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Gangsterism in the guise of diplomacy
US flaunts scheme to use weapons inspections as pretext for
war vs. Iraq
By Jerry Isaacs
9 March 2002
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A measure of the cynicism of the US political establishment
is its undisguised use of weapons inspections as a pretext to
launch a new war against Iraq.
In recent weeks US officials have openly discussed their campaign
in the United Nations Security Council for a renewal of weapons
inspections as a casus belli to manipulate public opinion
for a new military assault. It is remarkable that American officials
no longer feel the need to conceal the duplicity of their policy
toward the Persian Gulf country.
Bush administration officials hardly bother to conceal their
contempt for the UN and international public opinion as a whole.
A series of reports in the US press have cited unnamed US officials
setting forth the scheme to devise new sanctions so onerous that
Saddam Hussein will be bound to reject them, or, alternately,
to impose a regime of inspections so intrusive and provocative
that, sooner rather than later, the Iraqis will balk, creating
the pretext for a new US military assault aimed at toppling the
government in Baghdad.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is among the American
officials who have all but boasted of using the UN as a cats
paw in the US war preparations. He recently said new inspections
would have to be far more intrusive and involve the
Iraqis not controlling when they come in, where they could go,
what they could do. Rumsfeld added, The Iraqis arent
going to agree to something like that.
The fact that the renewed campaign for weapons inspections
is a mere pretext for war is underscored by events since September
11. Within hours of the terror attacks on New York and Washington,
the most militaristic faction of the administration began lobbying
to extend the war on terror to Iraq. They faced a
problem, however. There was no evidence Iraq had anything to do
with the September 11 attacks.
The bomb Iraq now zealots, headed within the administration
by Rumsfeld and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, shifted their tactics
after the anthrax attacks in October. Editorials appeared in the
Wall Street Journal and other sounding boards of the most
extreme war faction insisting that the Iraqi regime was the source
of the anthrax sent through the mail to congressional Democratic
leaders and various media figures. This pretext for war collapsed
when it emerged that the anthrax came from a domestic source.
The White House then came up with the scheme to use weapons
inspections to provoke a crisis with the Baghdad regime, which
could be used to justify military action that had already been
decided upon. US officials are demanding unrestricted access for
UN inspectors, including access to Saddam Husseins personal
security apparatus.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan was expected to meet with a
high-level Iraqi delegation Thursday to demand the renewal of
inspections. Before the meeting Hans Blix, the head of the UN
inspections commission, told the New York Times the UN
wants unrestricted access and no Iraqi veto over the nationality
of inspectors. Echoing US demands, Blix said, There are
no sanctuaries. The resolutions make it quite clear that there
should be access that is unconditional, immediate and unrestricted.
The Times acknowledged that the Bush administration
calculates the Iraqi government will be compelled to reject these
demands. The question hanging over the United Nations now
is whether the United States really wants arms inspectors to return,
based on public comments made by Secretary of Defense Donald H.
Rumsfeld questioning their value. Some diplomats say the United
States would not want inspectors on the ground if a military attack
were being planned; the last inspectors to work in Iraq had to
be pulled out ahead of American bombing in 1998.
Iraq barred UN inspectors from reentering the country after
charging they were working with US, British and Israeli intelligence
agencies to spy on the Iraqi security apparatus and track Husseins
movements in preparation for an assassination attempt against
the Iraqi leader. These accusations were confirmed in articles
published by the Washington Post and Boston Globe
in January 1999, following US air strikes that included attacks
on Husseins personal security detachment.
Well aware that Iraqs weapons program has long been dismantledafter
the Gulf War and more than a decade of inspections and sanctionsUS
demands for ever more intrusive searches are a transparent effort
to justify a military attack already in advanced planning stages.
Military analysts acknowledge that a renewed dispute over inspections
would give the Pentagon time to prepare an invasion.
Retired Air Force General Charles G. Boyd, who runs the Washington
office of the influential Council on Foreign Relations, told the
Washington Post the US military presence in the region
could be gradually increased while the administration pressed
Iraq at the United Nations. I would send them [US troops]
in while banging the drums on the need for more opening to inspectors,
Boyd said.
Even in the event that Iraq allows inspectors back in the country,
Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Colin Powell and other US officials
have already laid the groundwork to justify war. Rumsfeld told
CBS-TVs Face the Nation, Under the best circumstances,
inspectors have a very, very difficult time, because youre
dealing with a regime that ... kills people, that lies, thats
had years to hide things.
In other words, if inspectors are allowed back in, they will
carry out one provocation after another in order to charge the
Iraqi regime with obstruction, thereby providing a
rationale for military action.
The White Houses ploys are openly discussed in the American
media, which report them without the slightest criticism. Conceivably,
the Bush administration could muster some support by provoking
a casus belli, comments Newsweek magazine
in its March 4 issue. This spring the UN Security Council
is expecting to demand that Saddam allow in international arms
inspectors to identify and eliminate his WMD [Weapons of Mass
Destruction]. Bush administration officials fear, however, that
Saddam will play the fox and say yes.
A senior administration official told Newsweek the United
States will demand total, unfettered, 24-hour-a-day, 365-day-a-year
inspection rights. Commenting on this, the magazine concludes,
Saddam is not likely to permit arms-control inspectors in
his bedroom.
Meanwhile, Newsweek reports, the CIA is continuing its
long-term covert operations to undermine Hussein and foment a
coup from inside the military, a plan agency officials say
is enhanced by increased UN pressure combined with the ongoing
buildup of US forces in the area.
The Washington Post wrote February 24: The assumption
is that either Hussein will acquiesce, something the administration
views as unlikely, or his continued refusal will help convince
the world that all peaceful options have been exhausted.
Summing up the position of the administration USA Today
wrote on February 27, To give the impression of building
the widest possible coalition against Iraq, US officials are going
through the motions of implementing UN agreements, the officials
say. That includes making proposals that may be difficult for
US allies, as well as Iraq, to accept.
The newspaper then noted approvingly, Before resorting
to military action, the administration wants to be able to say
that it tried other options. It concluded, Diplomatic
efforts also provide time for the United States to prepare for
military action.
There is nothing new in US administrations using the bogeyman
of weapons of mass destruction, or similar pretexts,
to obscure their war aims. This has certainly been the modus operandi
since the Gulf War, and was used by the Clinton administration
to justify repeated air strikes and the maintenance of economic
sanctions, which have claimed more than a million Iraqi lives.
What is new is that US officials openly admit to using the supposed
threat of Iraqi WMDs as a casus belli.
This is indicative of the gangster-like character of the Bush
administration, which feels it is accountable to no one but its
corporate and military overseers. Blind to the deep-seated anger
and resentment generated throughout the world by their arrogance
and bullying, Bush officials are plunging the entire Middle East
along a road leading to catastrophe.
The administration feels it can operate in this manner largely
because it faces no opposition from the corporate-controlled news
media or the Democratic Party. Al Gore, the Democratic presidential
candidate in 2000, recently emerged from political semi-retirement
to declare his full support for war against Iraq, saying the US
should go the limit to overthrow the regime in Baghdad.
Earlier this week, Gores 2000 running mate, Senator Joseph
Lieberman, reiterated his support for a military assault against
Iraq and assured the White House it could initiate such action
without seeking the approval of Congress.
See Also:
US troops deployed to former Soviet republic
of Georgia
[1 March 2002]
Al Gore backs Bushs
war plans
[20 February 2002]
US militarism targets South
American oil
[20 February 2002]
Bush administration confirms
plans for war against Iraq
[16 February 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
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