|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
The twenty lies of George W. Bush
By Patrick Martin
20 March 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Monday nights 15-minute speech by President Bush, setting
a 48-hour deadline for war against Iraq, went beyond the usual
distortions, half-truths, and appeals to fear and backwardness
to include a remarkable number of barefaced, easily refuted lies.
The enormous scale of the lying suggests two political conclusions:
the Bush administration is going to war against Iraq with utter
contempt for democracy and public opinion, and its war propaganda
counts heavily on the support of the American media, which not
only fails to challenge the lies, but repeats and reinforces them
endlessly.
Without attempting to be exhaustive, it is worthwhile listing
some of the most important lies and contrasting Bushs assertions
with the public record. All of the false statements listed below
are directly quoted from the verbatim transcript of Bushs
remarks published on the Internet.
Lie No. 1: My fellow citizens, events in Iraq
have now reached the final days of decision.
The decision for war with Iraq was made long ago, the intervening
time having been spent in an attempt to create the political climate
in which US troops could be deployed for an attack. According
to press reports, most recently March 16 in the Baltimore
Sun, at one of the first National Security Council
meetings of his presidency, months before the terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Bush expressed his determination
to overthrow Saddam Hussein and his willingness to commit US ground
troops to an attack on Iraq for that purpose. All that was required
was the appropriate pretextsupplied by September 11, 2001.
Lie No. 2: For more than a decade, the United
States and other nations have pursued patient and honorable efforts
to disarm the Iraqi regime without war.
The US-led United Nations regime of sanctions against Iraq,
combined with no-fly zones and provocative weapons
inspections, is one of brutal oppression. The deliberate withholding
of food, medical supplies and other vital necessities is responsible
for the death of more than a million Iraqis, half of them children.
Two UN officials who headed the oil-for-food program resigned
in protest over the conditions created in Iraq by the sanctions.
The CIA used the inspectors as a front, infiltrating agents into
UNSCOM, the original inspections program. The CIAs aim was
to spy on Iraqs top officials and target Saddam Hussein
for assassination.
Lie No. 3: The Iraqi regime has used diplomacy
as a ploy to gain time and advantage. It has uniformly defied
Security Council resolutions demanding full disarmament...
Iraq has never defied a Security Council resolution
since the end of the Persian Gulf War in 1991. It has generally
cooperated with the dictates of the UN body, although frequently
under protest or with reservations, because many of the resolutions
involve gross violations of Iraqi sovereignty. From 1991 to 1998,
UN inspectors supervised the destruction of the vast bulk of the
chemical and biological weapons, as well as delivery systems,
which Iraq accumulated (with the assistance of the US) during
the Iran-Iraq war, and they also destroyed all of Iraqs
facilities for making new weapons.
Lie No. 4: Peaceful efforts to disarm the Iraqi
regime have failed again and again because we are not dealing
with peaceful men.
According to the Washington
Post of March 16, referring to the 1991-1998 inspection
period: [U]nder UN supervision, Iraq destroyed 817 of 819
proscribed medium-range missiles, 14 launchers, 9 trailers and
56 fixed missile-launch sites. It also destroyed 73 of 75 chemical
or biological warheads and 163 warheads for conventional explosives.
UN inspectors also supervised destruction of 88,000 filled and
unfilled chemical munitions, more than 600 tons of weaponized
and bulk chemical weapons agents, 4,000 tons of precursor chemicals
and 980 pieces of equipment considered key to production of such
weapons.
Lie No. 5: The Iraq regime continues to possess
and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised.
The Washington Post article cited above noted that CIA
officials were concerned about whether administration officials
have exaggerated intelligence in a desire to convince the American
public and foreign governments that Iraq is violating United Nations
prohibitions against chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons
and long-range missile systems. The article quoted a
senior intelligence analyst who said the inspectors could
not locate weapons caches because there may not be much
of a stockpile.
Former British Foreign Minister Robin Cook, who resigned from
the Blair government Monday in protest over the decision to go
to war without UN authorization, declared, Iraq probably
has no weapons of mass destruction in the commonly understood
sense of the term. Even if Iraq is concealing some remnants
of its 1980s arsenal, these would hardly deserve Bushs lurid
description, since they are primitive and relatively ineffective.
Some of the most lethal weapons ever devised are those
being unleashed by the United States on Iraq: cruise missiles,
smart bombs, fuel-air explosives, the 10,000-pound daisy-cutter
bomb, the 20,000-pound MOAB just tested in Florida. In addition,
the US has explicitly refused to rule out the use of nuclear weapons.
Lie No. 6: [Iraq] has aided, trained and harbored
terrorists, including operatives of Al Qaeda.
No one, not even US government, seriously believes there is
a significant connection between the Islamic fundamentalists and
the secular nationalist Baathist regime in Iraq, which have
been mortal enemies for decades. The continued assertion of an
Al Qaeda-Iraq alliance is a desperate attempt to link Saddam Hussein
to the September 11 attacks.
It also serves to cover up the responsibility of American imperialism
for sponsoring Islamic fundamentalist terrorism. The forces that
now comprise Al Qaeda were largely recruited, trained, armed and
set in motion by the CIA itself, as part of a long-term policy
of using Islamic fundamentalists as a weapon against left-wing
movements in the Muslim countries. This policy was pursued from
the 1950s and was escalated prior to and during the Soviet intervention
in Afghanistan, which ended in 1989. Osama bin Laden himself was
part of the CIA-backed mujaheddin forces in Afghanistan before
he turned against Washington in the 1990s.
Lie No. 7: America tried to work with the United
Nations to address this threat because we wanted to resolve the
issue peacefully.
The Bush administration went to the United Nations because
it wanted UN sanction for military action and it wanted UN member
states to cough up funds for postwar operations, along the lines
of its financial shakedown operation for the 1991 Persian Gulf
War. Bushs most hawkish advisors, such as Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Cheney, initially opposed going
to the UN because they did not want diplomacy to slow down the
drive to war. They only agreed after Secretary of State Colin
Powell argued that the pace of the US military buildup in the
Persian Gulf gave enough time to get the UN to rubber-stamp the
war.
Lie No. 8: These governments [the Security Council
majority] share our assessment of the danger, but not our resolve
to meet it.
This is belied by virtually every statement on Iraq issued
by the governments of France, Russia, China, Germany and other
countries opposed to military action, which have repeatedly declared
that they see no imminent threat from Iraq. Bush brands his opponents
on the Security Council as cowards, as though they were afraid
to take action against Saddam Hussein. These countries were, in
fact, increasingly alarmedby the United States, not Iraq.
Insofar as they summoned up resolve, to the shock of the Bush
administration, it was to deny UN support for the war that Washington
had already decided to wage.
Lie No. 9: Many nations, however, do have the
resolve and fortitude to act against this threat to peace, and
a broad coalition is now gathering to enforce the just demands
of the world.
Only three nations are contributing military forces to the
war: 250,000 from the US, 40,000 from Britain, and 2,000 from
Australia. The other members of the broad coalition
are those which have been bribed or browbeaten to allow the US
to fly over their countries to bomb Iraq, to station troops, ships
or warplanes on their territory, or provide technical assistance
or other material aid to the war. None will do any fighting. All
are acting against the expressed desire of their own population.
Lie No. 10: The United Nations Security Council
has not lived up to its responsibilities, so we will rise to ours.
Bush defines the UN bodys responsibility as serving as
a rubber stamp for whatever action the United States government
demands. In relation to the UN, however, the United States does
have definite responsibilities, including refraining from waging
war without Security Council authorization, except in the case
of immediate self-defense. Under Article 42 of the UN Charter,
it is for the Security Council, not the US or Britain, to decide
how Security Council resolutions such as 1441 are to be enforced.
The US decision to enforce its interpretation of 1441
regardless of the will of the Security Council is a violation
of international law.
Lie No. 11: If we must begin a military campaign,
it will be directed against the lawless men who rule your country
and not against you.
The widely reported US military strategy is to conduct an aerial
bombardment of Iraq so devastating that it will shock and
awe the Iraqi people and compel the Iraqi armed forces to
surrender en masse. According to one press preview, US and British
forces plan to launch the deadliest first night of air strikes
on a single country in the history of air power. Hundreds of targets
in every region of Iraq will be hit simultaneously. Estimates
of likely Iraqi civilian casualties from the immediate impact
of bombs and missiles range from thousands to hundreds of thousands,
and even higher when the long-term effects are included.
Lie No. 12: As our coalition takes their power,
we will deliver the food and medicine you need.
This is particularly cynical, since the immediate consequence
of Bushs 48-hour ultimatum was the withdrawal of all UN
humanitarian aid workers and the shutdown of the oil-for-food
program, which underwrites the feeding of 60 percent of Iraqs
population. As for medicine, the US has systematically deprived
the Iraqi people of needed medicine for the past 12 years, insisting
that even the most basic medical supplies, like antibiotics and
syringes, be banned as dual-use items that could be
used in a program of biological warfare.
Lie No. 13: We will tear down the apparatus of
terror and we will help you to build a new Iraq that is prosperous
and free.
The goal of the Bush administration is to install a US puppet
regime in Baghdad, initially taking the form of an American military
dictatorship. It is no exaggeration to say that the US government
has been the leading promoter of dictatorships around the world,
from Pinochet of Chile to Suharto of Indonesia to Saddam Hussein
himself, who, according to one recent report, got his political
start as an anti-communist hit-man working in a CIA-backed plot
to assassinate Iraqs left-nationalist President Qasem in
1959.
A classified State Department report described by the Los
Angeles Times of March 14 not only concluded that a democratic
Iraq was unlikely to arise from the devastation of war, it suggested
that this was not even desirable from the standpoint of American
interests, because anti-American sentiment is so pervasive
that elections in the short term could lead to the rise of Islamic-controlled
governments hostile to the United States.
Lie No. 14: Should Saddam Hussein choose confrontation,
the American people can know that every measure has been taken
to avoid war and every measure will be taken to win it.
This combines a lie and a brutal truth. The Bush administration
has taken every possible measure to insure that war takes place,
viewing the resumption of UN weapons inspections with barely disguised
hostility and directing its venom against those countries that
have suggested a diplomatic settlement with Iraq is achievable.
In prosecuting the war, the Bush administration is indeed prepared
to use every measure, up to an including nuclear weapons,
in order to win it.
Lie No. 15: War has no certainty except the certainty
of sacrifice.
There will be colossal sacrifices for the Iraqi people, and
sacrifices in blood and economic well-being for the American people
as well. But for Bushs real constituency, the wealthiest
layer at the top of American society, there will be no sacrifices
at all. Instead, the administration is seeking a tax cut package
of over $700 billion, including the abolition of taxation on corporate
dividends. Major US corporations are in line to reap hundreds
of millions of dollars in profits from the rebuilding of Iraqi
infrastructure shattered by the coming US assault. These include
the oil construction firm Halliburton, which Vice President Cheney
headed prior to joining the Bush administration, and which continues
to include Cheney on its payroll.
Lie No. 16: [T]he only way to reduce the harm
and duration of war is to apply the full force and might of our
military, and we are prepared to do so.
Every aggressor claims to deplore the suffering of war and
seeks to blame the victim for resisting, and thus prolonging the
agony. Bush is no different. His hypocritical statements of concern
for the Iraqi people cannot disguise the fact that, as many administration
apologists freely admit, this is a war of choicedeliberately
sought by the US government to pursue its strategic agenda in
the Middle East.
Lie No. 17: The terrorist threat to America and
the world will be diminished the moment that Saddam Hussein is
disarmed.
No one, even in the American military-intelligence complex,
seriously believes this. US counter-terrorism officials have repeatedly
said that a US conquest and occupation of Iraq, by killing untold
thousands of Arabs and Muslims and inflaming public opinion in
the Arab world and beyond, will spark more terrorism, not less.
Lie No. 18: We are now acting because the risks
of inaction would be far greater. In one year, or five years,
the power of Iraq to inflict harm on all free nations would be
multiplied many times over.
This is belied by the record of the past twelve years, which
has seen a steady decline in Iraqi military power. Saddam Hussein
has never been a threat to any free nation, if that
term has any meaning, only to the reactionary oil sheikdoms of
the Persian Gulf and to neighboring Iran, all ruled by regimes
that are as repressive as his.
Lie No. 19: As we enforce the just demands of
the world, we will also honor the deepest commitments of our country.
The demands of the world were expressed by the millions who
marched in cities throughout the world on February 15 and March
15 to oppose a unilateral US attack on Iraq. Bush seeks to have
it both waysclaiming to enforce previous Security Council
resolutions against Iraq (the just demands of the world),
while flagrantly defying the will of the majority of the Security
Council, the majority of the worlds governments, and the
vast majority of the worlds people.
Lie No. 20: Unlike Saddam Hussein, we believe
the Iraqi people are deserving and capable of human liberty...
The United States with other countries will work to advance liberty
and peace in that region.
For the Iraqi people, substitute the Egyptian
people, the people of the Arabian peninsula,
the Pakistani people or those of other US-backed dictatorships,
not to mention the Palestinians who live under a brutal Israeli
occupation that is supported by Washington. Does the US government
believe that any of them are deserving and capable of human
liberty? When the parliament of Turkey, under the pressure
of popular opposition, voted to bar the US from using Turkish
territory to invade Iraq, the Bush administration appealed to
the Turkish military to pressure the government into overturning
this democratic decision.
See Also:
The Bush administration repudiates international
law
[18 March 2003]
The Azores summit: Bush sets deadline
for US aggression against Iraq
[17 March 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |