|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Bush at Fort Braggfear-mongering, lies and desperation
Editorial Board Statement
29 June 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
President Bushs speech before a captive audience of 740
troops at Fort Bragg, North Carolina Tuesday night was a repellant
spectacle. It combined the pack of lies that the country has heard
over and over again for nearly four years with appeals to backwardness,
ignorance and fear, all intended to quash the mounting popular
opposition to the war in Iraq.
Filled with non sequiturs and self-contradictory arguments,
the speech asserted yet again that the unprovoked US invasion
and occupation of Iraq were in response to the September 11, 2001
attacks on New York and Washington, and that Iraq remained the
frontline in the global war on terror.
Is it really necessary to answer these bogus claims yet again?
These were the arguments the administration attempted to sell
to the American people before the invasion, manufacturing phony
intelligence about meetings between Iraqi agents and Al Qaeda
that were debunked well before the first troops were sent in.
Once again Bush employed the injunction that we not forget
the lessons of September 11. But what are those lessons?
No Iraqis were involved in the 9/11 attack, and there was no link
between the organizers of that crime and the regime in Baghdad.
If there is anything to be learned, it is that the Bush administration
seized upon the hijack-bombingsor allowed them to take placeas
a pretext for executing longstanding plans to conquer Iraq and
its vast oil wealth.
The central justification given when the war was launchedthe
alleged threat from Iraqi weapons of mass destructionwent
entirely unmentioned in Bushs half-hour address.
Bush now casts the war and the continuing occupation of Iraq
as a struggle for freedom and democracy. But his speech testified
to the disintegration of democratic processes within the United
States itself.
He appeared before massed troops, under discipline to sit through
his lies and stupidities. He addressed the nation not from the
Oval Office, as a democratically elected leader, but from Fort
Bragg, so as to project the image of a war-time commander-in-chief.
Under Bush, this designation has been transformed from an affirmation
of civilian control over the military to a byword for militarism
and an imperial presidency answerable neither to the law nor the
populace.
The basic assumption of those who wrote the speech was that
the American people are nothing but fools who can be endlessly
manipulated. In an attempt to dissuade the majority of Americans
from their well-founded conclusion that the war should never have
been launched and withdrawal should begin, Bush claimed we
have made significant progress over the past year.
He chose the date of his speech to coincide with the first
anniversary of what was proclaimed the handover of sovereignty
to an Iraqi regime headed by a former CIA agent. This was but
one of numerous turning points that produced only
growing resistance and carnage. Since that date, more than 900
US troops have been killed, along with uncounted thousands of
Iraqi civilians.
The number of daily attacks and the number of US troops killed
over the past month both stand at nearly double what they were
a year ago. For the Iraqi people themselves, the conditions of
life are worse now than they were a year ago. Violence is endemic,
with the US occupation forces and their Iraqi puppets controlling
nothing outside of Baghdads heavily fortified Green
Zone.
Less power is being generated today than a year ago, with most
people having electricity for only six to eight hours a day. Clean
water and adequate sanitary facilities are lacking, producing
widespread illness, particularly among children. And at least
40 percent of the population remains unemployed.
Added to these horrendous conditions is the oppression of foreign
occupation, with Iraqis deprived of all essential democratic rightsincluding
the right of life itselfby an all-powerful US military force.
There is no sovereignty under conditions in which
140,000 American troops are deployed in Iraq.
These are the conditions that have given rise to mass resistance
which the American military has proven powerless to stop.
Bushs attempt to dismiss this resistance as the work
of foreign fighters and ruthless killers converging
on Iraq is ridiculous. The American military now runs a
vast prison system in Iraq, holding well over 10,000 so-called
security detainees. Out of these, barely a few hundred
are non-Iraqis.
As for the foreign fighters, Bush noted that they
have come from Saudi Arabia and Syria, Iran, Egypt, Sudan,
Yemen, Libya. These are countries whose people share with
the Iraqis common language, culture and history of anti-colonial
struggle. If they are foreigners, what are the US
troops?
Describing the enemy that the US occupation army confronts
in Iraq, Bush declared: They are waging a campaign of murder
and destruction. And there is no limit to the innocent lives they
are willing to take... men with blind hatred and armed with lethal
weapons who are capable of any atrocity... they respect no laws
of warfare or morality.
He could well have been talking about his own government, which
launched an illegal war of aggression that has claimed an estimated
100,000 Iraqi lives. It has used bombs, missiles and napalm against
civilian targets, and reduced Fallujah, a city of 300,000, to
ruins. On a daily basis it carries out raids, killing innocent
civilians and detaining others.
To justify these crimes with a load of Manichaean rubbishpresenting
US imperialisms dirty colonial war as a struggle for good
against evilis to appeal to everything that
is backward, ignorant and fearful in America.
We fight today because terrorists want to attack our
country and kill our citizens, and Iraq is where they are making
their stand, Bush said. If Iraq is where people are making
their stand, it is because it is their country, and they
will never accept its conquest.
Bush made the unlikely claim that the bloody catastrophe in
Iraq is inspiring people throughout the Middle East. If anything,
the events there have provoked mass revulsion and outrage in the
region. Bush sought to claim credit for elections in the Palestinian
territories and in Lebanon, though votes in the former have been
taking place for several years, and in the latter for decades.
There was, underlying the specious claims of progress and vows
to complete the mission, a definite strain of desperation.
Bush has often chosen to use soldiers as extras in his televised
performances, but this time his audience was somber, interrupting
his speech with restrained applause just onceand then at
the prompting of a White House advance man. No doubt, back-to-back
tours in Iraq and the prospectenunciated by Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeldof a dozen more years of fighting has dampened
enthusiasm within the ranks.
The speech concluded with an appeal for American youth to consider
a military careera bit of hustling for the military
that was prompted by a disastrous decline in recruitment, posing
before the Pentagon the potential shipwreck of the all-volunteer
army.
At the same time, Bush invoked the need for sacrifice,
without ever spelling out what he meant. He suggested merely that
Americans fly the flag on the 4th of July to show their support
for the troops. Nowhere in his speech did he acknowledge that
nearly 1,750 American soldiers have been killed in Iraq, or that
his administration has expended approximately $200 billion on
the war.
The clear implication, however, was that the killing and dying,
and the squandering of vast sums will continue indefinitely. The
speech constituted a warning. The American ruling elite is not
about to accept another Vietnam. It has no intention of allowing
popular opposition to force an end to the war.
This is not to deny the existence of divisions within the political
establishment over the conduct of this war. The Democrats have
emerged as the faction pushing for more decisive action and criticizing
the administration for mismanaging the war effort. No less than
the Republicans, they are committed to completing the mission
in Iraq, i.e., subjugating its people by military force and assuring
US hegemony over the oil-rich Persian Gulf.
The Democrats chief foreign policy spokesman Senator
Joe Biden praised Bush for speaking to the American people on
Iraq, declaring, Unless we regain their support, were
in real trouble. He repeatedly warned that there are not
enough US soldiers on the ground, and suggested that more force
is needed to do the job.
While the mass media interrupted their prime time schedules
to broadcast Bushs speech, some commentators expressed concerns
afterwards that the president had failed to supply any new arguments
or policies to reverse the sharp decline in support for the war.
This failure is not a matter of poor speechwriting. Like it or
not, the administration confronts an objective reality in Iraq
where everything it has asserted or predicted has been refuted
by events.
In concluding his remarks, Bush declared, When the history
of this period is written, the liberation of Afghanistan and the
liberation of Iraq will be remembered as great turning points
in the story of freedom. On the contrary, when the history
of these events is written, the US interventions will be cited
as turning points in the resurgence of naked imperialist aggression
on a scale not witnessed since the fall of Germanys Third
Reich.
The decisive issue posed by the eruption of American militarism
is the need for the building of a political movement against war,
independent of the Democrats and Republicans and based on the
American working people. Such a movement must begin with the demand
for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all American
troops from Iraq. It must reject the entire fraud of the war
on terror, and insist that all those who conspired to launch
the war in Iraq be held responsible both politically and criminally.
See Also:
Washington in crisis over opposition
to Iraq war
[28 June 2005]
The Washington Post and the Downing
Street memo
[22 June 2005]
Bush faces growing opposition to Iraq
war
[18 June 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |