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Washington Post defends Bush, Iraq war against Paul
ONeills exposures
By David Walsh
16 January 2004
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The revelations of former US Treasury Secretary Paul ONeill
about the inner workings of the Bush administration, featured
on CBSs 60 Minutes program January 11 and providing
the substance of former Wall Street Journal reporter Ron
Suskinds new book, The Price of Loyalty, have further
laid bare the divisions within the American political establishment.
ONeills assertion, backed up by extensive documentation,
that the Bush government was plotting a war against Iraq from
its first days in office in January 2001, is a particularly devastating
exposure.
The revelations have been cited by leading Democrats, most
of whom voted to authorize Bush to launch a war against Iraq or
supported such an authorization, to step up their criticisms of
the present governments foreign policy. Their disagreements
with Bush are purely tacticalnone of the Democrats demand
the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq or oppose
the right of the US to intervene militarily wherever it wishesbut
they are sharp nonetheless.
Citing both ONeills comments and the recent report
issued by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace debunking
the weapons of mass destruction claims of the Bush administration,
Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts made a widely-publicized
speech January 14 in which he claimed that the war in Iraq had
increased hatred for the US overseas, diverted attention from
the broader war on terror and put the US more at
risk than it was before. Although Kennedy voted against
the resolution giving Bush the power to go to war, he supported
the provocative policy of the US toward Iraq over the last decade,
including the constant threat of military force.
Two days earlier former army general Wesley Clark, a leading
participant in US imperialist machinations in the Balkans and
now a candidate for the Democratic Partys presidential nomination,
told a Dallas audience: I think were at risk with
our democracy. I think were dealing with the most closed,
imperialistic, nastiest administration in living memory. They
even put Richard Nixon to shame. Clark, along with Democratic
congressman Charles Rangel, also called, in light of ONeills
revelations, for a congressional investigation into the real
reasons for invading Iraq, an elementary demand that has
not been publicized or discussed in the US media.
In response the Bush administration and its right-wing backers
have not been idle. ONeill has come in for considerable
abuse, so much so that he has back-pedaled somewhat, claiming
that the Bush administrations pre-September 11 discussions
of war with Iraq were merely a continuation of work
begun under the Clinton government.
Treasury Department officials made it known January 12 that
they had instructed their Inspector General to investigate whether
ONeill had divulged the contents of secret documents in
his television and book interviews, a charge he vehemently denies.
The former treasury secretarys remarks have been labeled
sour grapes by administration officials. The right-wing
media has suggested that ONeilla former Alcoa executive
and an official in two previous Republican administrationshas
more or less lost his marbles.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld acknowledged January 13
that he had twice telephoned ONeill after learning that
his former cabinet colleague was going to publish an insider
account of his days in the government, clearly in an effort to
convince ONeill not to go ahead with the work.
One of the most cynical attempts to refute ONeills
account has come from the Washington Post. Despite having
had at least four days to work up their position, the Post
editors manage to come up with only a few weak and thoroughly
dishonest paragraphs. ("Mr. O'Neill and Iraq," January
15)
They begin by complaining that the ex-treasury secretarys
damning revelations have been taken up by the contenders for the
Democratic presidential nominationi.e., by Bushs ostensible
political opponentsand conclude with the comment by Ohio
congressman Dennis Kucinich, in regard to ONeills
account, that the American people, in effect, have been
misled. This opening betrays one of the editors real
concerns, that ONeills exposé of Bush policy
will help those Democrats seeking to appeal to antiwar sentiment,
and only increases the possibility that the Iraq war will be placed
before the American people, in no matter how limited a form, as
a subject for debate in the upcoming election.
Following the reference to Kucinichs comment, the Post
asks meaningfully, Who is doing the misleading? and
proceeds to suggest that ONeill had a rocky tenure
as treasury secretary and was something of a loose cannon
while in office. The editorial continues with the sneering assertion
that Bushs former treasury secretary was given to holding
forth with extreme confidence on subjects ... about which he knew
little. They suggest that ONeill is continuing this
practice by insisting that President Bush was determined
from the moment he took office to oust Saddam Hussein.
The third paragraph contains the crux of the newspapers
specious argument. First, the editors claim, it was not surprising
that National Security Council meetings in January 2001 should
have discussed Iraq, since after all, the United States
was patrolling the skies above Iraq to enforce [self-proclaimed]
no-fly zones. Nor is it surprising, the newspaper
comments, that the Bush team should have contemplated regime
change: That was the declared policy of the United States, supported
by the Clinton administration and Congress. Mr. ONeills
account is new only insofar as he suggests that the administration
had moved beyond the contemplation of options to a decision on
Iraq.
No doubt the reactionary and provocative policy of the Clinton
administration, including the launching of virtually non-stop
air strikes and enforcement of murderous economic sanctions, paved
the way for the invasion and occupation of Iraq. However, there
is a difference between a stated policy of regime change
and the preparation of an unprovoked war. The latter is a war
crime under the Nuremberg precedent, as the editors of the Post,
implicated in this process, are entirely aware.
Bush officials and their supporters at the Post and
elsewhere are now making much of the alleged continuity
between the present governments policy and Clintons.
In the general historical sense of course, that continuity does
exist: both administrations have pursued the aims and interests
of American imperialism, which find expression at this point in
history in a drive for global domination.
Moreover, the Clinton administration by its actions in Bosnia
and particularly Kosovo opened a breach in the post-World War
II framework of multilateral intervention. USA
Today on January 14 published a letter written in 1995 by
Howard Dean, then governor of Vermont, urging Bill Clinton to
take unilateral action in Bosnia against the Bosnian
Serbs.
Continuity is not the same thing, however, as identity. Responsibility
for launching an aggressive war in the face of worldwide popular
opposition and in defiance of the UN Security Council falls on
the shoulders of the Bush administration. All the chatter about
continuity fails to take into account a fundamental
political reality of the 1990s: the zeal with which the ultra-right
sought by any means necessaryincluding a manufactured sex
scandalto undermine and replace the Clinton administration.
The right wing claimed, among other things, that Clintons
foreign policy was weak on terrorism and permitted
Saddam Hussein to thumb his nose at the US. Nor does
the Post account explain the ferocity with which the Republicans
organized the hijacking of the 2000 presidential election.
The Bush camp and the Post cannot have it both ways.
The reality is that the failure of the Clinton government to intervene
more aggressively in the Middle East, to actively prepare for
the military conquest of Iraq and its oil fields, was one of the
issues that outraged the Republican right.
In 1998 Rumsfeld, his present deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard
Armitage (currently Deputy Secretary of State), pro-war hawk Richard
Perle and others, lobbied the Clinton administration, in the name
of the Project for a New American Century (PNAC), to launch a
preemptive war against Iraq and place Saddam Hussein on trial
for alleged war crimes.
When the Clinton administration refused to act on this advice,
Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the others wrote another letter on May
29, 1998 to Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, calling for the establishment of a
strong US military presence in the region and for the use of that
force to protect our vital interests in the Gulfand,
if necessary, to help remove Saddam from power. They advocated
this in clear opposition to the existing Clinton policy
of reliance on sanctions, the mechanisms of the UN and US military
encirclement and air strikes to contain the Hussein
regime. The Post is now seeking to rewrite history to conceal
the specific criminality of the present administration and its
own filthy role in the process.
The editorial continues: But if this is what Mr. ONeill
believes [that the administration had already arrived at the decision
to go to war against Iraq], his memory conflicts with other versions
of history. The editors go on to cite the Posts
own accounts of the national security meetings in early 2001,
suggesting that Iraq policy had indeed been discussed but
that the administration was divided on the right course.
A few weeks later, the press accounts of the time describe
a debate in the administration, but no clear conclusion. Even
as late as Aug. 5, 2002, as the Posts Bob Woodward
has described it, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell had a two-hour
meeting with the president in which he laid out the dangers of
going to war in Iraq.
This is simply an attempt to throw dust in the readers
eyes. In fact, no one would dispute the contention that there
were divisions in the Bush cabinet over Iraq policy. That was
well known. But what ONeills testimony, that of an
eyewitness, makes indelibly clear is that the dominant faction,
represented by Vice President Richard Cheney and Rumsfeld, with
Bush as their figurehead, were set on a course for war with Iraq
from the first days of the administration (and indeed for years
before that out of office, as the PNAC documents make clear).
Until the middle of March 2003 Bush came before the American
public claiming that he had not made up his mind about
war with Iraq, that diplomacy would be pursued, that military
force would only be a last resort when all other options were
exhausted, etc., etc. ONeills exposures, including
the existence of documents, prepared months before the September
11 terrorist attacks, that outlined plans for a post-Saddam
Iraq and the handing out of lucrative contracts, reveal Bushs
performance as a charade filled out with falsehoods.
The transformation of the Washington Post into a servile
propaganda organ of the most rabid warmongering faction of the
Bush administration reflects in a particularly sharp manner the
degeneration and degeneracy of the American press. This is the
newspaper of the Watergate investigation, after all, during which
process its reporters were obliged to grill government officials
about Richard Nixons crimes against the American people.
One can assert without hesitation that the present incarnation
of the Post would have fired Woodward and Carl Bernstein
before they ever got started.
ONeills account, as far as it goes, rings absolutely
true. One has the external activity of the administrationthe
stealing of a national election, the preparation of an illegal
and brutal war that has already cost tens of thousands of lives,
the wholesale attacks on democratic rightswith which to
compare its internal life as presented in ONeills
comments. Is there a single aspect of his storyincluding
his vivid descriptions of Bushs cluelessnessthat one
has reason to doubt? On the contrary, the situation is far worse
and far more advanced than a respectable bourgeois like ONeill,
albeit possessed of a certain honesty, could ever imagine or describe.
We are not the least surprised by the Posts response.
The newspaper has been a rabid accomplice in the colonial-style
war and occupation of Iraq. It is now responding to the deepening
crisis of the Bush administration, the exposure on every side
of its criminality and lies, by attempting to silence or intimidate
anyone who provides a glimpse into its real inner workings.
See Also:
Former cabinet member: Bush pushed war
with Iraq long before 9/11
[13 January 2004]
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