The politics of delusion and crisis denial
By Rodrigue Tremblay
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Oct 30, 2006, 00:55
"Our presence in Iraq exacerbates the difficulties
we are facing around the world, and . . . continuing to fight in Iraq will only
make the situation worse." --General Sir Richard Dannatt, British Army
Chief
"If people say there has been an energising of the
jihadist movement through the protracted war in Iraq -- well, that's pretty
obvious." --General Peter Cosgrove, former
Australian Defence chief
"As democracy is perfected, the office of president
represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great
and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at
last and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron." --H.L.
Mencken, American journalist, 1880-1956
On May 1, 2003,
President George W. Bush stood on an aircraft carrier off the coast near San
Diego, California. In order to take full advantage of the plethora of TV crews
present (even the education network PBS was there), his propaganda machine had
erected a large sign behind him that said "Mission Accomplished."
Bush II had decided that the "major combat operations in Iraq are over.''
The American politician had invaded another country illegally, and used
military force at his own discretion, with the
potential of hundreds of thousands of deaths,
and he was crowing about it. In fact, even though Bush did not realize it at
the time, Iraq could turn out to be to the United States what Afghanistan was
to the Soviet Union, from 1979 to
1988, i.e. a colossal failure.
Indeed, more than three years later, Bush's "mission,"
whatever that means, was far from being "accomplished" and he was
stubbornly digging deeper into the hole of a bloody
illegal occupation of a foreign country. He even generously admitted to
planning to leave the Iraqi mess to his successor. And, lacking any democratic
spirit, he announced that American soldiers would not be leaving Iraq,
presumably even if the legitimate and "elected" government of Iraq
asked them to leave. This reminds one of the captain of the Titanic yelling
"full speed ahead" with his ship caught in the middle of a field of
icebergs. A captain who does not change course in the presence of
insurmountable obstacles is not 'resolute,' he is showing myopic stupidity. More appropriately perhaps, the
world is witnessing an "imperialistic" spirit, using words like
"democracy" and "freedom" to masquerade a more sinister
program. It is because Bush and his neocon advisers are too deeply engaged in
the imperial project that they cannot consider
changing their disastrous policy in the Middle East.
It is because Bush II is weak and immature that he cannot
admit mistakes and cannot face reality. Last August 21 (2006), he said it in so
many words: "We�re not leaving [Iraq] so long as I�m the
president. That would be a huge mistake." It takes guts to admit
a mistake. If Bush II were a real leader and a mature person, he would say:
"We went to Iraq thinking we would find weapons of mass destruction. We
did not find any. We were misinformed. Therefore, our invasion of Iraq was a mistake. We apologize to
the Iraqi people for all the suffering and we will compensate the country of
Iraq for the damage that has been wrought upon its people and its economy. Our
military occupation will cease as soon as the Iraqi government asks us to
leave, and as soon as a United Nations-led mandate of assistance to the Iraqi
government can be established."
But, don't hold
your breath. Bush II is no Winston Churchill
(1874-1965). Churchill said, in 1940:"We failed. We lost. And we are
going to have to change our policy." Moreover, Churchill did not
initiate a war of aggression, and he knew what war was about when he said: "Never, never, never believe any war will
be smooth and easy, or that anyone who embarks on the strange voyage can
measure the tides and hurricanes he will encounter . . ." George W.
Bush also could have profited if he had meditated on another Churchill quote, before
his March 20, 2003, war of aggression against Iraq: "The statesman who
yields to war fever . . . is no longer the master of policy but the slave of
unforeseeable and uncontrollable events." Churchill could also have
told him: "In war as in life, it is often
necessary when some cherished scheme has failed, to take up the best
alternative open, and if so, it is folly not to work for it with all your
might."
Some may say that
the reason Bush II is incapable of admitting a mistake is because he is
"God-fearing". Former German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder recently made public his personal apprehensions about
the fact that religion seemed to be the driving force behind many of George
W. Bush's political
decisions. Why, indeed, admit mistakes if you have 'God' on your
side?
Meanwhile, the
death toll in Iraq is getting to the catastrophic level. It is impossible to
obtain a precise figure about Iraqi deaths,
considering the dislocations and devastation prevailing in the country, but
credible assessments by public health researchers at Johns Hopkins University
place the number of deaths directly and indirectly caused by the war at between
426,369 and 793,663. History will record this ill-advised and illegal war as a
major man-made catastrophe. We are witnessing war crimes of great
proportions. Those who engineered and launched such a war of aggression
should be held accountable for the all-too-avoidable disasters
they have created. This does not prevent Vice President Dick Cheney,
sitting in his Washington, D.C., office, to rave and utter such nonsense as
"things are going remarkably
well [in Iraq]!" He
probably meant things are going well for Halliburton and
the other war contractors who are raking in money by the truckloads.
The truth is that,
at the end of the day, the American-led invasion of Iraq has produced the very
contrary situation it was supposedly intended to bring about, i.e. a reduction
of the threat of worldwide Islamist terrorism. In fact, as confirmed by the
declassified April 2006 National
Intelligence Estimate (NIE), the most
important report produced by the American intelligence community, the bloody
Iraq War has become a primary recruitment vehicle for Islamist terrorists in
the Muslim world and has further isolated the United States, not only in the
Middle East, but al over the world. And, what is more, not all Americans are in
the dark about the Iraq war. For instance, a recent Zogby poll
revealed that about half of the U.S.
population is now convinced that the Bush-Cheney administration has politically
exploited the 9/11 events to justify an attack against Iraq. So did 'terrorism'
have anything to do with this military adventure in the oil-rich Middle East?
Of course not. 'Terrorism' was only the propaganda shield behind which the
special interests of two big lobbies were dissimulated, i.e. the oil Cartel and the pro-Israel
Lobby.
In
conclusion, this improvised and whimsical war for unmentionable reasons will
turn out to have been an unmitigated and complete disaster. Pardon the pun, but President
George W. Bush is now between Iraq and a hard place. It was a fiasco all too
predictable and all too avoidable.
In my
book, The
New American Empire, I wrote that by attacking
"an Arab country without visible provocation, instead of
discouraging terrorism, the Bush administration actually encouraged Islamist
terrorism against the U.S. Was the risk worth it? For the [Richard] Perle-led super-lobby, it obviously was.
It was even necessary: Iraq had to be completely disarmed and the Middle East
had to be transformed into a huge oil-producing colony. The two objectives were
interrelated " (p.62 ). As Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz put
it succinctly: "The road to Jerusalem goes through Baghdad."
Well, this was wishing thinking on the part of a neocon
crowd too anxious to take advantage of a dangerously disconnected and willfully
ignorant American president. They were aided by the fact that Bush is
known to be prone to deny reality and ignore expert advice; he even boasts that
he makes government decisions according to his gut feelings.
This is truly a clear demonstration of delusion and denial politics.
Rodrigue Tremblay is
professor emeritus of economics at the University of Montreal and can be
reached at rodrigue.tremblay@
yahoo.com. He is the author of the book 'The
New American Empire'. Visit his blog site at www.thenewamericanempire.com/blog.
Copyright © 1998-2006 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor