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HUBRIS: SELLING THE IRAQ WAR

The Road To Hell

The Bush Legacy

The Secret Stuff

The president is quite correct when he says this is a new day and a new war and it's only just begun. Making Saddam a key figure if not the figure, however, is manipulative and inaccurate, and his daily Reasons, nearly all of which are beyond independent verification, have the stink of desperation about them. If you say enough things enough times, making enough of a sort of official sound, it begins to sound like a body of evidence. It begins to sound like you have a case. But there is no case. At least, not one that we have real evidence the American people can look at for themselves. In fact, the downside risk to Bush's Iraq gambit is so huge, so unthinkable, that there can only be one rational reason he's pushing so hard for this: The Secret Stuff.

The government has done a lot of things in the name of The Secret Stuff throughout this nation's existence. When the government is vague and obfuscatory, when they get backed into the corner, they wheel out The Secret Stuff. Issues of national security with devastating consequences should they be publicly aired. Bush's hole card is this Secret Stuff, things he intimates exist but cannot publicly discuss, but matters of such dire proportions that they are worth the lives of thousands of teenagers. The subliminal message, at least the one I'm receiving, is, Bush is not a madman. He's not some insane old coot putting kids in harm's way just to help the mid-term elections. I'm no Bush fan, but even I can't think of him in that way. So the message, the one they're not saying but are clearly communicating with the American people, is there is Secret Stuff. Something so terrible, the president feels the urgent need to act. And we, as good Americans, should trust his judgment, trust this Secret Stuff, and exercise a fundamental faith as Bush taps into the wellspring of exactly that kind of faith he and his administration has banked away since the planes hit the towers. President Bush apparently means to make a withdrawal at the bank of good will and drain off some of his 70% approval rating by ramming this war down our throats. And, honestly, even a cynic like me might be better able to get on board with this, were it not for incredibly stupid Deer Freeze gaffes, nuculer, $150 million for the GOP, and reckless statements from within Bush's own White House. To wit, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Karl Rove:

The Rove Propaganda: Insisting on going to war before the inspectors could complete their job.

Nobody Doesn't Like Sarah P.

Terrorism and war are absolutely part of Senior White House Advisor Karl Rove's reelection strategy. While it is certainly possible the timing of Rove's incredulous statements and Bush's saber rattling are coincidental, it nevertheless give me pause and a reasonable and human suspicion of the administration's motives, not so much in the objectives of Iraqi disarmament as in the timing of this campaign for it.

If Bush is trying to sell us on rushing into Iraq, and in obtaining his own Tonkin Resolution from Congress, he could have inspired more confidence by beginning his campaign after the elections. There's plenty of time to bomb Baghdad into the stone age in 2003, and even now we are unlikely to begin strikes before the end of the year. But I'm unsure whether or not Bush is interested in accruing credibility so much as expending it, draining it from the 70% approval well to achieve both a military and a political objective at the same time. Tainting Bush's message— a good and rousing call to arms against the villainous Saddam— with Beltway politics seems revelatory of a weasely character of a very small man. Putting the fairest and best face on this that I possibly can, Bush looks bad. Looks small and dumb and incompetent and selfish and, well, like a politician. For the timing if not the substance of all of this. And he shoots himself in the face, here, by asking us to trust him without presenting any measurably credible evidence. The subtext is, “Secret Stuff. Trust Me.” But he asks us to trust him in the drive time of the 2002 mid-term elections, while Karl Rove and Andrew Card are running around all but telling us they are using a potential war with Iraq to maximize the GOP political position.

I'd also be less nervous about all of this were it not for Vice President Dick Cheney's direct and indirect profiting from the Iraqi state.

In this Age of The CEO Perp Walk, changing the tune of the American press from the economy to national security would seem a good idea, especially if the media scrutiny was settling in on the vice president. It is, of course, preposterous to assume the Iraqi campaign is just Rove wagging the dog (likely at Cheney's direction), or that the president or vice president or their administration would actually put anyone in harm's way for political gain. I am not suggesting this is what they are in fact doing.

I am also not saying anything about Iraq having the world's second largest oil reserve. Bush is not saying anything about it, either, not even if only to dispel the thought that we're out to grab the oil. This is how evil, how conniving this all looks. Not talking about the politics or the oil only encourages that line of cynicism. Even if it is not evil, not conniving, even if the president and the administration's motives are absolutely pure, their good takes on the appearance of evil by the timing of their initiative and their silence on these kinds of issues. Skepticism is a cancer to any military campaign. While preparing this country for war, the administration has done itself and this nation a disservice by encouraging our cynicism with maneuvers that are either too clever for us to parse or are exactly what they appear to be: stupid.

This net result of making our forces “strong enough to dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a military build-up...” would be to encourage exactly the unorthodox initiatives we ourselves employed against an unbeatable and unstoppable force— the British. Desperate people who see no way to wage a conventional war with us will, by even a child's logic, turn towards desperate measures— terrorism. Bush's false machismo is a recipe for, an invitation to, a new era of terrorism unparalleled in American history.

Bush's statement reads more like a Stalin speech than the leader of the free world, a monologue from a man seemingly owned by special interests and manipulated by political strategists like Karl Rove, who has unequalled access to Bush (not even Cheney has more access than Rove). This hawkish tone emboldens terrorists and inflames jihad, as the big enemy flaunts his bigness. It's really just so insane, just so unthinkable, that I have to begin to suspect the administration is up to something: that this Madman Bush tone has a deliberate purpose and design. Because, if it does not, if this is not some psychological or propaganda campaign— if Bush actually means this— the implications are simply terrifying.

Click To Read Essay I suspect, for me, the proof of which this is will be whether or not we actually send ground troops into Baghdad. A squeaky clean air campaign could go on for months with very few American casualties. Troops in the desert are still a relatively low-risk endeavor, so maybe we're still talking about under 100 American casualties [Editor: at this writing, 295 U.S. troops have died since the Iraq war began in March, including 188 from hostile fire]. But I'd have to assume that, should the president march high school boys into Baghdad for close-in hot zone house-to-house combat, that the president is serious about Iraq's potential threat to our national security. I'm just not cynical enough to believe that, should we get to a Panama or even Vietnam combat mode, that it would be political maneuvering on Bush's part. My hope and prayer is we accomplish some semblance of a goal with an air campaign and some desert maneuvers and then the administration bows to political pressure from the U.N. and modifies or withdraws it's military campaign, conveniently, sometime after the November elections.

The flag-waving chorus of post-911 nationalism has provided Bush and Rove the perfect atmosphere to run their little hustle, rushing us headlong into a “war” with Saddam Hussein with a very sudden urgency that just happens to coincide with the November elections. And, sadly, we, as a nation, are not calling him on this. His approval rating remains sky high and House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, kicking off his '04 White House run, sold us all out by cutting a secret deal with Rove & Co. that will have the Democrats— and I am dizzy with disbelief about this— voting for Bush's obscene rush to Baghdad [which is why Gephardt lost my vote]. This president fills me with anxiety about both his motives and his competence. That no one can see this emperor is down to his boxer shorts, if not completely naked, fills me with dread. I desperately fear this man, and I desperately fear the equally clueless country that supports him.

Forget Iraq, the country in desperate need of regime change is the USA.

Christopher J. Priest
4 October 2002  Original
3 July 2003  Updated
editor@praisenet.org
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