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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (32562)6/28/2004 10:06:44 PM
From: SkywatcherRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
WHAHAHAHAHA....good one!
Tuck Tail and Run
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Tuesday 29 June 2004

The American people are not comfortable dealing with words like "total failure" and "ruined credibility," but these are words that all of us are going to have to become accustomed to.

A process that began in September 2002 as a coordinated propaganda blitz to convince Americans
they were on the verge of being gassed by an Osama-Saddam Axis of Doom, a process that was swathed in flags and a snarling, nationalistic patriotism, a process that has in the last 22 months delivered 855 dead American soldiers, thousands of gravely wounded American soldiers and over ten
thousand dead Iraqi civilians to our collective doorstep, has now concluded with a farcical handover of 'sovereignty' in the dead of night. One can almost imagine American proconsul Paul Bremer handing the keys to this rolling bomb over to former CIA pal and newly-minted Iraqi 'Prime Minister' Iyad Allawi with a snicker and a shrug.

Thanks for the laughs, Iyad, but my helicopter is waiting on the roof.

In January 2003, less than 60 days before U.S. forces rained fire and steel upon Baghdad in the 'Shock and Awe' portion of this escapade, Mr. Bush stood before Congress and the American people to deliver his State of the Union address. In it, he solemnly informed us that Iraq was in possession of 26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin, 500 tons (i.e. 1,000,000 pounds) of sarin, mustard and VX gas, 30,000 munitions to deliver these agents, mobile biological weapons labs, a program to procure uranium from Niger to use in nuclear bombs, and connections to al Qaeda.

None of this - not one bit of it - was true. This didn't stop Bush' people from repeating these lies over
and over again, even as all the evidence accounted against them. Pottymouth-in-Chief Dick Cheney
continues to flap the Iraq-al Qaeda canard despite the fact that his best evidence to support the theory,
a bin Laden insider named Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, has gone off the reservation. Once, al-Libi confirmed
the existence of a connection, but now he has changed his story completely.

The going theory on this flip-flop is that al-Libi endured some of the "aggressive interrogation
techniques" we have become famous for, and told his interrogators what they wanted to hear. If you
had electrodes strapped to your testicles while you sat in one of those dark rooms with the swinging,
bald light bulb, you'd probably do something similar. Once the electrodes came off, and once al-Libi
was confronted with evidence that contradicted his gonad-inspired claim, he reversed course and
delivered another blow to Mr. Cheney's theory.

This is, in the end, merely an accent in the symphony. In attending to the present, here is what we
call sovereignty in Iraq:

97 legal orders have been enacted by Bremer which are "binding instructions or
directives to the Iraqi people, "which will last for years, and which allocate
positions controlling communications, public broadcasting, securities markets,
investigations into public corruption, petroleum and virtually every area of
government to people loyal to the occupation force. One elections law crafted by
Bremer gives a seven-member commission the power to disqualify political parties
and any of the candidates they support.

The 25-member Iraqi Governing Council, appointed by the Bush administration to
run Iraq in its name, supposedly dissolved itself on June 1st. A little-noticed
decree from the Council, however, guarantees Council members power to veto
laws, approve Iraq's 2005 budget, and gives them seats on an array of committees
that will choose the remaining members of the National Council. In short, the
puppets installed by the Americans after the invasion, all of whom were roundly
rejected by the Iraqi people as illegitimate, are still very much in charge.

160,000 American troops will remain in Iraq, but the new government will have no
command over them. In fact, a recent decision by Bush and Rumsfeld grants total
immunity to the soldiers and their commanders for any illegal acts they might
commit. This newly sovereign Iraq will continue to be swarmed by an occupying
force over which Allawi and friends will have no control whatsoever.


Oil revenues from Iraq, the money Bush has repeatedly claimed belongs to the
Iraqi people, totals more than $20 billion to date. Almost none of that money has
made its way to the Iraqi people, or to the rebuilding of infrastructure, but has
instead been redirected to the U.S. and British corporations which basically
control the Coalition Provisional Authority. The contracts diverting these funds to
these corporations are binding, and cannot be changed even if the 'sovereign' Iraqi
government decides the money could better be spent elsewhere. For the time
being, despite the billions of dollars coming out of Iraq' s oil industry, the diversion
of funds created by these CPA contracts means that most of the money for the
rebuilding of Iraqi infrastructure will come from American taxpayers by way of the
U.S. Congress. According to a report by the BBC, most of the $20 billion cannot
be accounted for at this time. The party is not likely to end soon; since oil
production began, only 2,300 wells have been drilled in Iraq, compared with about
1 million in Texas. A large part of the country remains virtually unexplored.

The most important person in Iraq will not be Iyad Allawi or any other Iraqi. The
most important person in Iraq will be John Negroponte, former American
ambassador to the United Nations, who has been tapped to be ambassador to
Iraq. The American embassy in Baghdad will be the largest American embassy
anywhere in the world. As ambassador to Honduras during the Reagan
administration, Negroponte was accused of playing a central role in the human
rights violations and terror campaigns which were exposed during the Iran/Contra
scandal.


The handover of 'sovereignty' was done two days early and in the dead of night,
purportedly, to forestall any attacks planned for the now-discarded June 30
handover date. Somehow, however, this handshake between pals does not seem
likely to dissuade those Iraqis disposed to resisting the invasion and occupation of
their country. In all probability, the dying will continue, which is why Mr. Bush
made absolutely sure Iyad Allawi is prepared to declare martial law in his newly
liberated country.

George W. Bush would have us believe this is a great day, a great victory for the
United States. Here is what we call victory:

855 American soldiers dead.

Thousands more American soldiers wounded, many gravely.

Over ten thousand Iraqi civilians dead.

No weapons of mass destruction, and no connections to al Qaeda.

$151 billion of taxpayer money spent to enable this mess in this fiscal year alone,
money which came out of the border patrol budget, the rail safety budget, the Port
Security budget, law enforcement agency budgets, firefighter grants, the
bioterrorism budget, the First Responders budget, and more. Do you feel safer?


An Iraqi government as close to democracy as the Earth is to the Oort Cloud.

An American government thoroughly discredited on an international stage still rife
with dangers to American security. As Cliff Kupchan, vice president of the Nixon
Center which specializes in foreign policy, said, "I don't think you can turn around
three years of U.S. foreign policy with some midnight initiatives. The image of this
president in the public's and the world's eyes is pretty much established."

"Total failure" and "ruined credibility" are the watchwords for the day. A process that never should
have begun in the first place, a process which had nothing to do with defending the United States, has
led us to a place where every 'goal' put forth by the Bush administration, no matter how stupid or
simple, has turned to ash. This is the great gift Mr. Bush has delivered to us: A midnight deal, a
washing of hands, and a quick exit out the back door. Honor and integrity indeed.

CC



To: Brumar89 who wrote (32562)6/28/2004 11:02:43 PM
From: ChinuSFORead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Bush still does not know what he set out to do in Iraq. He told us he was going in because of WMDs and that the weapons inspectors were no good since they could not find any and that he would.

Then he talked about regime change. He drove Saddam out all right, but after Saddam what? He didn't plan for that. And then he ends up turning over sovereignty in a clandestine fashion. Not the sigh of a country whose countrymen would be jumping for joy in the streets, showering petals to US soldiers walking down the streets of Baghdad etc.