October
2, 2006
A
Political Culture of Lies and War
"The President's [George W.
Bush's] decision to ignore intelligence community assessments prior to
the Iraq war and to make repeated public statements that gave the misleading
impression that Saddam Hussein's regime was connected to the terrorists who
attacked us on 9/11 cost him any credibility he may have had on this issue."
Carl Levin, U. S. Senator (D, MI)
"When
the tyrant has disposed of foreign enemies by conquest or treaty, and there is
nothing to fear from them, then he is always stirring up some war or other, in
order that the people may require a leader."
Plato (427-347 B.C.)
"How
you can win the population for war: At first, the statesman will invent cheap
lying, that imputes the guilt of the attacked nation, and each person will be
happy over this deceit, that calms the conscience. — It will study it
detailed and refuse to test arguments of the other opinion. So he will convince
step for step even therefrom that the war is just and –thank God, that
he, after this process of grotesque even deceit, can sleep better."
Mark
Twain - [Samuel Langhornne Clemens] (1835-1910)
As a principle, a democratic government
should not rely on misinformation,
half truths and outright lies in order to defend its public policies. Indeed,
public affairs should be discussed in the open and policies judged on their
merit. To do otherwise is to betray the necessary trust a responsible
government must have with the citizens. But everybody knows that politicians do
lie, and the more they get away with it, the more they resort to this
subterfuge.
On September 25, 2002, for example, President George W. Bush
uttered a big lie that was bound to have disastrous historical consequences. It
would lead to one of the dumbest wars
ever. —In his search for fictional reasons to attack Iraq, he said: "You
can't distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the war on
terror."
This was a lie because American secret services had long established that
secularist Saddam Hussein considered violently religious Osama bin Laden to be
an enemy. A bi-partisan U.S. Senate panel
has confirmed that Saddam Hussein had rejected overtures from al Qaeda and
believed Islamic extremists were a threat to his regime. This was completely
different from the portrait of an Iraq allied with Osama bin Laden that the
Bush-Cheney administration painted in order to initiate a war of aggression
against Iraq. —It was thus impossible to have al Qaeda operatives being
trained in Iraq (as they were in Taliban Afghanistan). With that lie, Bush was
trying to mislead the American people into supporting a war against Iraq that
he had intended to launch even before he became president.
Therefore, the war against Iraq
that George W. Bush launched on March 20, 2003, was a premeditated war of
choice, not a defensive war of necessity. In fact, the 2003 unprovoked American
military attack against Iraq looks
like a repetition of the unprovoked 'preventive' attack that imperial Japan
launched against the United States at Pearl Harbor,
on December 7, 1941.
Bush's second big lie was the one about Iraq supposedly
having a stock of weapons of mass destruction about to be used against the
United States. On September 12, 2002, Bush II said emphatically, "Iraq has stockpiled biological
and chemical weapons, and is rebuilding the facilities used to make more of
those weapons."
This false
assertion was repeated time and again by President George W. Bush and by his
Vice President on numerous radio and TV networks. The Bush-Cheney
administration was publicly accusing Iraq of having hidden unconventional
weapons and was pressuring it to pledge to stop producing or concealing such weapons of mass
destruction. On October 8, 2002, in a speech delivered in
Cincinnati, the American president raised the level of fear even higher,
declaring that "we
cannot wait [before
attacking Iraq] for the final proof, the smoking gun, that could come in the
form of a mushroom cloud."
In fact, the Bush-Cheney
administration had been told by their own secret services that Iraq's WMD capability had been
essentially destroyed in 1991,
more than ten
years before. But it was not the purpose of the Bush-Cheney administration to
use intelligence in order to better the decision-making process. What Bush II
and his Neocons intended was to use and twist intelligence to justify political
decisions already made. For David Kay, the former head of the Iraq Survey
Group, the Neocons' claim that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction was simply
"delusional." —And even today, the
campaign of disinformation continues, because the situation in Iraq is much
worse than what Bush II and the Pentagon are saying in public.
At the end of the day, all these lies and distorsions have
paid off big politically for the Republican Party. Bush's political adviser,
Karl Rove, obviously inspired by the movie 'Wag the Dog', was able to plan
both the 2002 mid-term elections and the 2004 presidential election around the
theme of fear and terror: his program was to picture a mediocre and devious politician
as a "war president"
fighting terror around the world, dressed up in the American flag.
The Democratic leadership was so hoodwinked by this strategy, that Dick
Gephardt, the then House Democratic Minority Leader, for example, was anxious
to be photographed with George W. Bush in the fall of 2002, when the latter was
making his warmongering pronouncements. Gephardt was naive enough to believe
that by jumping onto Bush's war wagon, the Democrats could win 40 new seats and
take control of the House. Instead, as it was amply previsible, the subdued
Democrats lost 5 seats in the House. Bush and Rove were lucky to have such
confused adversaries. —Karl Rove is now trying to apply the same ploy to
the 2006 mid-term elections. It remains to be seen if the Democrats will fall
into the same trap.
And then, there was torture or, in Orwellian speak,
'enhanced interrogation techniques'. Because of George W. Bush's decisions
about torturing prisoners or so-called "enemy combatants", with the
advice of devious and crooked-minded lawyers,
the United
States is seen around the world as a country that violates the Third Geneva Convention against
torture and which routinely authorizes the mistreatment of prisoners.
The Bush administration's use of torture at the Abu Ghraib and
Guantánamo prisons is a well documented fact.
Also, because of George W. Bush's decisions about detainees,
there are 14,000 people in secret
American gulags with hardly any legal recourse, a situation
which is contrary to international law but also, to American law. What's more, torture in Iraq,
according to the United Nations' chief anti-torture expert, is now worse than
it was under the regime of Saddam Hussein. This unenviable record places the
American president in a very precarious legal position because he could be
accused of war crimes and impeached
for such
offenses.
Realizing
that, Bush is now desperately trying to save himself by having the U.S.
Congress retroactively modify both Article 3 of the Geneva
Convention and the U.S. War Crimes law, even though such a move would be
unconstitutional, since no law can be erased retroactively, under the U.S.
Constitution. It even seems that American military lawyers
have been
coerced to go along with an illegal practice they have themselves denounced
before. Indeed, after the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled on June 29, 2006 (in a 5-3 decision) that President Bush violated both
American and international law in his effort to railroad Guantanamo Bay
detainees in kangaroo courts, some legislative cover was thought to be
required. On
September 28, 2006, Congress pretended to want to curtail somewhat the
President's power to use torture, but finally approved a bill
that suspends the eight century old right of Habeas Corpus and the American Bill of Rights
for detainees at the Guantánamo Bay prison in Cuba or for any person
designated as 'enemy combatant' by the President, by stripping them of the
right to challenge their detention in court. With this new law, the American
Congress is now officially on record as going along with the Bush
administration in legalizing the recourse to future
torture techniques
by U.S. government agents, thus confirming the moral decadence of the United
States and its decline among democratic nations.
In conclusion, it can be said that the Bush-Cheney's
addiction to lies and to war
is a major threat to the United States itself, to its liberty and to stability
and freedom around the world. This decline of democractic principles and in
public morality, concomittent with the recourse to ever more sophisticated
armaments in military conflicts, is a direct threat to the survival of
humanity.
________________________________________
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.
Author's
Website:www.thenewamericanempire.com/
_______________________________________________________________________
Posted, October
2, 2006, at 5:30 am
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