Perry
Fresh Crack from Hawkeye State
January 17 / 18, 2004
Fadi Kiblawi and Will
Youmans
The
Use and Abuse of MLK Jr by Israel's Apologists
Joshua Muldavin
and Joseph Nevins
Blaming the Symptoms
Jeffrey St. Clair
Bad Days at Indian Point: Inside America's Most Dangerous Nuclear
Plant
Brian Cloughley
Iron Hammers in Iraq
Saul Landau
Fog of War: Vietnam and Iraq
M. Shahid Alam
Lerner, Said and the Palestinians
Richard Manning
Food Poisoning as Background Noise
Marjorie Cohn
The Guantanamo Concentration Camp
Mike Whitney
Scalia and Opus Dei: Radicals on the Court
Sadik Kassim
Meet Our New Saddam: Islam Karimov
Carol Norris
Arnold
and Bush's Numbers Don't Add Up
Joe Quandt
Suicide
Bombers: The Clash of Absurdities
David Krieger
Imagining MLK Jr at 75
Bruce Jackson
Making War, Making Movies
Ron Jacobs
Revolution in the Air: a review
Richard Edmondson
Rupert Murdoch and My Sister
Richard Forno
Apologizing for Preemption: Evil, Perle and Frum
Poets' Basement
Holt, Mickey Z, Albert & Guthrie
January 16, 2004
Kathy Kelly
A Visit
to Umm Qasr Prison
William S. Lind
More
Thoughts on 4th Generation Warfare
Gillian Russom
So.
Cal Grocery Strikers Speak Out: "We Need Action!"
Ari Shavit
Survival
of the Fittest? An Interview with Benny Morris
Adi Ophir
Genocide Hides Behind Expulsion: a Response to Benny Morris
Dave Lindorff
The General's Henchman: Michael Moore Smears Kucinich
Steve Perry
Iowa Death Trip 2
January 15, 2004
Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity
Memo
to the President: Your State of the Union Address
John Chuckman
Dry
Hole in the Oval Office: President from Podunk Drilling, Inc
Chris Floyd
Mind Over Matter
Gil-Scott Heron
Whitey on the Moon
Gary Leupp
The
Silk Road: Random Thoughts on the Bam Earthquake and Satan
January 14, 2004
Greg Moses
Happy
Birthday, Dr. King: To Write Off the South is to Surrender to
Bigots
Kurt Nimmo
Bush and the Supremes: Amputating the Bill of Rights
Dave Lindorff
Preview of Iowa? Pennsylvania Straw Poll Spells Trouble for Traditional
Dems (and Dean)
Jason Leopold
O'Neill Claims Backed by Rumsfeld / Wolfowitz War Letters to
Clinton
Alexander Cockburn
Bush,
Oil and Iraq: Some Truth at Last

January 13, 2004
William S. Lind
How 2004
Looks from Potsdam
M. Junaid Alam
Do Iraqis Have a Right to Resist?
Mickey Z
Snipers:
No Nuts in Iraq
Adolfo Gilly
Chonchocoro:
The Prisoner and the Presidents
Steve Perry
You Love God, Right?

January 12, 2004
Ben Tripp
No Stan
for the Kurds
Norman Solomon
The
Dixie Trap: Democrats and the South
Mike Whitney
O'Neill's Revenge
Jason Leopold
From the Very First Instant It Was About Iraq
Uri Avnery
Syria's
Peace Proposal
January 10 / 11, 2004
Alexander Cockburn
Bush
as Hitler? Let's Be Fair
Susan Davis
Dangerous Books
Diane Christian
On Lying and Colin Powell
Lisa Viscidi
Exhumations: Unearthing Guatemala's Macabre Past
Daniel Estulin
Destroying History in Iraq
Saul Landau
Homeland Anxiety
Elaine Cassel
Who's Winning the War on Civil Liberties?
Bruce Jackson
Making the Shit List
Christopher Brauchli
Baptizing Hitler's Ghost
Francis A. Boyle
The Deep Scars of War
Lee Ballinger
Cold Sweat: Sweatshops and the Music Industry
Patrick W. Gavin
Hillary's Slur: Mrs. Lott?
Ramzy Baroud
What Invaders Have in Common
Michael Schwartz
Inside the California Grocery Strike
Gary Johnson
An Interview with Former Heavyweight Champ Greg Page
Dave Zirin
An Interview with Marvin Miller on Unions and Baseball
Mark Hand
A Review of Resistance: My Life for Lebanon
Poets' Basement
Thomas, Daley, Curtis, Guthrie and Albert

January 9, 2004
David Lindorff
The
Misers of War: Troop Strength and Chintzy Bonuses
Kurt Nimmo
Saddam's Defense: Summon Bush Sr. to the Stand
Mike Whitney
Orange Jumpsuits for the Bush Clan?: The Carnegie Report on Iraq's
Non-existent WMDs
Deb Reich
Palestinians and Israelis: This War is Unwinnable
David Vest
Disabled
Vets Fire Back at Rumsfeld
January 8, 2004
Neve Gordon
Israeli
Refuseniks Sentenced to Jail
Lenni Brenner
Dr.
Dean and the Godhead
Ray McGovern
Bush: Driving Without Breaks
Mark Scaramella
Inside
the DA's Office: Lies, Errors and Tedium
Yves Engler
Bush's Mexican Gambit
James Hollander
Journalists
Under Fire: the Death of José Couso in Baghdad
January 7, 2004
Democracy Now!
Uncharitable
Care: How Hospitals are Gouging and Even Arresting the Uninsured
Greg Weiher
The
Bush Administration's Ongoing Intelligence Problem
Ben Tripp
The Word of the Year, 2003
Dave Lindorff
Dean and His Democratic Detractors
Michael Leon
The NYT Does Chomsky
Bob Boldt
God Talk
Ramon Ryan
Small
Victories and Long Struggles: the 10th Anniversary of the Zapatista
Uprising
January 6, 2004
Dave Lindorff
RNC
Plays the Hitler Card: MoveOn Shouldn't Apologize for Those Ads
Ron Jacobs
Drugs
in Uniform: Hashish and the War on Terrorism
Josh Frank
Coffee and State Authority in Colombia
Doug Giebel
Permanent Bases: Leave Iraq? Hell No, We Won't Go
John Chuckman
Sick Puppies: David Frum's New Neo-Con Manifesto
Rannie Amiri
The Politics of the Iranian Earthquake
John L. Hess
A Record
to Dissent From
Thacher Schmid
A Cheesehead's Musings on the Sunday NYT
David Price
"Like
Slaves": Anthropological Thoughts on Occupation
January 5, 2004
Al Krebs
How
Now Mad Cow!
Kathy Kelly
Squatting
in Baghdad's Bomb Craters
Jordy Cummings
The Dialectic of the Kristol Family: Putting the Neo in the Cons
Fran Shor
Mad Human Disease: Chewing the Fat Down on the Farm
Fidel Castro
"We Shall Overcome": On the 45th Anniversary of the
Cuban Revolution
Gary Leupp
North
Korea for Dummies
January 3 / 4, 2004
Brian Cloughley
Never
Mind the WMDs, Just Look at History
Vice Admiral Jack Shanahan
The Wrong War at the Wrong Time
William Cook
Failing to Respond to 9/11
Glen Martin
Jesus
vs. the Beast of the Apocalypse
Robert Fisk
Iraqi Humor Amid the Carnage
Ilan Pappe
The Geneva Bubble
Walter Davis
Robert Jay Lifton, or Nostalgia
Kurt Nimmo
Ashcroft vs. the Left
Mike Whitney
The Padilla Case
Steven Sherman
On Wallerstein's The Decline of American Power
Dave Lindorff
Bush's Taiwan Hypocrisy
William Blum
Codework Orange!
Mitchel Cohen
Learning from Che Guevara
Seth Sandronsky
Mad Cow and Main Street USA
Bruce Jackson
Conversations with Leslie Fiedler
Standard Schaefer
Poet Carl Rakosi Turns 100
Ron Jacobs
Sir Mick
Adam Engel
Hall of Hoaxes
Poets' Basement
Jones, Albert & Curtis
January 2, 2004
Stan Cox
Red Alert
2016
Dave Lindorff
Beef, the Meat of Republicans
Jackie Corr
Rule and Ruin: Wall Street and Montana
Norman Solomon
George Will's Ethics: None of Our Business?
David Vest
As the Top Wobbleth
January 1, 2004
Randall Robinson
Honor
Haiti, Honor Ourselves
David Krieger
Looking
Back on 2003
Robert Fisk
War Takes an Inhuman Twist: Roadkill Bombs
Stan Goff
War,
Race and Elections
Hammond Guthrie
2003 Almaniac
Website of the Day
Embody Bags
December 31, 2003
Ray McGovern
Don't
Be Fooled Again: This Isn't an Independent Investigation
Kurt Nimmo
Manufacturing Hysteria
Robert Fisk
The Occupation is Damned
Mike Whitney
Mad Cows and Downer George
Alexander Cockburn
A Great Year Ebbed, Another Ahead
December 30, 2003
Michael Neumann
Criticism
of Israel is Not Anti-Semitism
Annie Higgins
When
They Bombed the Hometown of the Virgin Mary
Alan Farago
Bush Bros. Wrecking Co.: Time Runs Out for the Everglades
Dan Bacher
Creatures from the Blacklight Lagoon: From Glofish to Frankenfish
Jeffrey St. Clair
Hard
Time on the Killing Floor: Inside Big Meat
Willie Nelson
Whatever Happened to Peace on Earth?
December 29, 2003
Mark Hand
The Washington
Post in the Dock?
David Lindorff
The
Bush Election Strategy
Phillip Cryan
Interested Blindness: Media Omissions in Colombia's War
Richard Trainor
Catellus Development: the Next Octopus?
Uri Avnery
Israel's
Conscientious Objectors
December 27 / 28, 2003
Alexander Cockburn
A
Journey Into Rupert Murdoch's Soul
Kathy Kelly
Christmas Day in Baghdad: A Better World
Saul Landau
Iraq
at the End of the Year
Dave Zirin
A Linebacker for Peace & Justice: an Interview with David
Meggysey
Robert Fisk
Iraq
Through the American Looking Glass
Scott Burchill
The Bad Guys We Once Thought Good: Where Are They Now?
Chris Floyd
Bush's Iraq Plan is Right on Course: Saddam 2.0
Brian J. Foley
Don't Tread on Me: Act Now to Save the Constitution
Seth Sandronsky
Feedlot Sweatshops: Mad Cows and the Market
Susan Davis
Lord
of the (Cash Register) Rings
Ron Jacobs
Cratched Does California
Adam Engel
Crumblecake and Fish
Norman Solomon
The Unpardonable Lenny Bruce
Poets' Basement
Cullen and Albert
Website of the Weekend
Activism Through Music

December 26, 2003
Gary Leupp
Bush
Doings: Doing the Language
December 25, 2003
Diane Christian
The
Christmas Story
Elaine Cassel
This
Christmas, the World is Too Much With Us
Susan Davis
Jinglebells, Hold the Schlock
Kristen Ess
Bethlehem Celebrates Christmas, While Rafah Counts the Dead
Francis Boyle
Oh Little Town of Bethlehem
Alexander Cockburn
The
Magnificient 9
Guthrie / Albert
Another Colorful Season
December 24, 2003
M. Shahid Alam
The Semantics
of Empire
William S. Lind
Marley's
List for Santa in Wartime
Josh Frank
Iraqi
Oil: First Come, First Serve
Cpt. Paul Watson
The
Mad Cowboy Was Right
Robert Lopez
Nuance
and Innuendo in the War on Iraq

December 23, 2003
Brian J. Foley
Duck
and Cover-up
Will Youmans
Sharon's
Ultimatum
Michael Donnelly
Here
They Come Again: Another Big Green Fiasco
Uri Avnery
Sharon's
Speech: the Decoded Version
December 22, 2003
Jeffrey St. Clair
Pray
to Play: Bush's Faith-Based National Parks
Patrick Gavin
What Would Lincoln Do?
Marjorie Cohn
How to
Try Saddam: Searching for a Just Venue
Kathy Kelly
The
Two Troublemakers: "Guilty of Being Palestinians in Iraq"
December 20 / 21, 2003
Alexander Cockburn
How
to Kill Saddam
Saul Landau
Bush Tries Farce as Cuba Policy
Rafael Hernandez
Empire and Resistance: an Interview with Tariq Ali
David Vest
Our Ass and Saddam's Hole
Kurt Nimmo
Bush
Gets Serious About Killing Iraqis
Greg Weiher
Lessons from the Israeli School on How to Win Friends in the
Islamic World
Christopher Brauchli
Arrest, Smear, Slink Away: Dr. Lee and Cpt. Yee
Carol Norris
Cheers of a Clown: Saddam and the Gloating Bush
Bruce Jackson
The Nameless and the Detained: Bush's Disappeared
Juliana Fredman
A Sealed Laboratory of Repression
Mickey Z.
Holiday Spirit at the UN
Ron Jacobs
In the Wake of Rebellion: The Prisoner's Rights Movement and
Latino Prisoners
Josh Frank
Sen. Max Baucus: the Slick Swindler
John L. Hess
Slow Train to the Plane
Adam Engel
Black is Indeed Beautiful
Ben Tripp
The Relevance of Art in Times of Crisis
Michael Neumann
Rhythm and Race
Poets' Basement
Cullen, Engel, Albert & Guthrie


Hot Stories
Alexander Cockburn
Behold,
the Head of a Neo-Con!
Subcomandante Marcos
The
Death Train of the WTO
Norman Finkelstein
Hitchens
as Model Apostate
Steve Niva
Israel's
Assassination Policy: the Trigger for Suicide Bombings?
Dardagan,
Slobodo and Williams
CounterPunch Exclusive:
20,000 Wounded Iraqi Civilians
Steve
J.B.
Prison Bitch
Sheldon
Rampton and John Stauber
True Lies: the Use of Propaganda
in the Iraq War
Wendell
Berry
Small Destructions Add Up
CounterPunch
Wire
WMD: Who Said What When
Cindy
Corrie
A Mother's Day Talk: the Daughter
I Can't Hear From
Gore Vidal
The
Erosion of the American Dream
Francis Boyle
Impeach
Bush: A Draft Resolution
Click Here
for More Stories.

|
Weekend
Edition
January 31 / February 1, 2004
With Friends Like
Us
Bush's
Desolate Imperium
By BERNARD CHAZELLE
Ah, the ease with which George W. Bush attracts
superlatives! Helen Thomas calls him "the worst president
ever." A kinder, gentler Jonathan Chait ranks him "among
the worst presidents in US history." No such restraint from
Paul Berman, who brands him "the worst president the US
has ever had." Nobel Laureate George Akerlof rates his government
as the "worst ever." Even Bushie du jour, Christopher
Hitchens, calls the man "unusually incurious, abnormally
unintelligent, amazingly inarticulate, fantastically uncultured,
extraordinarily uneducated, and apparently quite proud of all
these things." Only Fidel Castro, it would appear, has had
kind words for our 43rd President. "Hopefully, he is not
as stupid as he seems, nor as Mafia-like as his predecessors
were."
Vain hopes. In a mere three years, President
Bush has compiled a record of disasters that Fidel could only
envy. While cutting taxes for the rich, starving out federal
programs for the poor, dismantling environmental protections,
riding roughshod over civil liberties, and running the largest
budget deficit in history, his administration has pursued a "law
of the jungle" brand of foreign policy fueled by overt paranoia
and an imperious sense of omnipotence. Its shrill, threatening
rhetoric, relentlessly echoed by a gang of media goons, has coarsened
public discourse and alienated friends and allies.
At home, Bush has stoked the fears of
a public traumatized by 9/11 and encountered rare success preaching
an "us-against-them" Weltanschauung soaked in self-righteousness.
Dissent has been equated with lack of patriotism, illegal detentions
have gone unchallenged, and racial profiling has been given new
life. In the run-up to the war, international disapproval met
with sophomoric tantrums ("freedom fries, anyone?")
and vindictive hissy fits (canceled exchange programs with French
high schools): hardly America's finest hour.
Abroad, the image of the United States
has never been worse. Ever. While the horrors of 9/11 prompted
an unprecedented outpouring of sympathy for the US worldwide,
Bush squandered it all away and morphed "America the Benevolent
Giant" into "America the Shrill Bully." Bush's
vision of a dog-eat-dog Hobbesian universe in which the US plays
by its own rules is repellent to most nations. For all its shortcomings,
the rule of international law has vital resonance to many: For
Europeans it signifies the historical end of warfare as the preferred
means of resolving disputes; for their former colonies it is
a shield against the White Man's insufferable itch to force his
wisdom down their throats. For weak nations it offers a deterrent
against stronger neighbors. For all it promises the dignity of
being heard and treated as equals on a global stage. International
law might well be the worst form of utopia except, that is, for
all others that have been tried.
It is overwhelmingly in America's interest
to embrace international law, encourage liberal multilateralism,
and leverage its formidable power through international partnerships.
The world's sole superpower cannot go it alone. Perhaps it could
fifty years ago. No longer. Besides the direct causes_mostly
globalization and the emergence of rival economic blocs_there
are two indirect factors behind the "Gulliverisation"
of the US giant: The end of the Cold War has weakened its power
of coercion; its increased exposure to terrorism has intensified
its dependency on the goodwill of others.
The Bush administration does not see
it that way. Its answer to terrorism and the threats of rogue
nations is a doctrine of preventive warfare folded into an imperial
ambition of global domination. It is Wilsonianism run amok. President
Bush is a latter-day crusader on a mission to coerce everyone
into freedom.
And what a better place to start the
coercion than the land that is home to the world's second largest
oil reserves! To drum up support for the invasion, Bush's mouthpieces
served a credulous public a steady diet of lies and exaggerations.
They hyped the threats to the hilt. More seriously, they lied
about their certainty, presenting as rock-solid evidence what
they knew were unproven allegations rejected by many in the intelligence
community. The fake certitude_not the hype_was the lie. US forces
invaded Iraq to eliminate a threat that proved to be entirely
fictitious. The preventive warfare doctrine could not have failed
in more spectacular fashion.
Supporters of the war have a single,
powerful line of defense: "So what? A bloody dictatorship
has been overthrown! Got a problem with that?" For its shaming
effect, they will often throw in the rhetorical question, "Wasn't
going after Hitler worth a little sacrifice?" with its intended
subtext, "I Churchill, you Chamberlain." Saddam was
a ghastly tyrant, but he was no Hitler. He was a Caligula-like
monster and a second-tier dictator. The horrors he visited upon
Iraq, gruesome as they were, were no worse than those visited
on half a dozen nations in the last decade and not a patch on,
say, the Congolese conflict (3 million people killed in 4 years).
Absent the WMD justification, intervention in Iraq was thus a
moral choice rather than a moral imperative. A decision had to
be made that was based on the totality of arguments, for and
against, and upheld the Hippocratic oath of foreign policy: Do
no harm. What kind of mad surgeon would operate on a brain tumor
before assessing the odds of success and gauging potential side
effects?
Operating on the Saddam tumor had a number
of predictable side effects: massive loss of innocent lives (over
two 9/11s and counting), resentment of a proud people, precedent-setting
in the violation of international law, etc. What were the chances
of success? The experiences of the British in Mesopotamia, the
French in Algeria, and the Israelis in Lebanon were hardly encouraging.
Western incursions into the Arab world have had an uncanny way
of failing miserably. One glimmer of hope, of course, was the
sky-high credibility of American good intentions. Oh, really?
Then, what was Bush's defense secretary doing in Baghdad back
in the eighties, giving succor to a Saddam on top of his game
busy gassing Iranians for breakfast? And why did his father allow
the tyrant to murder 100,000 Kurds and Shi'ites in 1991? And
what about the twelve years of US-led sanctions that enriched
Saddam's cronies and raised the mortality rates among Iraqi children
under 5 to a staggering 13 percent? One may forgive the Iraqis
for being just a little wary of America's new-found solicitude.
President Bush saw no contradiction in
preaching democracy in Iraq while forging new alliances with
odious dictatorships in Central Asia, (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Kyrgyzstan), or in threatening Iran while coddling corrupt autocracies
and cesspools of terrorism (Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan). Bush
is planting today the seeds of tomorrow's invasions. A recovered
alcoholic, he has finally found an addiction that we can all
enjoy together: perpetual war.
Hypocrisy comes laced with hair-raising
incompetence. The Bush administration deluded itself about a
painless war of liberation that would pay for itself. Much has
been said already about postwar ineptitude, leading to radical
policy shifts every few weeks. (Today's tuesday, so we must be
trying to empower the Shi'ites.) For an example of incompetence
that would be laughable were it not so tragic, consider Bush's
gift of $43 million to the Taliban a mere six months before 9/11.
Hey, what's wrong with a little Faustian deal when there is a
war on drugs to be fought? (No doubt the families of 9/11 victims
would nod in agreement.)
The president's folly will come crashing
into the great Law of Unintended Consequences. This is the law
that gave us Saddam, Khomeini, and Osama. Which is not to be
confused with the Law of Intended Consequences, which gave us
Pinochet, the Shah, the Greek Colonels, and Mobutu. Propping
up nasty regimes in order to fight nastier ones (say, the Soviets)
was always a dicey logic but a logic nevertheless. It is different
today. Let us be clear. The war on terror was fully legitimized
by 9/11; indeed, most of the world lined up behind the US campaign
in Afghanistan. But Iraq is another story: an unprovoked aggression
couched in a mendacious narrative of self-defense; a war of domination
over a strategic region folded into a starry-eyed project of
democratization; an encouragement to dictators everywhere to
follow the lead of North Korea and get their nukes as soon as
possible. Who can doubt that the incessant humiliation of Iraqis
is fanning the flames of terror? Has it occurred to Bush that
he might have become bin Laden's unwitting recruiting sergeant,
his useful idiot in the White House?
At least Bush meant well_one hears. Did
he? Good intentions are cheap. As La Rochefoucauld said: "We
all have enough strength to bear other people's woes." How
not to see callousness, instead, in the spectacle of privileged
old men calling for a "little sacrifice" from the comfort
of their conservative perches? Whose sacrifice? Not theirs, that
much we know. The Bushies would rather cut down veterans' benefits_$21
billion reduction over 10 years_than give up their cherished
tax cuts. No, the lucky ones slated for sacrifice are the GIs
bogged down in Iraq and the likes of Ali Abbas, the boy who lost
his entire family and his two arms in a US bombing raid over
Baghdad. This war will prove a calamity for everyone, except,
of course, for little Ali, who will eternally bless his luck
that President Bush liberated him from the tyranny of his parents,
his siblings, and his limbs.
The war had one positive consequence_removing
Saddam from power_and will have countless adverse ones. But the
case against it is not in the numbers. It lies in the near-certain
prediction that the world will be worse off for it. As CIA veteran
Milt Bearden reminded us recently (with only slight historical
license), in the 20C "no nation that launched a war against
another sovereign nation ever won. And every nationalist-based
insurgency against a foreign occupation ultimately succeeded."
Why should the 21C be any different? Bush is building a world
of mistrust and desolation that will not be easily mended. A
fresh new wave of anti-Americanism is sweeping the planet today.
No one should rejoice in this, for America matters and its estrangement
is good for no one. This grave setback in international relations
will be Bush's lasting legacy. Once "the worst president
ever" retires to his ranch in Crawford, the world will be
left to pick up the pieces of a broken trust.
A Personal Note The debate has been divisive
and emotional. For someone like me_hardly a knee-jerk pacifist,
having supported military interventions in Somalia, Liberia,
the Congo, and Afghanistan_the case against the war in Iraq is
not an easy one. I will show in this article that, upon careful
consideration of the evidence, the case for war collapses, both
on principle and on practical grounds. The invasion was a huge
miscalculation whose adverse consequences will greatly outweigh
any potential benefit. My opponents will retort that I condone
wife beating.
This gotcha argument is irresistible.
Even I, not one to concede an inch to the other side, am sensitive
to it. Indeed, it is not a pleasant thought that, had I had my
way, Saddam would still be presiding over Iraq's misfortunes.
My anti-war position is based purely on moral and political cost-benefit
considerations. If that is too crass, how else should one go
about it? Unfortunately, I have not seen any serious counterargument.
I believe that the irresistibility of the gotcha line is the
reason why. It has been the black hole of pro-war thinking. The
endless pro-invasion screeds that fill the pages of The Weekly
Standard and National Review offer, in lieu of reasoning, little
more than wishful thinking and intellectual sleight-of-hand.
Limbaugh, Hannity, O'Reilly and their Clear Channel/Fox News
cohorts are entertaining buffoons who get paid to talk, not to
think. Meanwhile, the intellectual heavyweights on the right
have been too giddy with power to go to the effort of being intelligent.
If I have missed a serious pro-war argumentation
that is not based on the empty WMD/terror threats, I am quite
certain that the Bush people have missed it, too. All too often,
the debate has been a sterile clash of unreasoned assertions.
The pro-war camp has never dealt satisfactorily with a large
number of questions (addressed in this article). For example,
even if one is willing to suspend disbelief and picture a US-led
democracy in Iraq, is one also to trust that, were the regime
to be anti-American (a virtual certainty), the US would sheepishly
acquiesce? Who in the world can believe such a thing?
The fatuity of much of the pro-war rhetoric
gives me no comfort. As we all know, conservatives who cannot
make it in the world of ideas settle for the next best thing,
which is to run the country. Tom Lehrer may end up having the
last word: "Though he may have won all the battles / We
had all the good songs." I do not think so. As a US citizen,
I will do what I have to do at the ballot box on November 2,
2004. May this article inspire the American voters among you
to do the same and return the man from Crawford to his ranch.
IMPERIAL MADNESS
The Bush administration interpreted the
tragedy of 9/11 as a clarion call to move hard power to the center
of US foreign policy. Classical American hegemony, characterized
by its ability to enforce an international order and a willingness
to abide by it, was to give way to an "imperial ambition."
This transformation did not spring up out of a sudden rethinking
of US national security post 9/11. Rather, the terrorist attacks
triggered into action a plan long in the making, of which the
invasion of Iraq was Step 1. Bob Woodward reports that on 9/12,
with no knowledge about the hijackers, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld called for a US attack on Iraq at a cabinet meeting
[1]. No one in the room registered much surprise. Why would they?
They all knew that Rumsfeld had co-signed an open letter to President
Clinton in January 1998 that read in part, We urge you to...
turn your Administration's attention to implementing a strategy
for removing Saddam's regime from power [2].
Iraq was the first domino to topple.
Others would follow, opening up a new era of US global domination.
This project, now at the heart of Bush's foreign policy, is the
brainchild of the PNAC, the leading neoconservative think-tank.
(Neoconservatism is a misnomer: The godfather of the movement
explains why [3].) It is laid out in various documents such as
"Rebuilding America's Defenses" [4]. Briefly, the neocons
dream of spreading democracy around the world by enforcing a
Pax Americana that is strong enough militarily to deter any future
challenge and discourage rival coalitions. Neocons present a
coherent, if utterly unrealistic, vision of an American hyperpower
that has broken all ties with namby-pamby Carterism and Kissinger-style
realpolitik, and is hell-bent on sharing with the world the benefits
of its moral superiority. Democracy by force, if you will. It
is both highly principled and highly dangerous. Indeed, neocons
can sometimes sound like little Mussolinis in training.
We are an awesome revolutionary force.
Creative destruction is our middle name. We tear down the old
order every day... Seeing America undo old conventions, they
[our enemies] fear us, for they do not wish to be undone... We
wage total war because we fight in the name of an idea... Stability
is for those older, burnt-out countries, not for the American
dynamo (Michael A. Ledeen, Freedom Chair holder at the American
Enterprise Institute [5]).
Other times, they are merely auditioning
for the part of the megalomaniac villain in the latest James
Bond movie.
The maximum amount of force can and should
be used as quickly as possible for psychological impact_to demonstrate
that the empire cannot be challenged with impunity... [W]e are
in the business of bringing down hostile governments and creating
governments favorable to us (Harvard Professor Stephen P. Rosen
[6]). Every ten years or so, the United States needs to pick
up some small crappy little country and throw it against the
wall, just to show the world we mean business (Michael A. Ledeen
[7]). [The US should] recognize obligations only when it's in
our interest (Under Secretary of State John R. Bolton [8]).
As Georgetown Professor John Ikenberry
argues [9], the radical shift in American power from hegemonic
to imperial requires that the "US break from the postwar
norms and institutions of the international order and arrogate
to itself the global role of setting standards." Unconstrained
by international law, Bush's America is thereby entitled to play
by the rules of its own making while challenging the right of
others to do likewise. Which is fine by the neocons, because
America is good and the rest of world, mostly, is not. In a case
of paranoiac exceptionalism, the Bush administration has signaled
its opposition to the Land Mine Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol, the
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, the Antiballistic Missile Treaty, the
International Criminal Court Treaty, the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, and the Biological Warfare Treaty.
Rejection of all things multilateral
is a cornerstone of the Bush doctrine. It is a grotesque magnification
of the traditional Republican leeriness toward international
obligations. Indifferent to the fact that the United Nations,
imperfect though it may be, is the only forum where the world's
poorest nations have a voice, Pat Buchanan (no Bushie he) fired
the opening salvo: "Should We Evict the UN?" It has
treated America and New York City like doormats long enough.
[10]
Though Buchanan may represent only a
fringe isolationist brand of right-wing thinking, his paranoia
has been loudly echoed by Bush doctrine devotees. Here are two
typical rants heard on the eve of the war. One is by Washington
Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, a former psychiatrist who
studied paranoia and now practices it: ... in the Iraq crisis,
the United Nations will sink once again into irrelevance. This
time it will not recover. And the world will be better off for
it. [11]
The other one is by Former Assistant
Defense Secretary Richard Perle, far and away the most eloquent
French-basher to own a summer house in France: Thank God for
the death of the UN. [12]
This uniquely American fondness for dissing
the UN is quite extraordinary. It is the height of hypocrisy,
for no country has had its interests served better by the UN
than the United States. And the arrogance. Remember the American
sneering over the rights of Angola, Cameroon, and Guinea to use
their rotations on the Security Council to pass judgment about
Iraq. (No such sneering when senators from the microscopic states
of Rhode Island or Delaware threaten to block a piece of legislation
on Capitol Hill.) As Dag Hammarskjold famously said, The UN was
not created to take humanity to heaven but to save it from hell.
The United Nations is imperfect because
it mirrors the world, with its mix of democracies and tyrannies.
But it is the only forum where humanity speaks as a whole. Except
for a few well-publicized disasters (Rwanda, Bosnia), the UN
has been remarkably effective. With an annual peacekeeping budget
that is inferior to those of the NYC Fire and Police departments,
the UN has brought peace and democracy in recent years to East
Timor, Namibia, El Salvador, Cambodia, and Mozambique [13]. It
has helped the US in Afghanistan and Haiti. American detractors
are quick to point to the Rwanda genocide, which the UN shamefully
sat out. They invariably omit to mention who blocked the Security
Council from getting involved: the United States.
There are many problems with America's
new imperial aspiration, none more serious than its inherent
unsustainability. A convergence of cultural, economic, military,
diplomatic, and dependency factors will doom this ambition. In
fact it will die a quick death. Briefly, here is why. First,
there is the biological argument: Imperium is not in America's
DNA. Why would a land of immigrants develop an "emigrating"
vocation to occupy foreign lands? Expatriation is unlikely ever
to become the ticket for career advancement it was in the days
of the Raj. It takes a vivid imagination to picture legions of
American educators, administrators, engineers, and businessmen
willing to relocate to far-flung lands whose languages they don't
speak, whose cultures they ignore, whose foods they detest, and
whose anti-American sentiments they can only look forward to.
Americans' idea of living with the enemy is to move to Paris.
Georgetown Professor Charles A. Kupchan
has argued that the European Union, with an economy the size
of America's, will be increasingly inclined to check its unbridled
power [14]. The combined GDP of Northeast Asia already exceeds,
and soon will eclipse, that of the United States. Both the US
trade and budget deficits are astronomical. Annual foreign purchases
of US assets exceed the budget of the Pentagon. (Picture this:
all GIs on foreign payroll.) For all the talk of hyperpower,
the US share of the world economy is roughly half of what it
was in 1950. Bush's unilateralism is likely to catalyze the coalition
of rival forces; precisely what it sought to prevent.
At least America has the bayonets! Its
military superiority is, indeed, overwhelming and likely to remain
so for at least a generation. Its battlefield dominance over
any potential enemy is something of which Queen Victoria could
only have dreamed. With this comes the power to punish and conquer;
and do little else. On the terrorist front, coordinated intelligence
and police action have proven far more effective than brute force.
Similarly, for all of America's vaunted military power, Osama
is still on the lam (as of this writing) and in Afghanistan little
more than Kabul is under control. Not to speak of Iraq, where
the world's only superpower is proving unable to stabilize a
nation of 25 million that has been crippled by twelve years of
economic sanctions. As Talleyrand once observed to Napoleon:
"You can do anything with a bayonet, Sire, except sit on
it."
While military strength has been oversold,
diplomacy has suffered from neglect. Actually, ineptitude might
be a better word. Casting aspersions on the United Nations while
bribing and threatening its weaker members backfired miserably
and dashed American hopes for a resolution authorizing war. Insulting
and intimidating recalcitrant friends and allies, a signature
move from the Bush playbook, proved spectacularly counterproductive.
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice's exhortation, "Punish
France, ignore Germany, forgive Russia," served only the
purpose of showing America's inability to do even just that.
After Bush was spotted at the "irrelevant" UN in Fall
2003, hat in hand, it was the Europeans' turn to ponder whether
to punish, ignore, or forgive America.
Bad habits die hard. Berating Turkey's
democratic leaders for not listening more closely to their generals
was a throwback to the Cold War, when a friendly government was
defined as a military junta that took its orders from Washington.
Over 95 percent of Turks opposed the war; and yet Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz had the audacity to blame the Turkish
military for not playing "the strong leadership role"
that was expected of it (codeword for "putting a gun to
the head of democratically elected Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan"). Mind you that Wolfowitz was then the loudest
democracy promoter in neocon circles. Perhaps the decibels were
needed to cover up the hum of insincerity.
America is the mightiest nation the world
has ever known; vastly more powerful than Britain at the zenith
of its empire. Is it really? If power is measured not in weaponry
counts but, more usefully, in the ability to achieve one's objectives,
America can only envy British power. Indeed, President Bush needs
the cooperation of the world far more than Queen Victoria ever
did. Fewer and fewer countries even bother to listen to US diktats
any more. (If you are not convinced, read up on the pathetic
results of the US campaign to cut off aid to states supporting
the International Criminal Court.) This year's events proved
that Turkey has learned to say no. With the end of the Cold War,
France and Germany are terminally beyond US retaliatory reach_you
can tell from the invectives: always a sure sign of weakness.
In the war on terror, the US desperately needs the cooperation
of such heavyweights as Pakistan, Indonesia, and India. As for
China, it is simply too big to be bossed around. Add to this
the interdependencies created by globalization, and the picture
of a latter-day Gulliver tied down by Lilliputs begins to emerge.
As the deputy director of the French Institute for International
Relations, Dominique Moisi, puts it, ... nothing in the world
can be done without the United States. And the multiplicity of
actors means that there is very little the United States can
achieve alone. [15]
The dean of Harvard's Kennedy School
of Government, Joseph S. Nye Jr, is right on target when he identifies
soft power, ie, "the ability to get what you want by attracting
and persuading others to adopt your goals," as a key component
of any successful US foreign policy [16]. This echoes Kissinger's
dictum that the test of history for the United States will be
its ability to convert its power into international consensus.
Bush's foreign policy has been a high-octane
mix of bellicosity and diplomatic ineptitude. It has also been
remarkably "un-American." The United States has always
been better at persuasion than coercion. Attraction for its ideas
and values, not its military strength, has been the root of its
success. Tolerance, generosity, freedom, courage, energy, and
optimism are the vocabulary of America's greatness. Paranoia,
selfishness, and fear are not.
GIVE WAR A CHANCE
On the heels of the Afghan campaign,
an invasion that drew its legitimacy from the Taliban's harboring
of al Qaeda, the Bush administration shifted its priorities to
effect regime change in Iraq. On March 20, 2003, with no UN support
and widespread opposition worldwide, a US-led coalition attacked
Iraq. On May 1, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed
Forces proudly donned a flight suit in San Diego harbor, bravely
landed on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln thirty miles offshore,
and triumphantly declared the end of major combat operations.
Bush had won the war.
On September 21, 2003, in a public forum
at the New School, Paul Wolfowitz restated the three official
reasons for the invasion [17]: Saddam's weapons of mass destruction
(WMD); his connection to international terrorism; and the moral
imperative of replacing a brutal dictatorship by a civil democracy
that would serve as a model for the Middle East.
Other motives were suggested in the media.
One of them, straight out of Comedy Central, was the desire to
"save the UN." Yeah, so deep was Bush's affection toward
the world body that he would go to war to save it from irrelevance.
Never mind the anticipatory obituaries of the UN gleefuly prepared
by Bush's neocon courtiers right before the war. The New York
Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman had another theory: therapeutic
violence. The "real reason" for this war, which was
never stated, was that after 9/11 America needed to hit someone
in the Arab-Muslim world. Smashing Saudi Arabia or Syria would
have been fine. But we hit Saddam for one simple reason: because
we could... [18]
For the United States to act on a threat
preemptively (or, in the case of Iraq, preventively) required
a new national security doctrine. Aware of this, on September
20, 2002, the Bush administration articulated the need to act
against "emerging threats before they are fully formed"
in its new National Security Strategy [19]. The advocacy of anticipatory
self-defense is nothing short of a revolution in US foreign policy.
Yale History Professor John L. Gaddis calls it "the most
important reformulation of US grand strategy in over half-a-century."
Recent presidents considered_and swiftly rejected_preemptive
attacks, following Truman's advice that "you don't prevent
anything by war... except peace." The doctrine flies in
the face of international and US law. As Yale Law Professor Bruce
Ackerman points out [20], [The US Constitution] declares that
treaties approved by the Senate are the "supreme Law of
the Land" and it explicitly requires the president to "take
care that the laws be faithfully executed." The UN Charter
is a solemn treaty overwhelmingly ratified by the Senate in the
aftermath of World War II.
It just so happens that the UN Charter
explicitly prohibits preemptive (let alone preventive) strikes,
except in cases of immediate self-defense. For this reason, Condi
Rice's National Security Strategy required at the very least
new legislation from Capitol Hill. Instead, the US Congress turned
a blind eye and swallowed the Strategy wholesale.
Aside from legal considerations, what
are the practical ramifications of the Strategy? It is obviously
a major destabilizing factor for dueling countries, eg, India
vs Pakistan or China vs Taiwan. If X feels threatened by Y, it
might be tempted by the use of preemptive self-defense. This
alone might cause Y to feel threatened by X and, in turn, consider
a preemptive strike on X. But, of course, this would only add
to X's original mistrust, thus fueling a self-reinforcing feedback
loop of mutual suspicion. The Strategy also encourages dictatorships
everywhere to follow the North Korea model and speed up the development
of nuclear weapons in order to deter a US invasion.
As Ackerman reminds us, the limited doctrine
of self-defense enshrined in traditional law goes back to the
Nuremberg trials, whose main focus was not, as is commonly believed,
the prosecution of genocide but the condemnation of aggressive
wars. The classic case of preventive warfare is Pearl Harbor.
Japan was under a US-imposed oil embargo in 1941 and felt threatened.
Was it thus justified in attacking the United States? The UN
Charter says no. The National Security Strategy says yes.
No one disputes the intuitive appeal
of preemption: Hit 'em before they hit you. But how sure are
you they have it in for you? What if you attack them because
of a threat of WMD only to discover later that they have no such
weapons? (Not that this would ever happen to us, of course.)
Bush's solution to this conundrum_and to the Pearl Harbor paradox_is
the sort of exceptionalism that does not even pass the laugh-test.
It goes like this. The risks of error are, indeed, high enough
that preemption should be the exclusive right of the good guys
(that's us). The National Security Strategy puts it more delicately
[19]: ... nations [should not] use preemption as a pretext for
aggression.
Translation: We preempt; you don't. Mercifully,
the document reassures the world that we can be trusted to preempt
in moderation. The United States will not use force in all cases
to preempt emerging threats.
Why not in all cases? Why such lily-livered
restraint? Really, who writes this sort of thing: an assembly
of fifth-graders? University of Chicago History Professor Bruce
Cumings is kinder: "[the logic] would flunk even a freshman
class."
Which brings us back to Iraq. The Strategy
had no legal value, so what did the law say? International lawyers
are unanimous [21]: The war was illegal. In no way did UN Resolution
1441 [36] or any of its predecessors give legal authority for
an attack on Iraq. Those who disagree are about as numerous as
the WMD buried in Saddam's backyard.
Legalism, shmegalism! Didn't Tony Blair
speak of WMD deployments on 45 minutes' notice? Didn't Condi
Rice famously suggest that the smoking gun might come in the
shape of a mushroom cloud? Don't talk to us about legalism!
CONJURING UP THREATS
Hyperventilating Tony and Condi blowing
hot air again. The WMD argument has been shattered. After months
of scouring the country for WMD at a cost of $300 million, the
1,400-strong Iraq Survey Group has come up empty-handed. With
this appalling fiasco, Bush has unwittingly validated the work
of Hans Blix's UN weapons inspection team, which his cabinet
had gleefully ridiculed before the war. One could almost feel
sorry for the president. Iraq may well have been one of only
two countries on earth entirely free of WMD; and that is the
one he chose to invade! I guess the Vatican was lucky.
Intelligence analysts and Iraqi defectors
warned the administration of the existence of WMD but their evidence
never rose above the level of hearsay and wishful thinking. CIA
and State remained so unconvinced that the Defense Department
decided to set up its own intelligence shop (separate from DIA),
the Office of Special Plans. According to The New Yorker's Seymour
M. Hersh (the reporter who broke the My Lai story), Special Plans
cherry-picked intelligence to support Cheney and Rumsfeld's case
for war [22]. None of the alarming evidence these intelligence
amateurs gathered convinced anyone at the CIA. It did convince
the president, however. With CIA Director George Tenet still
fighting for his job after his fine performance on 9/11, traditional
intelligence agencies rolled over and let the (neo)con artists
at Special Plans run the show. Yet Bush could not say he had
not heard divergent opinions:
[UN Sanctions] have worked. He [Saddam]
has not developed any significant capability with respect to
weapons of mass destruction (Secretary of State Colin Powell,
2/24/01). I don't think that Iraq is especially eager in the
biological and chemical area to produce such weapons for storage
(Former UNSCOM chief, Rolf Ekeus, 3/00). When I left Iraq in
1998... the [nuclear] infrastructure and facilities had been
100% eliminated. There's no debate about that. All of their instruments
and facilities had been destroyed. The weapons design facility
had been destroyed. The production equipment had been hunted
down and destroyed (Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter,
9/02).
Britain compiled a "dossier"
that led Tony Blair to declare the level of threat "serious
and current." And yet his own chief of staff, Jonathan Powell,
wrote in an email: The dossier does nothing to demonstrate a
threat, let alone an imminent threat. [23]
According to Ha'aretz columnist Gideon
Levy, Israel's previous director of Military Intelligence, Amos
Malka, declared in Fall 2002 that "he was more concerned
about traffic accidents" in Israel than WMD in Iraq [24].
As we all know now, the terrorist threat from Iraq was equally
nonexistent (today, of course, thanks to Bush, it is a different
story). A review of the prewar intelligence revealed an astonishing
level of doubt and uncertainty. The Nation's David Corn has revealed
that these doubts were acknowledged by no less than a former
deputy CIA director, the Republican and Democratic leaders of
the House intelligence committee, the chief weapons hunter, and
the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee [25]. And yet
Bush had no compunction about saying: You can't distinguish between
al Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the war on terror (George
W. Bush, 09/02 [26]). We've learned that Iraq has trained al-Qaeda
members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases... Alliance
with terrorists could allow the Iraqi regime to attack America
without leaving any fingerprints (George W. Bush, 10/7/03 [27]).
It worked. In August 2003, up to 82%
of Americans believed that Saddam provided assistance to Osama
bin Laden's terrorist network, and 69% of them found it likely
that Saddam was "personally involved" in 9/11 [28].
(All those Elvis sightings are beginning to make sense, aren't
they?) Was it the trauma of 9/11 that allowed such brainwashing
to take place in a vacuum of media criticism? What happened to
the proud institutions that gave us the Pentagon Papers and the
Watergate investigations? Why such abject subservience of the
national media to the powers in Washington? Why such spinelessness?
A story for another day.
The obvious question: Why would the Bush
administration choose to humiliate Blix and his team, cherry-pick
intelligence, hype the threat of WMD, and dream up imaginary
Saddam-al Qaeda links? The Rumsfeld outburst mentioned earlier
holds the answer. Regime change in Iraq was high on the neocon
agenda throughout the nineties. After 9/11 Bush was sold on the
idea. The first indication that he would take us to war regardless
of the outcome of any future weapons inspections came in March
2002 [29]. Referring to Saddam, Bush bellowed to a group of senators:
"We're taking him out!" Dispelling any doubt about
the president's intentions, Cheney reiterated the same message
shortly after. The decision having been made, the only job left
was to sell it to the public. Since remaking the Middle East
to conform to Bush's imperial dreams was likely to sell as briskly
as an Edsel, the White House decided to play to 9/11 anxieties
instead; hence, the WMD threat, terror links, etc. The truth
is that for reasons that have a lot to do with the US government
bureaucracy, we settled on the one issue that everyone could
agree on, which was weapons of mass destruction, as the core
reason (Paul Wolfowitz [30]).
Britain's insistence in Fall 2002 on
going to the UN and getting Resolution 1441 passed was welcome
by the US as a convenient way of appearing conciliatory while
buying time for a military assault not yet ready for launch.
Richard Perle has recently revealed that a last-ditch attempt
by Iraqi officials to avoid military confrontation in March 2003
was rebuffed by the US [31]. Nothing was to stand in the way
of war.
Not only was Bush determined to go to
war regardless of the sideshow at the UN, he literally rushed
into it. The evidence is abundant and incontrovertible. The UN
weapons inspection team reported progress and protested its dismissal
in March 2003. With hindsight it did an excellent job in not
finding what did not exist. A British draft of a UN resolution
authorizing war was certain to garner at least 10 votes (enough
to pass), thus leaving France with the dreaded option of vetoing
it. As Clinton's former Assistant Secretary of State James P.
Rubin explains [32], Merely offering several more weeks would
likely have yielded ten votes for the British resolution, but
Bush refused.
Rubin also refutes the canard that France
forced Bush into war by its uncompromising refusal to entertain
a military outcome. ... Chirac would have gone along with the
use of force if a nine-month schedule had been set at the beginning.
Nine extra months? You must surely be
joking! Now that we know how close we came to nuclear annihilation
at the hands of Saddam, blessed be Bush's soul for ignoring Chirac's
craven advice...
The White House's burning desire to attack
Iraq required a new language of certitude and foreboding. Public
support for the war might not have survived a candid presentation
of the available intelligence, based as it was on conflicting
reports, dubious testimonies by Iraqi defectors, plagiarized
PhD theses, forged documentation of uranium sales, misidentification
of aluminum tubes, etc. The lack of any smoking gun did not help
either. Faced with this conundrum, the White House pulled out
all the stops and launched what may go down in history as the
most egregious, guileful, sedulous, systematic campaign of lies
ever orchestrated by a US administration. There we have it, the
hype, the fabricated trepidation, the faked certainty of the
uncertain:
Simply stated, there is no doubt that
Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction (Dick Cheney,
8/26/02). There is no doubt that [Saddam] has chemical weapons
stocks (Colin Powell, 9/8/02). Intelligence gathered by this
and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues
to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised
(George W. Bush, 3/17/03). Well, there is no question that we
have evidence and information that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction,
biological and chemical particularly... (Former White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer, 3/21/03). There is no doubt that the regime of
Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass destruction, (Head of
US Central Command Gen. Tommy Franks, 3/22/03). I have no doubt
we're going to find big stores of weapons of mass destruction
(Defense Policy Board member, Kenneth Adelman, 3/23/03). I'm
absolutely sure that there are weapons of mass destruction there
and the evidence will be forthcoming. We're just getting it just
now (Colin Powell, 5/4/03). I have absolutely no doubt at all
about the existence of weapons of mass destruction (Tony Blair,
5/29/03).
Never in the field of human conflict
was so much bunk served by so few to so many.
While no terrorist link between Saddam
and Osama has been established, unfortunately the same cannot
be said of the US government and the Taliban. This is the story
of an intrepid Texan congressman named Charlie Wilson and a belly-dancer,
former Miss World contender, named Joanne Herring, convincing
the US government to arm the Afghan Mujahideen with Stinger anti-aircraft
missiles to help them defeat the Russians [33]. The sequel, entitled
"freedom fighter today, terrorist tomorrow," is about
the most spectacular case of blowback the US has ever suffered,
featuring a certain Osama bin Laden in the role of the snake
that we thought was a pet. Meanwhile, Bush's obsession with Saddam
led him to drop the ball in Afghanistan and move the war on terror
to the back burner.
Another story, less well known but just
as riveting, is the Bush administration's bestowing $43 million
on the Taliban just a few months before 9/11. Those nasty hand
choppers might be reviled for their enslavement of women, their
theocratic subjugation of men, their destruction of the Bamiyan
Buddhas, and their virulent brand of anti-Americanism. But, you
see, the Taliban frown on drugs as much as Bush fancied them
in his youth; and they are just so much better at drug law enforcement
than our own DEA (they do chop hands after all). So, what more
natural than for Colin Powell to declare in May 2001 that the
US would reward their efficiency by becoming the single largest
sponsor of the Taliban? Savor, and shudder at, Robert Scheer's
prescient words in the Los Angeles Times [34]: The Taliban may
suddenly be the dream regime of our own drug war zealots, but
in the end this alliance will prove a costly failure. Our long
sad history of signing up dictators in the war on drugs demonstrates
the futility of building a foreign policy on a domestic obsession.
WITH FRIENDS LIKE US
No evidence of WMD. Ditto with terror
links. Who cares? Isn't Iraq better off now? If the pursuit of
democracy in a land long oppressed by tyrants is not a noble
cause, then what is?
Time to give that noble cause a closer
look. Wolfowitz advanced three reasons for the war: The first
two are shot; the third's the charm. With Saddam gone and the
US in control, democracy shall now spread across the region like
wildfire and the swamps of terror shall be drained. Hallelujah!
Of course, it is not too reassuring that the prophets who today
have "no doubt" about the bright future of Iraq are
the same geniuses who yesterday had "no doubt" about
the existence of WMD. The problems facing the US in Iraq are
daunting: Is Iraq viable as a single unified nation? How does
one go redistributing among tribal and religious groups power
traditionally held by the 16% Sunni minority while avoiding a
civil war? These are a few in a long list of urgent questions.
To stabilize Iraq, let alone transform it into a liberal democracy,
would be a Herculean task for the United Nations. For the US
it is simply hopeless. In the plains of Mesopotamia, America
will always be the problem, not the solution. The problem in
question is foremost one of credibility. In Iraq, the US has
none.
For starters, Iraqis will remember that
democracy was also promised to Kuwait in 1991, and we all know
how well that went. The New York Times columnist Nicholas D.
Kristof, not a man given to cynicism, smells a rat [35]: ...
the prattle about creating a democratic model on the Tigris is
just a shrewd White House marketing attempt to bait and switch.
If what Wolfowitz told Vanity Fair was
true and, indeed, democracy and human rights were preeminent
American concerns, then why did the US before the war put no
pressure on Saddam to release political prisoners, allow inspections
by ICRC officials, or supply the UN with lists of missing individuals?
If NATO could threaten Milosevic over humanitarian considerations,
why could the US not threaten Saddam on the same grounds? UN
Resolution 1441 addresses only the issue of UNMOVIC and IAEA
access to weapons sites in Iraq; not a word about human rights
in its decisions [36]. There is no merit to the argument that
Russia and China might have vetoed any UN resolution referring
to human rights. For one thing, neither of them vetoed Resolution
688, which addressed the plight of the Kurds in 1991. But even
if they did this time around, so what? The United States showed
that it was willing to bypass the UN anyway. The issue of credibility
goes far beyond missed opportunities, however. There are the
intentions and then there is the history, the nefarious history
of American involvement in Iraq.
First, the intentions. Apart from the
Bush doctrinaires, few have clamored more loudly for a remaking
of the Middle East along progressive lines than liberal columnist
Thomas Friedman. (The pro-war camp cuts right through party lines.)
His heartfelt longing for Iraqi democracy is unassailable; at
least on the off days when he is not calling for a dictatorship:
... the best of all worlds: an iron-fisted Iraqi junta without
Saddam Hussein. [37]
That was in the aftermath of Desert Storm.
In early 2003, while keeping the welfare of Iraqis close to this
heart, Friedman still displayed his legendary knack for cutting
through the smarmy sentimentality of naive do-gooders. ... a
war for oil? My short answer is yes. Any war we launch in Iraq
will certainly be_in part_about oil. To deny that is laughable.
[38]
Refreshing straight talk brought to you
100% sarcasm-free: The man actually approves. Now, why in the
world would any Iraqi reading Friedman doubt the purity of American
intentions? And keep in mind that this is not even one of those
megalomaniac Bushies speaking but rather a pillar of the liberal
establishment.
Another chink in the intentional argument
is the widely shared belief that the US would never allow a democracy
to take root if it were anti-American. The reality must be faced:
A true democracy in Iraq today would almost certainly be anti-American.
Does anyone in Washington seriously believe that a US promise
not to mess with such an outcome would be taken seriously by
anyone in the region? Of course, not. Unfortunately, Iraqi politicians
know that, too; therefore, they would be less than impressed
by a reassurance of noninterference coming from someone who they
know full well does not even believe that his own reassurance
is credible. A dialogue of the deaf.
And now, as promised, the history. Sadly,
the United States has had a hand in virtually all of the calamities
that have befallen Iraq in the last 40 years. The CIA funded
the 1963 coup that brought the Ba'ath party to power and paved
the way for Saddam's bloody takeover in 1979. In late 1983, Donald
Rumsfeld, then President Reagan's special Mideast envoy, flew
to Baghdad to assure Saddam of US support in the Iran-Iraq war
(Washington's favorite spectator war). In the mid-eighties, State
Department reports of Iraq's daily use of chemical weapons on
Iranian troops did nothing to dent Saddam's image in the White
House as our bulwark against Iran, the enemy du jour. That Iraq
was a true ally was demonstrated in May 1987, when an Iraqi attack
on the USS Stark killed 37 American sailors. Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger immediately threatened Iran (no, this is not
a typo), while the US quickly accepted an apology from Saddam.
In March 1988, Saddam's forces killed over 5,000 Kurdish civilians
by poison gas in Halabja. Repelled by this atrocity, the US Senate
passed sweeping sanctions against Iraq. Reagan's fierce opposition
killed the bill in the House. For good measure, his administration
granted Iraq 65 licenses for dual-use technology exports in the
weeks following the attack [39]. A year later, the White House
provided Saddam with a billion-dollar loan [40]. Now, that's
a friend for you.
Alas, the Washington-Baghdad lovefest
did not last. On August 2, 1990, Saddam foolishly sent his tanks
rolling into Kuwait. What gassing civilians, invading Iran, and
slaughtering political opponents could not do, Saddam's designs
on Kuwaiti oil did. He had crossed the red line. With an eloquence
to rival his son's, Bush Sr declared three days later: "This
will not stand. This will not stand, this aggression against
Kuwait." On January 16, 1991, his spokesman Marlin Fitzwater
proudly announced, "The liberation of Kuwait has begun."
To save anyone the embarrassment of taking the word liberation
too seriously, Secretary of State James Baker had this pithy
line: "It's about jobs, jobs, jobs!"
At the end of the conflict, the United
States committed one of the most shameful betrayals in modern
times [41]. Bush Sr encouraged Kurdish and Shi'ite uprisings,
only to withdraw US support at the last moment and allow Saddam
to slaughter as many as 100,000 people. Thomas Friedman had to
see the "the mass graves and the true extent of Saddam's
genocidal evil" to find justification for the war [18].
You mean to say, Mr. Friedman, you didn't know? You did not know
that Saddam did the bulk of his butchering while enjoying full
US support. To paraphrase FDR, Saddam was a son of a bitch, but
he was our son of a bitch. We created this monster. If you want
to know who's to blame for all this, we are (Stephen D. Bryen,
TIME interview [42]).
Who is this Stephen Bryen to accuse the
US of creating the monster of Baghdad? Some anti-American pinko
commie bastard? Actually, Reagan's Deputy Under Secretary of
Defense.
If that were not enough, America bestowed
other gifts on poor Iraqi citizens, no doubt cementing enduring
gratitude. A 12-year regime of sanctions crippled an impoverished
nation while doing nothing to hurt Saddam or threaten his grip
on power. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization reported that
sanctions had caused the deaths of 567,000 children by 1995 [43].
UNICEF estimated that half a million children under the age of
five had died as a result of sanctions [44]. Even a skeptic such
as Columbia Professor Richard Garfield conceded a minimum of
at least 150,000 excess deaths among young children [45]. UNICEF
senior representative in Iraq, Anupama Rao Singh, reported on
March 20, 2000 that mortality rates for young children had more
than doubled by 1994. (As Garfield pointed out, not even World
War II produced similar increases in child mortality.) By 1999,
13 percent of all Iraqi children were dead before their 5th birthday,
mostly from contaminated water [46]. As John Pilger wrote in
The Guardian on March 4, 2000 [47], Chlorine, that universal
guardian of safe water, has been blocked by the Sanctions Committee.
In 1990, an Iraqi infant with dysentery stood a one in 600 chance
of dying. This is now one in 50.
In early 2001, over the strenuous objection
of health agencies worldwide, the Bush administration placed
holds on $280 million worth of medical supplies such as vaccines
against infant hepatitis, tetanus, and diphtheria for fear of
dual use (a fear which biological weapons experts in Europe scoffed
at). Only in March 2001, when the Washington Post and Reuters
began to run stories about it, did the US relent and lift the
holds. (Read Joy Gordon's chilling account in Harper's Magazine
for the gory details [46].) Admittedly, the Clinton administration
was no less shameful in its defense of the status quo. Here is
a classic exchange on CBS's 60 Minutes between Lesley Stahl and
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright (December 5, 1996):
Stahl: We have heard that half a million
children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in
Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it? Albright: I
think this is a very hard choice, but the price_we think the
price is worth it.
The US rebuffed repeated efforts by UN
Security Council members to amend the sanctions regime. If the
proposed alternatives were found wanting, wasn't it incumbent
upon the US and the UK to find better ones? They never even tried.
At least not until 2001, when international pressure became too
strong and a "smart sanctions" initiative (though barely
less punitive) was introduced by the British_only to be scuttled
by the Russians [48]. The sanctions hurt the people of Iraq while
strengthening the grip of its ruling elite. Tellingly, Saddam's
numerous palaces survived years of US-British strikes. The American
position of keeping the status quo while blaming Saddam for all
of Iraq's woes and doing nothing to hurt him was unconscionable.
Few Iraqis will forgive, let alone forget, their grievous, unnecessary
suffering.
The purpose of this brief journey through
the sorrowful history of Iraq was not to criticize US policy
(which, in fact, deserves even more criticism than this account
suggests). It was to make the point that, whenever Bush talks
about helping Iraq, its citizens can only laugh; and then cry.
WHY DO THEY HATE US?
Iraq is only the tip of the iceberg.
A recent Pew survey indicates that a full 6% of Egyptians and
1% of Jordanians hold a favorable view of the US: some gratitude
from the second and fourth largest recipients of US foreign aid!
In Pakistan a whopping 2% of the public welcomes the spread of
American ideas and customs [49] [50].
"Why do they hate us?" has
been the post-9/11 question par excellence. Its distinct resonance
comes from its beguiling ambiguity. Who are they? The terrorists?
But then why didn't we hear the same question after the Oklahoma
City bombing? Perhaps they are the Muslims or the Arabs or any
of those scary, dark-skinned bogeymen who haunt the imagery of
right-wing radio talk shows. They are mired in poverty and oppression
and spend every waking hour envying our wealth and freedoms.
Or maybe only our wealth. President Bush, an expert on both subjects,
assures us it is our freedoms they actually hate. Being the devilishly
witty man that he is, the freedom he has in mind must surely
be that of detaining Muslim teenagers in Guantanamo Bay indefinitely
without charge, in contravention of basic international law.
Finer connoisseurs of human nature have
suggested that Arab anti-Americanism stems from a scapegoating
campaign meant to divert the people's attention from their own
governments' failings. Its motto: Praise your leader for all
that is good; blame America for all that is bad. After all, the
scapegoat theory goes, isn't US policy unabashedly, overwhelmingly,
ridiculously pro-Muslim? (Hint for those who are having trouble
with this homework exercise: Kuwait, Bosnia, Kosovo.) Were it
not for decades of manipulation at the hands of shameless leaders,
the Arabs would know how good we are.
They would also know how stupid we are.
For what else would you call people who give billions in financial
assistance to Arab leaders only so that they can better whip
their people into an anti-American frenzy? Why didn't the scapegoat
theorists tell us earlier? If only we'd known! Of course, one
may criticize al-Jazeera for lacking American-style impartiality,
be it the fairness and balance of Fox News or the cool objectivity
of Clear Channel. But to think that the Qatar-based TV news network
is just a vehicle of power intended to keep the restless Arab
masses from turning against their governments is borderline delusional.
This is not to say that transference of self-pity into loathing
of others might not play a role. (After all, John Ashcroft does
it all the time.) But to claim that it is the whole story suggests
that Arabs in dozens of nations, thousands of miles apart, suffer
from some sort of collective mental disorder: a slur that does
not even rise to the level of an idea.
Much of the Arab world seems frozen in
time, torn between the corrupt remnants of pan-Arab nationalist
movements and the siren call of Islamic "liberation"
theology. This Hobbesian choice leads some Western observers
to comment, rather disingenuously, "Arabs give us hell for
the hell they're in, but they have only themselves to blame."
The truth is, there is plenty of blame to go around. Arabs may
have dug the hole they are in, but the West has sealed the top
and made sure there is no way out. Whose fault is it if, in the
year the novelist Naguib Mahfouz won the Nobel Prize, Egypt published
only 300 books but ten times as many thirty years earlier? Probably
Egypt's. But whose fault is it if Mubarak is a despot whose jails
are teeming with political prisoners? Fewer fingers would point
at the US if its government did not prop up the Egyptian leader
to the tune of $2 billion a year.
Westerners like to aver, "Better
a corrupt autocrat friendly to us than an Islamist in charge."
But hasn't Turkey put to rest the notion that all Islamists are
incorrigibly theocratic? While far from ideal, Iran offers a
mix of Islamic and democratic governance, with genuine elections
and a painful but real public debate, that at least offers a
glimmer of hope for the future and is, in so many ways, preferable
to Egypt's ossified autocracy and Saudi Arabia's feudal monarchy.
A leading Middle East scholar, Gilles Kepel, contends that radical
Islamism, having failed miserably wherever it has been tried
(Sudan, Iran, Afghanistan), is actually in decline [51]. So,
yes, terrorism is a deadly serious threat, but is the current
hysteria fully justified? New Republic editor Paul Berman's attempt
to connect Islamism and Nazism is an intellectually interesting
panic-inducing exercise; though little more insightful than the
zoologist's observation that mice and elephants all have four
legs [52]. This is the sort of fear-mongering that leads the
US to choose the vilest secular dictatorship over any sort of
Islamic government.
Fortunately, the current administration
has a more balanced view of things. It offsets its allergy to
Muslim fundamentalism with an exquisite tenderness toward all
things Christian; especially sermons that blame gays and feminists
for the tragedy of 9/11 [53] or military harangues that extol
the superiority of the Christian god [54].
Supporting despotic regimes often has
much to do with oil. It is longstanding US policy to view the
free and stable flow of oil in the Persian Gulf as a vital interest
of the United States. In a State of the Union address, the president
declared: Let our position be absolutely clear: An attempt by
any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf region
will be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the
United States of America, and such an assault will be repelled
by any means necessary, including military force.
The president was Jimmy Carter and the
year was 1980 [55]. (Let us only hope the Chinese never declare
the wood-rich American Rockies part of their vital interests.)
It is a common misconception to read in US policy a crass pretext
for an oil grab. The objective was_and still is_to prevent outside
forces from controlling oil prices. (In Jimmy Carter's English,
the word 'outside' means non-American.) Being home to the world's
second largest oil reserves, Iraq has an inordinate potential
to influence oil prices.
If coveting thy neighbor's oil were not
bad enough, the US has made a habit of supporting bloody dictatorships
in the region. Saddam's was only one of several. Few in Iran
have forgotten how their fledgling democracy under Mohammed Mossadegh
was crushed by the CIA in 1953 and replaced by the Shah's police
state. This was the start of a chain reaction that takes us all
the way to today's crisis in a perfect illustration of the great
Law of Unintended Consequences.
<1.British> oil interests threatened
by Mossadegh; Mossadegh replaced by Shah in CIA-led coup. <2.Shah>
replaced by Ayatollah; Ayatollah threatened by Saddam the Good
with full US support. <3.Saddam> the Good replaced by Saddam
the Bad (after Kuwaiti oil grab); Saddam the Bad defeated by
US forces.
Many of the Arab world's grievances against
Europe and America are genuine and legitimate. Colonizers rarely
endear themselves to their subjects and European colonization
was no exception. As a parting gift, Europe broke up vast chunks
of the Arab world into a jumble of artificial states. The mess
is yet to be sorted out. The Arabs' despair at America is more
present and serious. It feeds on three perceptions:
US support of despised Arab autocracies.
Washington's unwillingness to actualize an equitable solution
to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The humiliation of what
was once the world's preeminent civilization at the hands of
a giant rubbing its superpower status in its face.
Occupation humiliates and humiliation
motivates. The picture of an Abrams tank rolling down Baghdad
is the best recruiting tool bin Laden could ever hope for. (Obviously,
Bush has the bin Laden vote locked up in '04.) US arrogance_blind
though it may be at times_does not help either. Here is again
America's most influential foreign affairs columnist at his patronizing
best [56]: We just adopted a baby called Baghdad_and this is
no time for the parents to get a divorce. Because raising that
baby, in the neighborhood it lives in, is going to be a mammoth
task (Thomas L. Friedman, 5/4/03).
If America's elite is so damn supercilious
to think it can "raise" the inhabitants of the world's
oldest civilization, it will come out of the experience battered
and humbled. This colonizing impulse is key to this discussion
and deserves a little detour.
Empire is back in vogue. The brilliant
colonial apologist Niall Ferguson makes a compelling case that
taking up the White Man's burden was a magnificent gift to the
world [57]. (I am always struck by the fact_no doubt a coincidence_that
it is always the colonizer, not the colonized, who gushes over
the magnificent gift.) The revisionists' arguments are quantitative
and utilitarian; hence their persuasive power. For example, they
explain that African-Americans are richer, healthier, and live
longer than black Africans (all true); therefore, slavery was
a good thing. Well, they do not actually say that, but their
methodology not only allows such a conclusion, it actually makes
it inescapable.
India's superb universities, its vibrant
democracy, its extensive railway network, even the great cities
of Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras, are all byproducts of the British
conquest. Ferguson does not simply call them positive, happy,
or even wonderful consequences of colonization_though they might
well be all of these. He actually uses these achievements retroactively
to justify the conquest itself. His logic is flawed in at least
two major ways. To begin with, we know that the Brits did not
conquer India in order to build universities, railroads, and
cities, but, rather, to expand trade. In justifying an enterprise,
intentions do matter. There is also this little thing called
freedom. By Ferguson's thesis, it would be quite all right for
Bill Gates to kidnap poor children in Sri Lanka, since they would
be better fed and better educated in his hometown of Redmond.
Or perhaps, for similar reasons, we could have a law that requires
poor American parents to give up their kids for adoption. In
fact, why not pay Mexican immigrants working at McDonald's only
half-wages? They would still be much better off than in Mexico,
and McDonald's would thus be able to lower the cost of a Big
Mac, which would help everyone. Niall Ferguson's brilliant mind
opens up all sorts of exciting possibilities.
The revisionists privilege hard variables,
such as literacy, health, wealth, and property laws, over such
soft, subjective, quaint notions as humiliation, deculturation,
discrimination, degradation, servitude, respect, and freedom.
And actually, come to think of it, the economic argument is not
all that convincing, anyway. In 1750, India's share of the world's
GDP was 25 percent. In 1900, it had fallen to 1.7 percent. But
by then, of course, it had cricket.
If you naively thought, as I did, that
one of the greatest moral achievements of the last half-century
was the universal, irreversible recognition that colonization
was on the whole a ghastly affair, then think again. Lord Curzon's
judgment that the British empire was "under Providence,
the greatest instrument for good the world has seen" has
gone full circle from serious, to farcical, back to serious.
I guess it is only a matter of time before we hear again about
the glory of getting the trains to run on time. Scary.
The US should resist the temptation to
take up the White Man's burden again. Past imperial ambitions
have all been tainted by phenomenal amounts of arrogance. Bush's
Iraqi adventure is proving to be no different. America's racist
past should also invite an extra dose of humility and restraint.
We have learned that dropping bombs on other people's heads for
their own good is not always the wisest course. The US failed
to save Vietnam from communism; and even that required two million
dead. Fighting in self-defense is one thing; to do so in the
name of educating the "natives" about one's superior
ways stinks to the heavens. This is a lose-lose proposition:
In trying to save others' souls, the US risks losing its own.
A JUST WAR?
What if Bush fought a just war for the
wrong reasons? So he lied to our faces, concealed his true motives,
conjured up imaginary threats, tricked us into a war under false
pretense. But does this necessarily rule out the morality of
the war? To rescue a man from a lake with the sole intent of
stealing his wallet is wrong but still better than to let him
drown. No one with a conscience can bemoan the fall of Saddam.
How does Bush's war fare by the standards of just war theory?
Not well. I have covered some of this
ground already; for example, the war violated international law
and it was anything but a solution of last resort. Just war theory
also asks: Were the intentions right? Not an easy question. Hell
is, as we know, paved with good intentions; add to this my rescuer-robber
example, and it is easy to reply: Who cares? While imputing good
intentions to the likes of Rumsfeld or Cheney would be the height
of naivete (the latter being, coincidentally, the former CEO
of Halliburton, the lucky beneficiary of a no-bid engineering
contract in Iraq), others in the Bush entourage may have been
motivated by a genuine desire to help the Middle East break out
of its cycle of violence and despair. Before falling into rapture
over their purity of heart, however, one must ask: How can well-intentioned
people lie with abandon, coddle dictators, and display such shocking
indifference toward the sort of horrors seen in Africa?
A just war requires both a just cause
and a reasonable chance of success. Since the "causes"
stated by the administration changed so often, one must be ready,
for the sake of argument, to give Bush the benefit of the doubt
and assume that the cause was bringing civil democracy to Iraq.
Indeed, since the WMD threat was a farce, any other possible
cause, say, Friedman's iron-fisted junta, can be dismissed peremptorily
as unjust. The problem is that transforming Iraq into a civil
democracy is, as Nicholas Kristof puts it [35], nothing but a
pipe dream. I went over the reasons already: credibility, history,
economic interests, humiliation, and a giant cultural wall of
incomprehension.
EPILOGUE
When Condoleezza Rice calls us, war critics,
racists, she misses the point [58]. We never said that Iraq could
not be a democracy. We simply said that Condi and her friends
could not make it into one. The most likely outcome for Iraq
in the short term is Lebanon-style guerrilla warfare leading
to a mini-Saddam or a civil war. It was ugly before. Bush has
ensured that it will remain ugly for a long time to come. Meanwhile
he has subverted the war on terror by diverting enormous resources
away from it and redirecting them toward fanning the flames of
anti-American hatred.
President Bush did not have to go to
war. To explain his refusal, he could have simply said: We should
not march into Baghdad, turning the whole Arab world against
us. Assigning young soldiers to a fruitless hunt for a securely
entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would
be an unwinnable urban guerilla war, it could only plunge that
part of the world into ever greater instability.
History would have kindly forgiven him
such blatant plagiarism: for these were the words his father
wrote in his memoirs [59].
Bernard Chazelle
is a professor of computer science at Princeton University and
author of The
Discrepancy Method: Randomness and Complexity. He can be
reached at: chazelle@CS.Princeton.EDU
This article and others are available
on Professor
Chazelle's website.
REFERENCES
[1] Bush at War, by Bob Woodward, Simon
& Schuster, 2002.
[2] http://www.newamericancentury.org/iraqclintonletter.htm
[3] The Neoconservative Persuasion, by
Irving Kristol, Weekly Standard, August 25, 2003.
[4] http://newamericancentury.org/
[5] We'll Win This War, by Michael A.
Ledeen, The American Enterprise Online.
[6] The Future of War and the American
Military, by Stephen P. Rosen, Harvard Magazine, May-June 2002,
vol 104, no 5.
[7] Michael A. Ledeen, quoted by Jonah
Goldberg in Baghdad Delenda Est, Part Two, National Review, April
23, 2002.
[8] Beware of Bolton, by Ian Williams,
May 30, 2002.
[9] America's Imperial Ambition, by John
Ikenberry, Foreign Affairs, 2002.
[10] Should We Evict the UN? by Patrick
Buchanan, New York Post, December 27, 1997, page 15.
[11] Washington Post, January 31, 2003.
[12] The Guardian, March 21, 2003.
[13] Why America Still Needs the United
Nations, by Shashi Tharoor, Foreign Affairs, Sept/Oct 2003
[14] The End of the American Era: US
Foreign Policy and the Geopolitics of the Twenty-first Century,
by Charles A. Kupchan, Knopf, October 29, 2002.
[15] The Real Crisis Over the Atlantic,
by Dominique Moisi, Foreign Affairs, July/August 2001.
[16] Propaganda Isn't the Way: Soft Power,
by Joseph S. Nye Jr., The International Herald Tribune, January
10, 2003.
[17] Wolfowitz Stands Fast Amid the Antiwarriors,
by Eric Schmitt, The New York Times, September 22, 2003.
[18] Thomas L. Friedman, The New York
Times, June 2003.
[19] The National Security Strategy of
the United States of America, The White House, September 17,
2002.
[20] But What's the Legal Case for Preemption?
by Bruce Ackerman, Washington Post, August 18, 2002.
[21] Law unto Themselves, by Richard
Norton-Taylor, The Guardian, March 14, 2003.
[22] Selective Intelligence, by Seymour
M. Hersh, The New Yorker, May 5, 2003.
[23] The Economist, October 4, 2003.
[24] A deafening silence, by Gideon Levy,
Ha'aretz, October 6, 2002.
[25] Bush's Unreliable Intelligence,
by David Corn, The Nation, November 12, 2003.
[26] Rice: Iraq trained al Qaeda in chemical
weapons, CNN, September 26, 2002.
[27] President Bush Outlines Iraqi Threat,
by George W. Bush, Cincinnati, October 7, 2002.
[28] Saddam Hussein and the Sept. 11
Attacks, Washington Post Poll, September 6, 2003.
[29] We're Taking Him Out, CNN, May 6,
2002.
[30] May 9, 2003 interview of Paul Wolfowitz
by Sam Tannenbaus, published in Vanity Fair, July 2003.
[31] Iraq Said to Have Tried to Reach
Last-Minute Deal to Avert War, by James Risen, The New York Times,
November 6, 2003. Original article.
[32] Stumbling into War, by James P.
Rubin, Foreign Affairs, September/October 2003.
[33] Charlie Wilson's War: The Extraordinary
Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History, by George Crile,
Atlantic Monthly Press, April 2003.
[34] Bush's Faustian Deal With the Taliban,
by Robert Scheer, Los Angeles Times, May 22, 2001.
[35] Iraqi Democracy Is a Pipe Dream,
by Nicholas D. Kristof, The New York Times, October 19, 2002.
[36] UN Resolution 1441, The Security
Council, November 8, 2002.
[37] Thomas L. Friedman, The New York
Times, July 7, 1991.
[38] A War for Oil?, by Thomas L. Friedman,
The New York Times, January 5, 2003.
[39] US Diplomatic and Commercial Relationships
with Iraq, 1980 - 2 August 1990.
[40] US Support for Iraq in the 1980s,
Center for Cooperative Research.
[41] The Ghosts of 1991, by Peter W.
Galbraith, Washington Post, Saturday, April 12, 2003.
[42] Making of a Monster: How the US
Helped Build Iraq's War Machine, by William P. Hoar, The New
American, September 1992.
[43] A Hard Look at Iraq Sanctions, by
David Cortright, The Nation, December 3, 2001.
[44] Iraq surveys show 'humanitarian
emergency, Unicef Information Newsline, August 12, 1999.
[45] Columbia News Video, by Prof. Richard
Garfield, March 03, 2000.
[46] Cool War, by Joy Gordon, Harper's
Magazine, November 2002.
[47] Squeezed to death, by John Pilger
The Guardian, Saturday March 4, 2000.
[48] Iraq 'smart sanctions' derailed
by Russia, by Anton La Guardia, <telegraph.co.uk>, April
7, 2001.
[49] Pew's Global Attitudes Project,
June 2003.
[50] Andrew Kohut's Senate Testimony,
February 27, 2003.
[51] Jihad: Expansion et declin de l'Islamisme,
by Gilles Kepel, Gallimard, 2003.
[52] Terror and Liberalism, by Paul Berman,
Norton, 2003.
[53] Jerry Falwell, September 13, 2001.
[54] General William Boykin, 2002-2003.
[55] State of the Union Address to Congress,
by President Carter, January 21, 1980.
[56] Thomas L. Friedman, The New York
Times, May 4, 2003.
[57] Empire: The Rise and Demise of the
British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power, by Niall
Ferguson, Basic Books, 2003.
[58] Critics of US policy are racist,
says Rice, by David Rennie, <telegraph.co.uk>, September
8, 2003.
[59] A World Transformed, by Brent Scowcroft
and George H. W. Bush, Knopf, September 1998.
Weekend
Edition Features for January 10 / 11, 2004
Alexander Cockburn
Bush
as Hitler? Let's Be Fair
Susan Davis
Dangerous Books
Diane Christian
On Lying and Colin Powell
Lisa Viscidi
Exhumations: Unearthing Guatemala's Macabre Past
Daniel Estulin
Destroying History in Iraq
Saul Landau
Homeland Anxiety
Elaine Cassel
Who's Winning the War on Civil Liberties?
Bruce Jackson
Making the Shit List
Christopher Brauchli
Baptizing Hitler's Ghost
Francis A. Boyle
The Deep Scars of War
Lee Ballinger
Cold Sweat: Sweatshops and the Music Industry
Patrick W. Gavin
Hillary's Slur: Mrs. Lott?
Ramzy Baroud
What Invaders Have in Common
Michael Schwartz
Inside the California Grocery Strike
Gary Johnson
An Interview with Former Heavyweight Champ Greg Page
Dave Zirin
An Interview with Marvin Miller on Unions and Baseball
Mark Hand
A Review of Resistance: My Life for Lebanon
Poets' Basement
Thomas, Daley, Curtis, Guthrie and Albert
Keep CounterPunch Alive:
Make
a Tax-Deductible Donation Today Online!
home / subscribe
/ about us / books
/ archives / search
/ links /
|