From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Wed Mar 19 13:57:28 2003
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2003 10:53:53 -0600 (CST)
From: MER—Mid-East Realities—MiddleEast.Org
<MERL@MiddleEast.Org>
Subject: The Boy King and his Crusading War
Article: 154287
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
After Afghanistan and Iraq, make no mistake about it, the US and
Israel have already set their target sights on Iran, Hezbollah
(Lebanon), Hamas (Occupied Palestine), and Syria (all in the
MiddleEast) as well as Pakistan plus of course North Korea in Asia
(providing a disguised warning to China not to attempt to become a
military superpower). The new crusade to create and enforce the
'New World Order' first enunciated by the current American
President's father is now underway full-speed-ahead. Though there
are many Christians and Jews, including the Pope himself, who view
this course with horror and revulsion, even so those who hold the
reigns of power have indeed embarked on what history may well view as
a modern-day Christian/Jewish crusade against the Arab/Islamic world.
The exceedingly pro-Western Secretary-General of the Arab League has
publicly said the U.S. is unleashing a firestorm of hell which will
result in catastrophe. The very moderate head of Al-Azhar, the oldest
center of Islamic thought and teaching in Egypt, has publicly called
on the Muslim's of the world to fight the United States and defeat
the new crusaders. Our world is about to be changed forever by a
coalition of Bible-thumping Christian fundamentalists and
Zionist/Israeli militarists, using a simplistic non-credible
illegitimate American President and a college drop-out Commanding
General (You were not the brightest bulb in the socket
said the
President of his old University of Texas to Tommy Franks at a recent
reunion...to which Franks replied: Ain't this a great
country?
) to launch a massive unprecedented military invasion in
the heart of the Arab world whose ramifications will surely last
beyond the lifetimes of all now alive on planet earth.
As for the Bush rhetoric when it comes to such matters as 'democracy' and 'Palestinian Statehood', anyone who believes anything now publicly said by those who control the American government is living in a fairy-tale world of new-speak and double-think.
Wall Street Journal—17 March, WASHINGTON—The Bush administration's audacious plan to rebuild Iraq envisions a sweeping overhaul of Iraqi society within a year of a war's end, but leaves much of the work to private U.S. companies, Monday's Wall Street Journal reported.
The Bush plan, as detailed in more than 100 pages of confidential contract documents, would sideline United Nations development agencies and other multilateral organizations that have long directed reconstruction efforts in places such as Afghanistan and Kosovo. The plan also would leave big nongovernmental organizations largely in the lurch: With more than $1.5 billion in Iraq work being offered to private U.S. companies under the plan, just $50 million is so far earmarked for a small number of groups such as CARE and Save the Children.
Washington is under international pressure to broaden a postwar
rebuilding effort, even as it continues to do battle with traditional
allies over the merits of launching a war on Iraq. The administration
recently has signaled it may seek down the road to give the U.N. and
other countries a larger role. President Bush, after a one-hour summit
in the Azores Islands, said yesterday that if it comes to war he plans
to quickly seek new Security Council resolutions to encourage broad
participation in the process of helping the Iraqi people to build a
free Iraq.
But U.N. officials said they still have no clear indication how the administration might involve the international body, especially if many of the large rebuilding tasks are already farmed out to U.S. companies directly answerable to Washington.
By the time you read these words, George W. Bush may already have
launched his war against Iraq. Since August, he has acted like a boy
king, stomping his feet and demanding, I want my war. Give me my
war.
He told all of his vassals to make sure it happened, and at press time, it sure looked likely.
The whole issue of getting inspectors into Iraq, even the goal of
disarmament, was a ruse. What Bush has wanted all along is to
overthrow Saddam Hussein. He was honest about that originally, though
he used the hideous neologism regime change.
But when that
wouldn't fly diplomatically, he reverted to disarmament. Then,
when it became obvious that Saddam was cooperating, at least to some
extent, with the inspectors, Bush pulled the regime change
card
out of his sleeve once again.
At almost every opportunity, Bush claimed that Saddam was not only a
threat but a growing
or mounting
or gathering
threat.
But how could Iraq be such a threat when U.N. inspectors were going anywhere they wanted, anytime they wanted, to search for these weapons?
How could Iraq be such a threat when Saddam was destroying many of his
Al Samoud missiles? Hans Blix, chief U.N. weapons inspector, said this
action constitutes a substantial measure of disarmament.
. . . We're not watching the breaking of toothpicks here. Lethal
weapons are being destroyed.
How could it be such a threat when Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, said that there is no evidence
of the revival of a nuclear weapons program
?
How could it be such a threat when U.S., French, German, and Russian spy planes were free to survey every inch of Iraqi territory and then pass their intelligence on to the inspectors?
Before Secretary of State Colin Powell received other instructions from his boss, he used to say that Saddam was in a box. Because of inspections, the walls of the box were closing in on Saddam.
But that didn't satisfy Bush.
The boy king wanted Saddam's head.
This is not how democracy is supposed to work. Congress itself committed a horrendous blunder when, last October, it abdicated its responsibility under the Constitution. By handing Bush a bill that essentially said he could go to war against Iraq any damn time he pleased, Congress ceded its power to declare war and thus did away with a fundamental check and balance.
James Madison wrote in 1793: In no part of the Constitution is more
wisdom to be found than in the clause which confides the question of
war or peace to the legislature, and not the executive department.
If the President had that power, said Madison, the temptation would
be too great for any one man.
Bush has shown how easily he is tempted.
He also has shown utter contempt for the views of the vast majority of people in nation after nation who have opposed this war. Dismissing worldwide protests as the equivalent of a focus group, Bush has failed to come to grips with the overwhelming unpopularity of his position. When 95 percent of the people in Turkey opposed the war, when 83 percent of the people in England opposed the war, when record numbers of protesters appeared in one capital after another to show their disgust with the Bush Administration's policy, a wiser, more prudent man might have reconsidered his plans. But not Bush. He pushed right ahead.
So enthralled is Bush with the might of the Pentagon, so enraptured is he with his self-assigned role of liberator, so sure is he of doing God's will that he has become an enormously frightening figure. He seems to believe he can rule the world alone--or at most as part of a triumvirate with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.
The costs of the policy are already mounting. Bush has done grievous damage to Washington's relationship with its traditional European allies.
Tony Blair might lose his job. The governments of Spain and Italy
could also tumble because of their toadying. France or Germany could
exercise a veto over the expansion of the European Union or NATO.
Such expansion can occur only by unanimous consent, and if Old
Europe
sees the Eastern European countries as Trojan horses of
Washington, it may decide to scuttle the whole deal.
U.S. relations with Russia also have suffered. Vladimir Lukin, deputy
speaker of the house of Russia's parliament, condemned Bush's
cowboy approach. Do you know the difference between a policeman and
a gangster?
A policeman complies with rules which are elaborated not by the
policeman but by a certain democratic community accepted by
everyone, he told The New York Times. A gangster implements his
own rules.
More trouble is likely to come from the Muslim world. Bush has argued that invading Iraq will solve just about every problem in the Middle East except male pattern baldness. The central argument that Bush made--that installing democracy (as if it were a spare part) in Iraq will bring peace to the Middle East--doesn't stand up. The Bush Administration actually fears democracy in Iraq because a majority of Iraqis are Shiites, who are likely to ally with Iran. Bush also is opposed to self-determination for the Kurds, much to their consternation. He has already promised Turkey that the Kurds will not get a state of their own.
Bush bases his absurd claim that the overthrow of Saddam will hasten
peace between Israel and the Palestinians on the assumption that
Saddam's demise will deprive terrorist networks of a wealthy
patron that pays for terrorist training and offers rewards to families
of suicide bombers.
But if Bush thinks that Palestinian suicide bombers engage in their unjustifiable, bloody acts simply to get monetary rewards from Saddam for their families, he's kidding himself.
What's more, by threatening to invade and occupy another Muslim
country, Bush is playing the role that Osama bin Laden has assigned to
him: that of Islam's enemy. In February, bin Laden denounced
the crusaders
for trying to occupy the capital of Islam in
the past and to usurp the wealth of Muslims and to put up a puppet
government to control you.
If the U.S. military inflicts grotesque civilian casualties on Iraq, and if pictures of this brutalization run on Al Jazeera TV day in and day out, the war against Iraq will serve only as a recruiting call for Al Qaeda. Bush advertised the war on Iraq as a war against terror, but it may serve to swell the ranks of the terrorists. And it may foment fundamentalist unrest from Nigeria to Egypt and Pakistan.
Other consequences of Bush's bellicosity we are seeing already: The U.S. economy wobbles, oil prices skyrocket, unemployment jumps. These may pale in comparison to the death toll in Baghdad, but they represent real suffering for millions of Americans.
History is not preordained or static, much less finished (Francis Fukuyama notwithstanding). Bush's overreaching has already produced its antithesis: the surprising and exhilarating and enormous worldwide mass protests against the war. The anti-war movement has merged with the anti-globalization movement and morphed into a single movement against the U.S. empire.
Six months ago, few could have predicted this global revolt. But here it is. And it won't go away soon. With its increasing power, this movement will challenge Bush's economic and military policies, seeing them as wings of the same predator.
In some basic sense, then, what we are seeing is a worldwide democratic movement vying against Bush's policy of empire, war, and repression.
We are now in a desperate race to see whether Bush will wreak immeasurable global havoc, or whether the anti-empire protesters in one country after another (including in the United States!) will catch up to him and, by pressuring their respective governments, bring to heel this international outlaw.
There is no more urgent task before us.