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Bush press conference on Iraq: Were not leaving
so long as Im the president.
By Patrick Martin
23 August 2006
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President Bushs press conference Monday gave a glimpse
of the deepening political crisis of the US administration over
the failure of its policies in Iraq and the broader Middle East.
Bush was on the defensive throughout the session, struggling with
questions which, if not overtly hostile, focused attention on
the contradictions in his shifting rationale for the Iraq war.
Although Bush gave an opening statement on Lebanon, the press
returned again and again to the Iraq war, both to the deteriorating
security situation in the country and the dwindling public support
for the war within the United States.
So great has been the turn in public opinion against the war
that Bush himself was compelled to admit the extent of the mass
opposition. He made several comments on this theme, clearly rehearsed
ahead of time, acknowledging the opposition while declaring it
mistaken:
Theres a lot of peoplegood, decent peoplesaying:
Withdraw now. Theyre absolutely wrong. Itd be a huge
mistake for this country.
There are a lot of good, decent people saying: Get out
now; vote for me; I will do everything I can to, I guess, cut
off money is what theyre trying to do to get the troops
out. Its a big mistake.
And theres a fundamental difference between many
of the Democrats and my party. And that is: They want to leave
before the job is completed in Iraq. And again, I repeat: These
are decent people. Theyre just as American as I am. I just
happen to strongly disagree with them
I will never question the patriotism of somebody who
disagrees with me. This has nothing to do with patriotism. It
has everything to do with understanding the world in which we
live.
This evidently was one of the main talking points Bushs
handlers had rehearsed with him before the press conference. It
reflects concerns that the McCarthy-style baiting of Iraq war
opponents in recent statements by Vice President Cheney, chief
Bush political aide Karl Rove and other Republican spokesmen has
backfired, provoking even greater popular antagonism towards the
administration.
At one point Bush was directly asked about the comments of
Cheney, who said that Connecticut voters who denied renomination
to Democratic Senator Joseph Lieberman because of his support
for the Iraq war were emboldening Al Qaeda-types.
Bush reiterated the mantra that leaving Iraq before the
mission is complete will send the wrong message to the enemy and
will create a more dangerous world. He sought to soften
the slur against opponents of the war, adding, Look, its
an honest debate, and its an important debate for Americans
to listen to and to be engaged in.
This shift in public posture is purely cosmetic. Despite the
conciliatory rhetoric Monday, the White House and the Republican
National Committee are seeking to whip up right-wing support in
the November election by suggesting that opposition to the Iraq
war is treasonous.
For that reason, Bush grossly exaggerates the antiwar
credentials of the congressional Democrats, who support the goals
of the warconquest of Iraq to obtain oil resources and strategic
dominance in the Middle Eastbut have criticized the Bush
administrations incompetent execution of this neo-colonial
exercise.
The hollowness of Bushs statements about the necessity
and legitimacy of political debate over the war is revealed in
his refusal to actually engage the arguments of those opposed
to the war. His version of debate was to repeat, in
almost robotic fashion, his other main talking point of the day,
the necessity to finish the job in Iraq.
Bush dismissed a question about whether the US invasion and
occupation had made matters worse in Iraq, repeating for the thousandth
time his administrations long-discredited claim that Saddam
Hussein was a threat to the world and was on the brink of building
weapons of mass destruction.
He refused to address seriously the growing Sunni-Shia conflict
in Iraq, despite the statements by top American generals that
the country may be on the brink of civil war, and that sectarian
killings, not the attacks of terrorists, are the principal threat
to the establishment of a stable US occupation regime.
This unwillingness to face reality has become the target of
criticism in much of the mainstream press. Washington Post
columnist Eugene Robinson, for instance, cited Bushs comments
about the mounting death toll among civilians and asked: Does
he believe it would be a sign of weakness to admit that the flowering
of democracy in Iraq isnt going exactly as planned? Does
he believe saying everythings just fine will make it so?
Is he in denial? Or do 3,438 deaths really just roll off his back
after hes had his workout and a nice bike ride?
At one point, asked what Iraq had to do with the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001, Bush blithely admitted, Nothing.
Then he added, Nobodys ever suggested that the attacks
of September the 11th were ordered by Iraq.
In fact, virtually every top administration spokesman made
that connection, including Vice President Cheney, who peddled
the claim, long after it had been discredited, that alleged 9/11
plot leader Mohammed Atta had met with Iraqi agents in the Czech
Republic before the attack. Condoleezza Rice warned that the next
9/11 would be a mushroom cloud if Saddam Hussein was
not dealt with.
Bush also distorted the basis of the opposition to the war,
suggesting it was simply the result of squeamishness over the
bloodshed in Iraq. You know, nobody likes to see innocent
people die, he said. Nobody wants to turn on their
TV on a daily basis and see havoc wrought by terrorists.
The opposition to the war is fueled, however, by popular revulsion
to the havoc wrought by the United States, along with its allies
Britain and Israel, in the region. More fundamentally, the most
politically conscious elements in the popular opposition to the
Iraq war reject not only the methods employed by the imperialists,
but their goals, which are not to democratize the
Middle East, but to reduce Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Iran and other
countries to the status of semi-colonies, completely subordinated
to the interests of American capitalism.
While Bush repeatedly claimed that the goal of the United States
in Iraq was to foster democracy, he made it clear that he felt
no accountability to the democratic will of the American people.
Whatever the popular sentiment in the US, he declared, Were
not leaving so long as Im the president.
This contradiction was spelled out in two comments made by
Bush in the course of the press conference. He declared that the
war on terror was directed against an ideology opposed
to democracy: And the only way to defeat this ideology in
the long term is to defeat it through another ideology, a competing
ideology, one thatwhere the government responds to the will
of the people.
But towards the end of the press conference, asked whether
he still hoped to convince the American people, or whether this
is the kind of thing youre doing because you think its
right and you dont care if you ever gain public support
for it, Bush replied bluntly: Look, Im going
to do what I think is right and if, you know, if people dont
like me for it, thats just the way it is.
Nor is Bushs policy accountable to the will of
the people of Iraq, since he has declared the US troops
will remain, no matter what, until he leaves office.
Such assertions inevitably beg the question, what will Bush
do if the majority of the Iraqi people or the majority of the
American people seek to bring an end to the bloodbath prior to
January 20, 2009?
Bushs categorical statements imply that his administration
recognizes no limits on its war powers, and would be prepared
to defy Congress in the unlikely event that it imposed a deadline
for the withdrawal of US troops. As for the political situation
in Iraq itself, if the supposedly democratically elected and sovereign
regime attempted to cut its strings and respond to popular sentiments
by demanding the removal of American forces, the US would have
no compunction in organizing a coup and installing a new government.
See Also:
Is the US planning a coup in Iraq?
[22 August 2006]
The president gives a press conference
[16 August 2006]
Huge protest in Baghdad against US-Israeli
war in Lebanon
[8 August 2006]
"Bush administration
deploys thousands more troops in Baghdad
[31 July 2006]
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