Inspect Iraq, Don't Attack
"For 11 long years, Saddam Hussein has sidestepped, crawfished, wheedled out
of any agreement he had made not to harbor, not to develop weapons of mass destruction,
agreements he's made to treat the people within his country with respect. And
so I'm going to call upon the world to recognize that he is stiffing the world."
- George W. Bush, 9/5/02
Sources within the White House inner circle say George W. Bush is "out of control."
An unprovoked attack against Iraq is imminent, because Bush believes he's on
a mission from God to rid the world of Saddam Hussein, whether the world likes it or not.
No one likes Saddam Hussein. His own family members defected, and when he coaxed
them to return, he had them executed. Saddam has mass murdered Kurds and others,
and ruthlessly suppresses dissent in his own country. Saddam threatens and invades
his neighbors when he sees an advantage.
The Bush administration hopes to focus attention on these facts, while distracting
us from all other considerations. Alone -- without support from our allies,
his father's advisors, the general public, his own generals or even his own
party -- Bush is headed for a high-noon showdown with Saddam.
Saddam is an evil man. No one denies this. Iraq's attempts to gain nuclear
weapons represent a potential threat to the region. But this has been the case
for eleven years, as even Bush admits. Iraq is weaker now than in 1991, and
the Gulf War coalition dissolved long ago. Even Republican experts join our
allies and the American people opposing Bush's aim to "go it alone"
against Iraq. So why attack now?
High ranking Republicans express strong dissent against Bush's plans. The
Washington Post reports: "Brent Scowcroft and James Baker, respectively the
national security adviser and secretary of state in the first Bush administration,
have advised against invasion." General Scowcroft also served as the National Security Advisor for President Gerald Ford.
International and Congressional leaders support renewed weapons inspections,
but White House sources say Bush himself demands removal of Saddam as his objective.
Bush "talks a lot about the oppression of the Iraqi people, and liberating [them]
from this madman." New
Plan On Iraq Emerges, Former Officials Urge U.S. Caution.
We aren't privy to the secret intelligence, but our allies and these top Republicans
are. They all say Bush hasn't made the case that Iraq poses a clear and present
danger. That's why our allies are not lining up to join the Bush "Crusade" against
Saddam. That's why top elected Republicans and two generations of GOP wise men
reject Bush's "cowboy diplomacy."
Rather than consider this counsel as he claims he's doing, Bush is stepping
up his rush to war. This belies Bush's more placid public pronouncements, in
which he claims he will respect Congressional prerogatives: "President Bush
promised yesterday to seek congressional authorization before taking any military
action to ensure Iraqi disarmament." Bush
to Seek Hill Approval on Iraq War.
According to inside sources, this is all for show. Bush has already made up
his mind to attack Iraq. We must ask ourselves: Why war? Why now? The only credible
answers are alarming. As during his campaigns, Bush is relying on others like
Richard Cheney to present his anger to the public. George W. Bush is very angry
today.
In private, Bush is lashing out against his Secretary of State, General Colin
Powell for "undermining his authority." True, Powell informed the public about
the "fierce debate within the administration over a possible confrontation with
Iraq," however he defers to Bush: "Now that the holiday period is over and all
the European colleagues are back to work, and the United Nations General Assembly
will be meeting next week, I think you will see the president will pull all
these threads together," said Bush's top diplomat. Powell
Cites 'Real' Divide Internally on Iraq Policy.
Others are not so confident. The European Union and international elder statesmen
oppose Bush's designs against Iraq. They hope to reach Bush via Powell and even
former President Bush. The Washington Post reports:
"Former South African president Nelson Mandela expressed firm opposition to
military action. Mandela said he had tried to speak to Bush and had instead
spoken with his father, the former president. 'I asked him to speak to his son,
and I have already spoken to Powell,' Mandela said. 'I have not given up trying
to persuade the president not to attack Iraq.'" (Washington
Post - Sep 4, 2002)
Colin Powell is no liberal or dove. As James Mann, a senior writer-in-residence
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies wrote in the Washington
Post: "Powell has been, throughout his career, a proponent of a strong national
defense, an extensive military presence overseas and, more generally, a unique
American role in the world. He supported the Star Wars program in the 1980s
and resisted relaxing the ban on gays in the military in the 1990s." The
Left and Right Have The Secretary All Wrong.
Mann added: "Powell served comfortably as the loyal military aide to Secretary
of Defense Caspar Weinberger, the most hawkish Cabinet member of that Reagan
administration and the architect of unprecedented increases in the defense budget.
Mann quotes Powell: 'To Weinberger and Reagan we owe the resurgence of the United
States as a respected and credible military power.'"Bush is wrong to question
his Secretary of State's loyalty because as Mann notes: "Powell turned down
offers to become Clinton's secretary of state, primarily because he felt more
in tune with the Republicans than with the Democrats on foreign policy."(Washington
Post)
Powell is wrong if he thinks Bush seeks a diplomatic solution rather than
a military confrontation. Even so, Powell is supporting Bush, at least so far.
Therefore, the real divide between Bush and Powell has less to do with "undermining
authority" than doctrinaire differences.
The Powell Doctrine on use of force reads as follows: "US troops should be
sent into conflict only when vital US interests are at stake, where there is
strong public support, where the objectives are clearly defined and limited,
and where overwhelming force is used to accomplish the objective." (Washington
Post)
Bush is abandoning the Powell Doctrine for a new doctrine unprecedented in
American history. Former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger is perplexed
by Team Bush's demands that America and the World's leaders should trust one
man's judgment -- without consultation or proof -- as justification for an unprovoked
attack.
This is beyond a leap of faith. It is a mad jump to an illogical conclusion
at odds with American honor and dignity. Our allies, military experts, and Republican
Secretaries of State Kissinger, Baker, Eagleburger and Powell oppose this Bush
Doctrine.
The US was founded as a nation of peace and commerce, not aggression and conquest.
Powell -- and over two centuries of American policymakers have always considered
war the last resort. Bush's Doctrine starts with the first strike use of massive
deadly force in defiance of every American principle.
Bush's approach relies on "leveraged power" -- threats and use of force, even
unprovoked first strikes for arbitrary purpose. Even absent adequate force,
vital US interests, and clearly defined and limited objectives. Even over Congressional,
allied and public opposition.
One military expert compares the international arena to law enforcement. The
police have no interdictory authority. Until there is a crime, under the rule
of law, the police have no jurisdiction. That's been our policy since 1776.
George W. Bush believes differently, based on his personal sense of power and
divine guidance.
Bush's sense of unquestionable authority drives him out of control when anyone
defies him. Court decisions declaring his and Attorney General Ashcroft's actions
unconstitutional and excessive infuriate Bush. People are questioning him on
Iraq, and that makes Bush very angry.
Our allies nearly unanimously refuse to grant Bush blank check authority to
attack Iraq. The Congress, the media and the American public express the same
concerns. Bush is furious anyone dares "defy" his "authority" to declare war.
This rage renders him unwilling to listen to anyone other than partisan political
yes men. He is "out of control."
Top White House poltical advisors Karl Rove and Dan Bartlett joined Vice President
Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld priming Bush for battle. Rove
wants Bush to attack Iraq before the November elections to force Democrats and
moderate Republicans to toe-the-line or look like "weaklings" [paraphrased due
to vulgarity]. That's the wrong reason to put 100,000s of American troops in
harms way. But to Rove, that's a small price to pay for winning Congressional
races.
Rumsfeld tells Bush to attack strong and hard, assuring him the Congress,
our allies, and the American people will "fall in line." That may well be true,
at least over the short run, but that defies the Powell Doctrine requirement
of public support before committing to war. It also begs the fundamental questions.
Why war? Why now?
Fellow Texan Republicans James A. Baker III and House Majority leader Richard
Armey both made unprecedented public criticisms of Bush, cautioning against
this unprovoked invasion and refuting administration claims that Saddam Hussein
is a threat to the United States or our vital interests. They lead the calls
urging Bush to rely on weapons inspectors rather than weapons. However their
advice goes unheeded.
Bush is intent on ousting Saddam, and considers inspections part of a one-two punch, rather
than an alternative to all out attack. Sources characterize the Bush policy
as "send in the inspectors while we arm the missiles." This reckless
doctrine makes Ronald Reagan's motto "Trust but verify" seem positively placid
by comparison.
Bush's party leaders, his father's national security team, several Secretaries
of State -- including his own, and our top military planners all advocate alternatives
to invasion. They all oppose Bush's first strike doctrine. Without support from
his party, the public, or our allies in the Middle East, and without any evidence
Iraq poses a threat to us or the region, Bush is pushing for an imminent attack.
The situation, under a steady boil at least since Bush branded Iraq an evil
power during his State of the Union address, is now about to boil over. War
With Iraq Is Imminent.
Undaunted and untroubled, Bush sees confirmation in the unlikeliest places.
He read former President Carter's recent statements as support for an invasion.
Carter warned against a unilateral US war against Iraq, because
Baghdad represents "no current danger to the United States." Carter
says Iraq poses 'no current danger' to US, also, Carter
Takes on 'Belligerence' in Washington.
Carter's OP-ED published in the Washington Post concludes: "As has been emphasized
vigorously by foreign allies and by responsible leaders of former administrations
and incumbent officeholders, there is no current danger to the United States
from Baghdad." Jimmy
Carter: America's Policy Shift, The Troubling New Face of America.
Our source confirms Team Bush believes that "If that's what Carter says, then
we must be right." This describes Bush as either deep in delusion, on an all
consuming mission -- or both. Adding to this harrowing unreality, Bush's top spokesman denies there is any conflict over Iraq within the administration.
Labor Day, Ari Fleischer told reporters on an Air Force One: "[Cheney and Powell]
haven't spoken differently, they've spoken the same." Fleischer further enunciated
"The American position, as the vice president said in his remarks, and Secretary
Powell said, and as the president has said, is that arms inspectors in Iraq
are a means to an end, but the end is knowledge that Iraq has lived up to its
promises that it made to end the Gulf War, that it has in fact disarmed, that
it does not possess weapons of mass destruction." No
Conflict on Iraq Policy, Fleischer Says.
For the record, Powell has called for return of weapons inspectors, saying
"The president has been clear that he believes weapons inspectors should return."
By contrast, Cheney told the Veterans of Foreign Wars on Aug. 26: "A return
of inspectors would provide no assurance whatsoever of compliance with U.N.
resolutions. On the contrary, there is a great danger that it would provide
false comfort that Saddam was somehow 'back in his box.'" (Washington
Post)
This is not merely an internal White House conflict. This is a three-body
equation. First, Bush sees himself as the divine sword of retribution against
Saddam. For him, nothing else matters. Second. Karl Rove and Dan Bartlett are
trying to use this for partisan political advantage. The third leg -- including
Bush's own military advisors, Colin Powell, and top Republican elected officials
and career diplomats -- are resisting invasion.
Despite their wise counsel and his assurances to the contrary, Bush has already
made up his mind. He will step up his actions because, as the White House sources
tell us, Bush is "out of control." Bush believes he was personally called by
God to lead America. Tim Russert and former NYC Mayor Giuliani discussed this
on "Meet the Press" last year. At the time, most dismissed such talk as post-September
11th hyperbole.
However, Bush has embraced this notion of Biblical mission, and now operates
with an absolute sense of supreme authority without qualification and without
limitation. He stands poised to unleash American might full force against anyone
who would dare to defy him. The Karl Rove camp hopes an attack on Iraq will
humiliate Democrats in time to sway the mid-term elections. This means the late-October
deadline reported by the media was no misprint. Bush and Rove see this as a
date certain for reluctant Republican politicians, members of the opposition,
and even our allies to stand "with us or against us."
It's of no small moment that Russia with its 1000s of nuclear missiles recently
embraced not only Saddam but Iran and North Korea -- Bush's entire "axis of
evil." The implications of their approach should give Team Bush pause, however
like an MBA focused on the next quarterly report, he's ignoring long-term ramifications.
His top political team and Rumsfeld support and enable Bush's messianic mission.
There is no sign of caution or consideration of consequence in their analysis.
As the Bush Administration rushes headlong into war, we should pause and consider
the law. International law doesn't support an attack on Iraq, but I am concerned
with an even more basic law: Isaac Newton's laws of physics, specifically the
one stating: "Every action has an equal and opposite reaction." We would be
foolish to ignore this immutable law. We simply cannot afford Bush's approach
fiscally, legally, or geopolitically. Bush's
Iraq Attack Risks Reaction.
The White House is already implementing its plans for Bush to strong-arm domestic
and international allies. Bush was scheduled to begin making phone calls this
morning, September 5, speaking bluntly and personally to international leaders.
Bush, Rove and others seek to "leverage" every strength of the US against leaders
reluctant to back invasion plans. Cautioned about potential adverse consequences
on international trade and economy as well as other policy issues, Bush said,
"There is only one issue."
President Carter disagrees. He wrote: "Fundamental changes are taking place
in the historical policies of the United States with regard to human rights,
our role in the community of nations and the Middle East peace process -- largely
without definitive debates (except, at times, within the administration). Some
new approaches have understandably evolved from quick and well-advised reactions
by President Bush to the tragedy of Sept. 11, but others seem to be developing
from a core group of conservatives who are trying to realize long-pent-up ambitions
under the cover of the proclaimed war against terrorism." The
Troubling New Face of America.
Carter is not alone questioning the ideological and partisan political underpinnings
of this new dangerous doctrine. Former Weapons Inspector and Marine Intelligence
Officer Colonel Scott Ritter says this right wing cabal has captured our national
security policy and are putting their narrow partisan interests above our national
interest. Colonel Ritter says the man he voted for is planning to invade Iraq
to improve his party's chances at the polls this November. We all know the "wag
the dog scenario." It's no secret Republicans are in big trouble heading into
the November elections. Lately it seems war is the only GOP issue, as the economy
sinks into a Double Dip W. Bush recession. AWOL
Bush Aims America At Iraq, and RED
ALERT - October War in Iraq.
Warning signs still under the media radar suggest a worse situation, if that's
possible. Some among Bush's trusted White House staff fear what they are seeing
and where Bush is taking us. His state of mind hauntingly reminds them of Richard
Nixon's Final Days. They fear Bush is becoming Nixonesque ... or worse. Although
Bush lacks Nixon's paranoia, he may entertain even more dangerous notions.
George W. Bush sincerely believes God sent him to remove Saddam Hussein from
power. Bush's monomania about Saddam and his sense of divine purpose scare some
of his closest advisors. His resentment of dissent and refusal to credit counsel
alarm many from the Nixon, Ford, and Reagan administrations. Even top officials
from his father's administration fear the worst, and former President Bush is
among them.
Top Republicans past and present oppose Bush's plans for an unprovoked invasion.
Our closest allies around the world loudly and clearly announced they will not
support an attack against Iraq. Polls show the American public does not want
America to go it alone. Experts from the US, the UN, and the Middle East all
advise we inspect Iraq, not attack. Bush is intent on bucking all of them. Inspect
Iraq, Don't Attack.
USA Today reported "many congressional leaders - including those who support
the use of force against Saddam - worry that the administration needs a clearer
justification than the belief that Iraq has developed weapons of mass destruction."
Although "Bush administration lawyers have concluded that establishing a link
between al-Qaeda terrorists and Iraq would provide the legal justification the
White House needs to attack Saddam Hussein's regime," Armed Services Committee
Chairman Delaware Senator Joseph Biden says Bush has "no Constitutional authority
to invade." Biden expressed hopes the Bush administration have the "resolve"
to do the right thing. Connection
sought between Iraq, al-Qaeda.
John Warner of Virginia, the ranking Republican on the committee also contradicts
the Bush position. Senator Warner said Bush will "have to come to Congress"
for authorization because "no existing resolutions of a general nature would
suffice to meet that political - not legal - requirement." Warner is the Senate's
leading expert on military matters. He authored the resolution empowering former
President Bush to launch the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and his support is crucial
to this Bush in 2002. His opposition should give Bush, Rove, Cheney and Rumsfeld
pause. But apparently it hasn't and won't. (USA
Today)
So why war? Why now? Because Bush sees himself as the divine sword of retribution.
Because Karl Rove and other shortsighted partisan-minded White House insiders
are trying to exploit war for political advantage. Against this, the voices
of reason are resisting invasion. Who will prevail in this triangular test of
wills?
Will we go to war for Republican partisan political advantage? Will Bush lead
us on a crusade based on his misguided sense of divine missionary purpose? Will
American forces kill and die for all the wrong reasons? It all depends on media
responsibility reporting the facts, public awareness and opposition, and Congressional
courage. In other words, prospects appear bleak.
Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas is about 25 miles away from the burned out site of the Koresh Branch Davidian compound outside Waco. Now people wonder: Is Bush's state of mind that far from Koresh's?
Sources:
New
Plan On Iraq Emerges, Former Officials Urge US Caution, (Washington Post
- September 5, 2002; Page A28 )
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38620-2002Sep5.html/
Bush
to Seek Hill Approval on Iraq War, (Washington Post - Sep 5, 2002 - Page
A01) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36083-2002Sep4.html/
Powell
Cites 'Real' Divide Internally on Iraq Policy, (Washington Post - Sep 4,
2002 - Page A01) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34671-2002Sep3.html/
The
Left and Right Have The Secretary All Wrong, (Washington Post September
1, 2002; Page B01) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19279-2002Aug31.html/
War With Iraq Is Imminent,
(MikeHersh.com - Aug 23, 2002) http://www.mikehersh.com/article_70.shtml/
Carter says
Iraq poses 'no current danger' to US, (Reuters Alertnet - 5 Sep 2002) http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N05112500/
Carter
Takes on 'Belligerence' in Washington, (Reuters: Politics - 4 Sep
2002) http://www.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml;jsessionid=GD54XBCPP3YK2CRBAELCFEY?type=politicsnews&StoryID=1411844#/
Jimmy
Carter: America's Policy Shift, The Troubling New Face of America, (Washington
Post - September 5, 2002 - Page A31) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38441-2002Sep4.html/
No
Conflict on Iraq Policy, Fleischer Says (Washington Post - Sep 3, 2002 -
Page A14) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A27581-2002Sep2.html/
Bush's Iraq Attack Risks
Reaction, (MikeHersh.com - Aug 23, 2002) http://www.mikehersh.com/article_69.shtml/
The
Troubling New Face of America, (Washington Post - September 5, 2002 - Page
A31) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38441-2002Sep4.html/
AWOL Bush Aims America
At Iraq, (MikeHersh.com - Aug 6, 2002) http://www.mikehersh.com/article_58.shtml/
RED ALERT - October War
in Iraq, (MikeHersh.com - July 24, 2002) http://www.mikehersh.com/article_28.shtml/
Inspect Iraq, Don't Attack,
(MikeHersh.com - July 27, 2002) http://www.mikehersh.com/article_33.shtml/
Connection
sought between Iraq, al-Qaeda, (USA Today - July 29, 2002) http://usatoday.com/news/world/2002-07-28-iraq-al-qaeda_x.htm/
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