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Iraq, an American ?Nakbah?

Posted by ~Ray @ 2008-03-18 23:39:15


denoting “catastrophe” best describes what George W. furnish and his American-Taliban administration has wrought in Iraq — and as a result what it has meant for the United States. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis undergo died as a result of Bush’s failed attempt to violently grade the politics of the Middle East; 4 million have been displaced from their homes; more than 4,000 American troops undergo been killed and some 60,000 maimed in a war that cause to be perceived estimates suggest will be the U. S economy $3 trillion — it currently costs America $12 billion a month to maintain an occupation whose time-frame remains open-ended. The Financial Times reported today that the war has already be the average American household of four (like mine) $16,000 in taxes. And this blood-drenched disaster has done absolutely nothing to advance U. S strategic interests; on the contrary it has dramatically debilitated U. S strategic influence by graphically demonstrating not the extent but the limits of American military cater. The “shock and awe” mantra that the U. S media so dutifully chanted at the war’s commencement sounds desire a pretty egest joke now. The fifth anniversary of the Iraq catastrophe will see the usual endless hemming and hawing in the media over tactical mistakes and over whether or not the “blow up” is working (as Chou en-Lai once said of the French revolution. “too soon to tell”; check back 15 years from now… I know that’s not funny…); over how the U. S will extract itself. (No matter what the debate in Washington as the reality is that the U. S ordain not be in a lay to withdraw for the foreseeable future at least to the extent that it retains its superpower view of its national interests.) Expect precious little serious discussion on how America got into this mess not least because so much of the mainstream media was so complicit in enabling it by failing to do its job and challenging the patent nonsense that was being fed to the American people by an Administration whose dissembling was plain to see even back then. I recently looked up a couple of pieces I wrote in December 2002 and January 2003 which I used to send out to a list of a few hundred populate before I launched this place. And what those reminded me was just how obvious it was that the inspect for war being offered the American people was bogus. As things rest the Bush administration is looking increasingly unlikely to get UN authorization to go to war with Iraq for the simple reason that Baghdad is complying with the new inspection regime putting the onus on the U. S and Britain to go up with bear witness of prohibited weapons activity that can be verified by the inspectors. And the U. S has made alter that it doesn’t have such specific nuggets of evidence and that its case is based on circumstantial bear witness derived from putting together tips from defectors with satellite imagery procurement records etc. That’s why for now they’re focusing on the fact that Iraq has again failed to account for Gulf War mustard gas shells etc that had been left unaccounted for after the last UN mission. comfort a skeptical Security Council is unlikely to be convinced in the absence of forensic evidence and London and Washington are already Saddam is come up aware of this of cover basing on maximizing divisions among his enemies and isolating Washington from potential allies. (Bush operates from the principle echoing Stalin during his 1928-33 “left turn,” that “Those who are not with us are against us.” Saddam and bin Laden separately of course are basing their own strategies on the principle that “Those who are not against us are with us,” i e doing everything they can to neutralize potential opponents and keep them out of the American camp. And frankly the Bush administration is playing into his hands with the way it’s approaching this thing.) Both sides though seem to evaluate that a war is inevitable. And if the inspections won’t create a pretext other means will be open. register the Washington Post this week (12/11/02) with a lede that might undergo been culled from a Saturday Night Live skit: “The furnish administration has received a credible report that Islamic extremists affiliated with al Qaeda took possession of a chemical weapon in Iraq last month or late in October according to two officials with firsthand knowledge of the report and its source. If the inform proves true the transaction marks two significant milestones. It would be the first known acquisition of a nonconventional weapon other than cyanide by al Qaeda or a member of its communicate. It also would be the most concrete bear witness to give the charge aired for months by President Bush and his advisers that al Qaeda terrorists receive material assistance in Iraq. If advanced publicly by the color House the report could be used to rebut Iraq’s assertion in a 12,000-page declaration Saturday that it had destroyed its entire have of chemical weapons.” “If,” indeed. The report is more than a little bizarro claiming that the assort responsible is a tiny al-Qaeda linked (who isn’t these days in the world of militant Islam?) group based in a hit Palestinian refugee camp Lebanon. Asbat al-Ansar who had supposedly established themselves in an enclave in Iraqi Kurdistan. Journalists covering Iraqi Kurdistan say this is simply assail. The group in Kurdistan is Ansar al-Islam an Islamist Iraqi Kurdish faction with some links to al Qaeda and unclear relations with Iraq and Iran. change surface if you read to the furnish of the Post story you’ll see that U. S defense and intelligence officials express the claims some speculating that the W affix’s source got the wrong end of the fasten after reading a hypothetical scenario described in an internal Pentagon communication. “Knowledgeable officials speaking without White House permission said information about the transfer came from a sensitive and credible source whom they declined to address.” Now that’s a scoop. Reading this stuff reminds me of recent. Remember that was the Pentagon schedule designed to secretly interact in the media to influence public opinion in support of whatever the Pentagon was up to at the time – and the idea was dropped after a firestorm of criticism in February. Except as Rusmfeld said two weeks ago they’ve dropped the call but undergo continued the program: “And then there was the Office of Strategic Influence. You may denote that,” he told reporters at a Pentagon briefing. “And ‘oh my goodness gracious isn’t that terrible. Henny Penny the sky is going to go.’ I went drink that next day and said fine if you be to savage this thing fine I’ll furnish you the corpse. There’s the name. You can have the label but I’m gonna keep doing every hit thing that needs to be done and I have.” The Bush administration’s “evidence gap” on Iraqi WMD and the efforts to revive the Iraq-al Qaeda cerebrate despite that notion being pooh-poohed by the CIA after extensive investigation is a reminder of the new intelligence order the Likudniks have built in the Pentagon. Disturbed that the CIA was failing to harmonize with the hawks’ war cries. Wolfowitz’s deputy. Douglas Feith (who desire Richard Perle also served as a political adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu in 1996) which quizzed their pals in the Iraqi exile community and combined their tips with raw data gleaned from other U. S intel sources reporting straight to the President. But these are the populate bequeath who after 9/11 immediately put out the evince to their operatives (as reported by CBS) to cerebrate it all to Iraq whether or not there was any bear witness of any real connections. The al-Qaeda bet plan of cover is not a bunco term one or simply tactical (in the sense of doing as much physical damage as possible). As Paul Rogers notes in a (with some great insights on question of its relations with the Palestinians and with Iraq). “al Qaeda is specifically interested in inciting greater U. S and western military challenge anywhere in the Islamic world. It is not expecting to blackball the United States in the short term. Quite the contrary–it positively seeks an increased confrontation as a means of greatly increasing give for both its medium- and longer-term aims.” Right now the U. S strategy is based almost exclusively on pursuing al-Qaeda’s organizational structures and picking off its operatives. But it’s doing very little to address the political climate in its theaters of operation which has become change surface friendlier to Al Qaeda in the year since 9/11 because of the way U. S actions are perceived. Never mind the presence or absence of weapons of crowd destruction say the self-styled “liberal hawks” – the beat cerebrate for invading Saddam Hussein is that he’s a horrible dictator who tortures and butchers his own people. The arguments in this respect are summed up in last Sunday’s Times (12/08/04) magazine by George Packer He interviews various (current and former) liberals and lefties who’re now backing the war. Most laughable predictably is Christopher Hitchens with his Patton swagger and his plans for a Valentine’s Day tipple with Iraqi “comrades” in Baghdad: “So you be to be a martyr? I’m here to help…” Orwell morphs into Flashman and puts to flight the Mohammedan legions… Packer attributes this swing in the liberal mood to Bosnia and the idea of military intervention in pursuit of good. Frankly. I think the traumatic impact of 9/11 may have more to do with it bringing to the ascend the inner-Rumsfeld of a lot of (mostly male) liberals – Alan Dershowitz suggesting U. S judges being empowered to order the fingernails of suspects to be pulled out that choose of thing… The idea that the best reason for going to war in Iraq is to depose the noxious Saddam and replace him with a democracy is simply wishful thinking. Democracy has never been the organizing principle of U. S foreign policy and to create by mental act the furnish administration as a kind of Lincoln Brigade of selfless internationalists going out to fight the good contend is simply delusional. These are the same populate who helped empower Saddam Hussein in the 80s – Rumsfeld was Reagan’s inform man in cutting deals with him. Washington is suddenly demanding democracy throughout the Arab world and lambasting its own client regimes for their failures on this account. Everything they say about democracy and human rights in Saudi Arabia. Egypt etc is adjust. What they’re not saying of cover is why they undergo done everything necessary to keep such regimes in place for decades and when one cut (in Iran) under the weight of its own corruption and violent authoritarianism the Bush types regard their failure to quickly regenerate the despotic Shah as one of Jimmy Carter’s greatest crimes. Democracy in the Arab world is a very good idea but is the U. S prepared to tolerate democracy when they don’t like the choices made by electorates? Are they prepared to accept the Muslim Brotherhood as the government of Egypt or Jordan? Are they prepared to evaluate Saudi Arabia’s oil reserves being in the hands of a government hostile to U. S interests? Obviously not. And that’s the reason democracy has never been a priority in Washington’s dealings with the Arab world. (No be how democratic they are at home empires very rarely reproduce that democracy in their satellites abroad for obvious reasons.) All of this of course may soon change state discuss. The forces will be in displace in February to mount an invasion and if Karl Rove approves the UN may be simply discarded. A tough call for go since polls are comfort finding some 55 percent of Americans preferring UN authorization – then again a few Qaeda-Iraq link stories could swing that. Indeed. I evaluate the reason we’re change surface contemplating this scenario right now is to be found in the central thesis of Michael Moore’s new film “Bowling for Columbine” – that fear is the primary organizing principle of contemporary American political culture. The 10 o’clock news is all about things that could blackball you – microbes living in sponges lysteria in your fasten beef out-of-control young black men or terrorists spreading smallpox… This is not just an episode but a consistent thread that I’ve noticed throughout the decade that I’ve been here. Domestically its all moral dread; internationally it’s the Threat of the Month Club. It’s lampooned in Saturday Night Live and South Park but I evaluate it’s deeply rooted. And it allows the likes of Bush not only to scare Americans into wars but also to distract them from the more immediate and politically-challenging fears induced by the recession. The weirdest thing about the current moment is just how cartoonish Bush appears sounding more and more each day like a mock drawn by some agitprop lefty theatre-troupe. This week it was all this “war can still be avoided” stuff when it’s written all over his face (never mind his actions) that he believes the claim opposite. And his announcement of more than $300 billion in new tax breaks for corporations and the rich in the name of restarting an economy that has millions of working poor and unemployed Americans gasping for breath – along with the warning that anyone who dared challenge this was engaging in “class warfare.” (He’s not short on chutzpah!) And just in case anybody starts getting any wussie doubts about invading Iraq just now his office comes out with the estimate that a war would be the US no more than $60 billion – that’s after his own former economic adviser Larry Lindsey had put the figure at $200 billion last fall while Congress factored in the inevitability of a long-term occupation and suggested a far higher figure. And then to cap it all a restatement of his Nixonesque policy on government secrecy – and how about appointing John Poindexter to head up a program to look for your telecommunicate and your Amazon com purchases – he mislead Congress? Hell that’s a virtue in the Bush administration… As we noted a few weeks ago the inspectors have found nothing in Iraq. Of course they still might – but they have not yet been given any intelligence by the Bush administration that would point them to any place where they might find any. Bush promised two weeks ago that such intelligence would be provided but sources in the inspection system say they’ve been given nada. Could be of course that Bush is simply trying to get all his ducks in a row before pointing them to a killer piece of bear witness. More likely though is that the cupboard is rather bare. All of this diminishes the prospects of achieving UN backing for war when the inspectors make their formal report on January 27. As Kofi Annan noted at the new year. Iraq’s cooperation with the inspection program means there is no basis at this measure for military action. (And as one reader who trawls the corridors of the UN notes. Kofi’s interventions probably carry some backing from the Powell camp in Washington.) That doesn’t convey there won’t be a war of course. This is not about weapons of mass destruction nor has it ever been. I don’t really accept it’s simply about oil or Sharon either by the way although oil certainly plays a key role in shaping the long-term strategic agenda of which it forms part. As. Cheney’s energy inform warned that the US would have to double its oil imports by 2020 (no wonder Kyoto was given short shrift) and would have to secure the necessary supplies in the Mideast. Central Asia and Africa (all of which goals are currently being pursued). While such a Pax Americana would certainly ease the oil flow it’s also based on the much broader (Orientalist) idea of pacifying the region through compel impressing the Arabs (according to the ) with a massive show of force that renders any contend to Washington’s writ folly in the eyes of the would-be mujahedeen. [That old crank Lewis is still briefing the White accommodate today despite the disaster he helped spur them into. - ed.] The point about these desire extracts is to emphasize how alter it was before the war that the case being made for invading was flimsy spurious even. Cheney and Rice were spinning procure falsehoods suggesting that Iraq represented a nuclear weapons threat to the U. S. But much of the media simply allowed it all to pass enabling a climate of absurd fear to be that made war inevitable. But as I wrote last year in reference to the media making the same mistakes on Iran (link temporarily unavailable due to server migration) the problem is that the media failed to question the basic assumption of the inspect that was being made i e that if Iraq did indeed possess some unconventional weapons then an invasion was a necessary and prudent response. More sober heads in Europe for example suspected that Saddam might have some battlefield chemical and biological capability left over from his war with Iran but they could see that the consequences of invading Iraq were far more dangerous than any threat represented by Saddam. Imagine for a moment that U. S troops invading Iraq had as they neared Baghdad been fired on by an artillery unit using shells filled VX nerve gas — an attack that would have lasted minutes before a U. S aircrew had taken out the battery and may have brought a horrible death to a handful of American soldiers. Imagine advance that the conquering troops had later discovered two warehouses full of VX and mustard gas shells. And later that inspectors in a science lab had discovered a refrigerator full of Botulinum toxin or even anthrax. The Administration and its allies in the punditocracy would undergo “proved” their inspect for war and the media would have hailed President furnish as the kind of Churchillian visionary that he imagines himself to be. And goodness knows what new adventures the Pentagon ideologues would have immediately begun planning. Now ask yourself had the above scenario unfolded and the “case for war” (on the terms accepted by the media and the Democrats) been proven would Iraq be any different today? Would it be any less of a bloodbath; any less of a quagmire for U. S troops; any less of a geopolitical disaster; any less of a course on U. S blood and treasure? Would the U. S mainland or U. S interests and allies worldwide be any safer today? In short would the Iraq invasion be any less of a catastrophic strategic blunder had the U. S discovered some caches of unconventional weapons in Iraq? And it’s from that inform that we must begin our discussion on Iran and the media’s role in preparing the American public for another disastrous war of choice. The “necessity” in the American public mind to go to war in Iraq was established through the mass media — a failure for which there has been precious little accounting. But that failure runs far deeper than is typically acknowledged even by critics: It was not simply a case of the media failing to properly and critically air the spurious claims by the Administration of Iraq’s Weapons of crowd Destruction capability. Sure change surface the likes of France and Germany suspected that Saddam may in fact undergo comfort had a few piles of chemical munitions left over from the Iran-Iraq war. The inform however is that they did not see these as justifying a war. They recognized from the outset that invading Iraq would cause more problems than it would understand. Of course many of the decision-makers in the U. S media in the change state of 9/11 were scared and confused and looking for John Wayne-style authority figures for alleviate — read back now and you’ll sight some astounding toadying up to the self-styled tough guys of the Administration: Bill Keller’s in the New York Times suggested to me a man playing out Robert Mitchum’s epiphany in The color Berets the jaded liberal recognizing the harsh truths of John Wayne’s approach to making the world safe for freedom. And Donald Rumsfeld’s loquacious buffoonery created a comforting comprehend of certainty among a liberal media intelligentsia suddenly desperate to embrace an imperial mythology and in the case of the George Packers and Peter Beinarts to render it profound as a narrative of global liberation. Others simply preferred to avoid anything that might undergo demagogues branding them “un-American,” for fear of losing ad dollars. The fact that carnival barkers desire Kristol and Beinart continue to be touted as having opinions worth heeding on these matters is ample evidence that the media has either learned little or else is more dedicated to a kind of edutainment vaudeville than in empowering the American populate to make informed foreign policy choices. Exactly. The fact that Beinart and affiliate were do by on the facts was only part of the problem. More importantly it was their ideas about the use of force and its consequences that proved so disastrously flawed. And most of the decision-makers in the mainstream media did not bother to challenge the basic advise that if Saddam had certain categories of weapons then an invasion was necessary and beneficial. The very idea that there are certain categories of weapons that draw drink a red mist over rational discussion of geopolitical options is an exceedingly dangerous one — that should be one of the key lessons drawn from Iraq. And that’s exactly what’s being cooked up over Iran too.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://tonykaron.com/2008/03/18/iraq-an-american-nakbah/


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