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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JDN who wrote (534797)2/3/2004 12:21:19 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
speaking of lies that MATTER!
The Lies That Bind Us to Iraq
Using the ends to justify the means repeats the folly of Vietnam.

The central sickness of human history is the notion that
the ends justify the means, and it has disastrously
gripped political movements from left to right and from
the secular to the religious. It is axiomatic that immoral
means will inevitably corrupt the noblest of ends, as has
been displayed from the fatal hubris of the Roman
Empire down through the genocidal policies of the last
century's nationalists, communists and colonialists and
on through the suicide bombers of today.

Yet this profoundly immoral posture has been
embraced by President Bush in justifying his preemptive
war against Iraq, even when the much-touted Iraqi
threat proved at best to be based on inexcusable
ignorance and at worst to be impeachable fraud. The
undemocratic means employed by Bush —
misinforming the public, Congress and the United
Nations — are now somehow to be justified by the
ends of "building democracy" in Iraq. This is a daunting
challenge that the American people never signed on for
and which seems as elusive a goal today as a year ago.

Once again we seem unwilling to fully grasp the lesson of Vietnam, our other
major exercise in preemptive war based on the theories of ivory-tower
intellectuals with dreams of a Pax Americana. For those requiring a refresher
course in that previous folly, which so fractured our own country while
devastating three others, check out the new documentary "The Fog of War," in
which the Vietnam adventure's prime architect, Robert S. McNamara, tearfully
concedes it was all a grand mistake.

That decadelong conflict was brought to you originally by Democrats, one of
whom, John F. Kennedy, remains much admired. McNamara attempts to make
the case that JFK wanted to get out but was assassinated before that could
happen, but I don't buy that theory. Getting out is the hardest part, particularly
once you have put abroad the lie that you invaded a country in order to save it. It
is political suicide to then abandon such a crusading war when it turns sour.

Today, in Iraq, we again have been battered senseless by the argument that it is
"irresponsible" to leave, even when it is clear we are no longer welcome. Those
who dare suggest that our continued presence as an occupier is actually part of
the problem — like presidential candidate Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich (D-Ohio) —
are pilloried as unrealistic. But attempting to alter other people's history — while
also serving our own economic and political needs — leads almost inevitably to
quagmire, blowback and a nonsensical path of trying to make future truth of past
lies: We didn't go to Iraq to save it, but now we have to save it to excuse the fact
that we went.


This tangled web is no less onerous when spun by Republicans Bush and Dick
Cheney than by Democrats Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. And now, as then,
in the early stages of the war we saw only the most tepid opposition from the
political and media elites to the big-lie technique that so often accompanies war.

Most of the leading Democratic Party presidential candidates, for example, are
compromised by having supported an invasion they should have passionately
challenged before it was launched. It is not too late for them to admit they were
fooled by Bush, as some of them have begun to do. Thankfully, the campaign of
Sen. Joe Lieberman (D-Conn.) is on the ropes. He has consistently endorsed the
White House's cynical abuse of the facts; just last week, he said the Iraq invasion
was "just" because "Saddam Hussein himself was a weapon of mass destruction,"
a stupid and dangerous twisting of language.

Similarly unnerving is the ease with which ideologues like Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz manage to shape and shift their arguments whenever
their grand theories are undermined by messy reality. "We have a more important
job to do in Iraq … and that is to help the Iraqi people build a free and
democratic country," Wolfowitz said last weekend.

If this was the goal all along, then why didn't Wolfowitz and Bush tell the
American people before they sacrificed their sons and daughters to the crusade?
What was all that about the imminent threat of Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction and Hussein's ties to 9/11? All lies, it turns out. If Wolfowitz ever
finds his conscience as McNamara apparently has, he too will be crying in some
future documentary about the folly of presuming to bring enlightenment to a
people we neither respected nor understood, while undermining our own fragile
democracy.