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White House propaganda campaign: Bush, Cheney smear opponents
of US war in Iraq
By Patrick Martin
16 January 2007
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In remarks broadcast Sunday on national television, President
Bush and Vice President Cheney brushed aside the mass opposition
to their war policy among the American people, declared that the
US government would do whatever it takes to win a
military victory in Iraq, and suggested that Iran could well be
the next target for American military aggression.
As they reiterated their plans for expanding the war, Bush
and Cheney expressed the outlooka hallmark of dictatorship,
not democracythat the government has the right to defy the
expressed will of the people on the most serious of political
issues, a war in which thousands of Americans and hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis have already died.
As part of a coordinated public relations offensive by the
White House, Cheney appeared on the morning interview program
Fox News Sunday, while Bush was interviewed for the
CBS program 60 Minutes, broadcast the same evening.
Both sought, in slightly different ways, to intimidate the
majority of Americans who oppose the continuation of the US occupation
of Iraq and want a rapid withdrawal of all American troops.
Bush painted a picture of the devastating impact of a US failure
in Iraq, saying it would embolden the enemy, whom
he defined as Al Qaeda and extremists, as well as
Iran. He painted a picture of slaughter and mass suffering throughout
the Middle East, although that is the catastrophic outcome already
set into motion by the US invasion.
Hinting at the huge economic and strategic interests at stake
in control of the oil-rich regionand contrasting them to
the stakes involved in the US defeat in VietnamBush said,
What happens in the Middle East matters to the homeland.
And thats different than in some past engagements.
Cheney, as befits his role as the administration bully, warned
that those who advocate a US withdrawal from Iraq would revalidate
the strategy that Osama bin Laden has been following from day
one, that if you kill enough Americans, you can force them to
quit, that we dont have the stomach for the fight.
While Cheney suggested that those opposed to the Bush administrations
war policies are capitulating to terrorism, Bush claimed that
there was broad agreement within the United States on the need
for success in Iraq, and maintained that critics of
his plans to escalate the war were obliged to provide an alternative
scenario to achieve an American victory.
While not challenging the basic framework of the US intervention
in Iraq, and addressing Bush and Cheney with fawning respect,
the CBS and Fox journalists nonetheless posed a number of pointed
questions to the president and vice-president, which evoked responses
that are worth citing.
Scott Pelley of 60 Minutes pressed Bush on the
lies employed to pave the way to war in 2003. Many Americans
feel that your administration has not been straight with the country,
has not been honest, he said, singling out the claims of
weapons of mass destruction and a connection between Iraq and
the 9/11 attacks, as well as the administrations gross underestimation
of the cost of the war.
Bush appeared initially taken aback, sputtering, I gotcha.
I gotcha. I gotcha. Then he resorted to the administrations
last-ditch defense of the prewar liesthe argument that the
Democrats and the Clinton administration had held the same view
of Saddam Husseins Iraq. There were a lot of people,
both Republicans and Democrats, he said, who felt
there were weapons of mass destruction. Many of the leaders in
the Congress spoke strongly about the fact that Saddam Hussein
had weapons prior to my arrival in Washington DC.
Fox interviewer Chris Wallace asked Cheney about the sharp
decline in public and congressional support for the war in Iraq,
particularly as expressed in the November 2006 elections. Citing
exit polls showing 67 percent who said the war was very important
to their vote, and only 17 percent who supported the dispatch
of more troops, he asked Cheney, By taking the policy you
have, havent you, Mr. Vice President, ignored the express
will of the American people in the November election?
Cheney responded, I dont think any president worth
his salt can afford to make decisions of this magnitude according
to the polls. The polls change day by day . . .
Wallace persisted, This was an election, sir. Cheney
brushed this fact aside, reiterating, Polls change day by
day, week by week ... you cannot simply stick your finger up in
the wind and say, Gee, public opinions against; we
better quit.
The vice president went on to elaborate an outlook based on
the rejection of any democratic accountability of the US government
to the American people. On the contrary, he claimed, the task
of the government was to be stronger than the people, to insure
that the will of the chief executive (the Decider)
prevailed against the will of the people.
That is part and parcel of the underlying fundamental
strategy that our adversaries believe afflicts the United States,
Cheney said. They are convinced that the current debate
in the Congress, that the election campaign last fall, all of
that is evidence that theyre right when they say the United
States doesnt have the stomach for the fight in this long
war against terror.
They believe it. They look at past evidence of it: in
Lebanon in 83 and Somalia in 93, Vietnam before that.
Theyre convinced that the United States will, in fact, pack
it in and go home if they just kill enough of us. They cant
beat us in a stand-up fight, but they think they can break our
will. And if we have a president who looks at the polls and sees
the polls are going south and concludes, Oh, my goodness,
we have to quit, all it will do is validate the Al Qaeda
view of the world.
Its exactly the wrong thing to do. This president
does not make policy based on public opinion polls; he should
not. Its absolutely essential here that we get it right.
The two interviews present an extraordinary portrait of American
political life, in which the Bush-Cheney administration is pushing
ahead with its policy of expanded military aggression in the Middle
East, regardless of the deep popular revulsion against the war.
The White House feels it can safely ignore popular sentiment
because it has long taken the measure of its congressional critics
and recognizes that there will be no serious effort by the Democratic
leadership to bring an end to the war.
Both Cheney and Bush spoke freely about the prospects of congressional
action to cut off funding for the war. Bush seemed to concede
that Congress had the constitutional authority to cut off funding
for the war, but declared, I will fight that, of course
. . . I will resist that. That would mean that theyre not
willing to support a plan that I believe will work and solve the
situation. Weve got people criticizing this plan before
its had a chance to work.
Cheney again was more confrontational, dismissing a sense
of Congress resolution, proposed by the Democratic leadership,
as a meaningless verbal exercise, and declaring that Bush had
the authority to send additional troops to Iraq regardless of
congressional opinion. The president is the commander in
chief, Cheney said. Hes the one who has to make
these tough decisions. Hes the guy whos got to decide
how to use the force and where to deploy the force.
While grudgingly admitting the Congress had authority over
military spending, Cheney agreed with a suggestion from his interviewer
that such a vote against war funding would amount to undercutting
the troops.
In comments on another Sunday television interview program,
Face the Nation on CBS, Republican Senator John McCain
called the Democrats bluff, dismissing a non-binding resolution
as meaningless and challenging them to cut off funding if they
truly wanted to end the war.
New House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid have disavowed any such effort, accepting and even embracing
the Bush administration claim that such a vote would represent
an attack on the rank-and-file soldiers now deployed in Iraq.
This is a cynical and self-serving effort to de-legitimize and
suppress mass antiwar sentiment, as well as to inoculate themselves
against a future campaign of who lost Iraq? demagogy
from the Republicans.
Neither the White House nor the Democrats bother to explain
why sending soldiers out to be killed by IEDs and sniper fire
should be considered supporting the troops, while
it would be a stab in the back to use the congressional power
of the purse to force the administration to bring these soldiers
home safely to their families.
Neither faction of the US ruling elite, of course, considers
the interests of the innocent Iraqis whose lives will be sacrificed
with the continuation and escalation of a war that has caused
the deaths of an estimated 655,000 people.
The escalation on which the Bush administration has embarked
is a threat not only to the long-suffering people of Iraq, but
to the masses throughout the Middle East, and to the democratic
rights of the American people as well.
In his television interview, Cheney elaborated a future of
decades of war, declaring, This is an existential conflict.
It is the kind of conflict thats going to drive our policy
and our government for the next 20 or 30 or 40 years. We have
to prevail, and we have to have the stomach for the fight, long
term.
This kind of apocalyptic language is more than just the latest
rehash of the long-disproven claim that the US invasion and occupation
of Iraq are a response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The demented
perspective voiced by Cheney amounts to a justification for an
unlimited escalation of violence in Iraq and Afghanistan and new
wars against Iran, other countries in the Middle East, and beyond.
It is the basis for the onslaught being conducted against the
democratic rights of the American peoplesomething Cheney
spelled out in the same interview, responding to weekend revelations
about Pentagon spying on American citizens by defending this latest
example of the police-state methods being employed at home.
The White House can press forward with its program of war and
repression only because of the collaboration of the congressional
Democrats, who will use their majority status in Congressthe
byproduct of the massive antiwar vote last Novemberto prop
up the Bush administration. The struggle against the war in Iraq
and the threat of wider US military aggression can be waged only
through the building of a mass independent antiwar movement based
on the working people and opposed to both political parties of
the American corporate elite.
See Also:
Bush administration threatens Iraqi prime
minister as Baghdad bloodbath is prepared
[15 January 2007]
Iraq escalation heightens political crisis
in Washington
[13 January 2007]
In speech on Iraq escalation, Bush promises
more bloodshed, wider war
[11 January 2007]
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