-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.onlinejournal.com/Commentary/Weiner090502/weiner090502.html

The charnel house future: Why Bush&Co. must be stopped now

By Bernard Weiner
Online Journal Contributing Writer



September 5, 2002�I don't want to talk here about whether a full-scale attack on Iraq 
is
right or wrong�or whether, with all the scandals surrounding Bush&Co., the 
administration
is using its daily leaks and the whole Iraq debate as giant distractions.

What I want to do here is to examine whether such attacks �with Iraq being the most
potent symbol of America's unilateral adventurism in foreign and military policy�will 
further
or endanger America's national interests. And then I will suggest what those of us 
with a
less imperial view of U.S. national interests can, and should, do to alter the 
situation.

First, let's look at it from the point of view of the Bush&Co. hawks currently driving
America's foreign and military policy. From their vantage point, attacking Iraq will
accomplish several important national-interest goals:

It will remove a dangerous, ambitious thug from the region, with his capacity for major
mayhem�which could well include Saddam's use of biological, chemical, and, eventually,
nuclear, weapons. If he isn't stopped now, this reasoning goes, and he chooses to
blackmail his neighbors with such weaponry, he could exercise control over a good 
share of
the world's oil reserves, and thus threaten the economic health of the developed 
countries
that count on that energy supply.

Taking out Saddam Hussein would serve as a clear warning to other rulers in the Persian
Gulf/Middle East: Don't test us, or you'll get the same. American suzerainty over the 
area
would be insured for decades, and, after Iraq falls back into its correct orbit, all 
without an
additional shot having to be fired. Because of all the bases set up for the Iraq 
attack, with
some contingents of American troops stationed in the region on a semi-permanent basis,
the threat of U.S. action against other would-be recalcitrant rulers would take on more
believability.

Attacking Iraq gives the military a chance to try out its new, sophisticated hardware, 
and
software, and thus hone the technologies and strategies that bolster American power
around the world. Afghanistan was the prelude, but because it was carried out on such a
poor, mostly non-urbanized society, a lot of the weaponry could not be fully tested. 
The
Afghan campaign was, and remains, a kind of high-tech guerrilla war. Taking on Baghdad
and a well-armed and well-trained urban defense force would be a better test of what
these weapons can do in more conventional conflicts.

Attacking Iraq has a domestic benefit as well. The al- Qaida mass-murder attacks of 
9/11
frightened the hell out of the American populace, making clear the vulnerability of the
homeland; this state of mind led to easy acceptance of moves toward a more rigorous,
militarist America, with less constitutional constraints on administration actions. The
"permanent war on terrorism" ensures that citizen and congressional criticism of U.S. 
policy
will be muted, and condemnable as unpatriotic.

In wartime, power goes toward the White House. Even non-war-related legislation will be
easier to get passed because it can be seen as part of "national security" and 
"homeland
defense." A second Bush term is ensured. (If the attack comes before November, GOP
candidates could ride the coattails of Bush, as the country rallies around the flag 
and its
commander-in-chief. If the war comes after the elections, the administration has 
nearly two
years in which to nail down a victory over Iraq and get it fully integrated into the 
Western
camp.)

So, from the standpoint of the Bush&Co. hawks, as you can see from the above listing, 
it's
a win-win. As the world's only superpower, the U.S. guarantees continued dominance over
key areas of the globe, and the administration maintains and grows its domestic power.

What impresses one about this Bush&Co. way of thinking is that it looks at foreign 
policy
only in terms of short-range goals. Its domestic policies follow that same limited
perspective: What can we get right now? Screw the long- term effects. Global warming?
We'll stay with fossil fuels and limited gas-mileage requirements; let the market 
prevail. We
can worry about the effects of global warming later, and still later, and even later.
Increased terrorism in the Middle East and inside our own borders? Yeah, maybe, but we
and Israel can deal with it later, no problem.

Now, what are the implications of this limited-vision thinking on short- and 
long-range U.S.
national interests?

So we get rid of Saddam Hussein. We have attacked yet another Arab nation, devoid of an
overt provocation. Granted, its leader is a constant nuisance and threat to U.S. and 
Western
interests� and thus is a kind of hero on the Arab street�but, even though Saddam
attacked nobody, he gets "pre- emptively" taken out.

Virtually every Arab leader has warned us against attacking Saddam Hussein, not because
they like him or even want to support him�he's a maniacal bully who threatens their
interests as well, and they'd be happy if he disappeared�but because their own regimes
will become even shakier when that Arab street erupts in protest and the terrorist 
atrocities
flourish. A good share of the Arab leaders are moderates and somewhat secular, and they
realize they are bucking a strong Islamist tide in the region. They might well be 
sucked into
the political maelstrom of chaos and Islamist rage, and could be overthrown by extreme
fundamentalists.

Does Bush&Co. care about this? Apparently not; neither does it seem to have paid much
attention to the Law of Unintended Consequences when starting a war. Unless, that is,
they've already factored-in some of that chaos in the region. Indeed, already there is
serious talk within the administration that maybe the U.S. will then find it necessary 
and
convenient to assert its hegemony�with troops on the ground, if threats don't result 
in the
desired "regime changes"� over Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, Sudan, Yemen, maybe even
Egypt. (It already has established its suzerainty over the Caspian Sea energy 
supplies, with
U.S. military bases scattered throughout the former- Soviet republics.)

By not addressing the underlying causes for social unrest in the Middle East/Persian 
Gulf
(much not of our doing)�the poverty, the hopelessness, the Palestine conundrum, etc.�we
ensure that the soil in which terrorism grows will become richer, more fecund, 
producing
more desperate and violent harvests. The U.S. should help solve the Israel/ Palestinian
conflict first, for example, but it chooses to turn its head away�focused like an 
on-point
hunting dog only on Baghdad�while Sharon and Hamas grow more senselessly brutal,
caught up in the vicious cycle of revenge politics.

Given that the U.S. has walked away from the Palestine issue�except to push for "regime
change" in the Palestinian Authority�the Arab street associates even more readily with
Saddam, another "victim" (as they see it) of American/Israeli aggression. Were the
Palestine situation resolved� with a viable state of their own, the Israeli 
settlements on
Palestinian soil abandoned, a peace treaty between the parties, security for Israel and
Palestine as two equal countries, agreements over water worked out, etc.�Hamas and
similar terrorist outfits would be marginalized, and there might be less support for 
the
Saddams of the Middle East.

By attacking Iraq, the U.S. will have established the international legitimacy of 
pre-emptive
strikes, invasions, assassinations, etc., to effect "regime change." When someone
threatens, or in the vague future might threaten, what you claim as your national 
interests,
the precedent will have been established that it's permissible, indeed even advisable, 
to
attack them first, to invade if necessary, to take out their leaders when you can. No 
more
negotiations, or compromises, or use of international agencies or courts. The United 
States
of America, the colossus astride the globe, says it's okay to just smash and burn 
first, take
questions later. Humanity, civilized behavior, the rule of law�all these slide 
backwards.

In summary, by behaving in such an arrogant, bullyboy fashion around the globe, 
Bush&Co.
is building up anti-U.S. resentment and anger, creating conditions in which terrorism 
grows,
ignoring and insulting our traditional allies (especially in Europe), risking our 
long-term
economic and social health, and so on. In the long run, the world is a shakier, more 
violent
place, U.S. interests are damaged, the international economic and civil situation is 
more
chaotic (and we all know what kind of leaders rise in chaotic times), the domestic 
political
situation in the U.S. grows more fascist-like, with a concomitant rebellion amongst key
elements in the citizenry.

In short, I fail to see any benefits, long-term for sure but even reasonable 
short-term ones,
that would arise from the Bush administration's current military and foreign policies,
symbolized most immediately by its move toward Baghdad.

When Bush took office, surrounded by a well-seasoned, experienced Cabinet, many were
willing to believe that even if Dubya himself was something of a dim bulb, the light 
and
competence emanating from those around him would lift him up and make the government
look good. But after 9/ 11, and more recently, it seems more and more evident that 
these
guys, with their limited short-term blinders on, don't really know what the hell 
they're
doing, other than blustering their way through with threats and aggressive behavior.

My friends, unless the situation changes, they are going to take us all down with 
them. The
world will become a charnal house of wars and counter-wars and constant, growing
terrorist atrocities�with the U.S. acting more like the Roman Empire, sending its armed
legions hither and yon to prop up the state and deal with nationalist revolts�and 
internally
our own country will resemble more and more a proto-fascist society, with its ancillary
Resistance movement.

For the sake of U.S. national interests, and for us and our (and the world's) children 
and
grandchildren, these guys simply have to be stopped. Protests, teach-ins, agitation,
education, letters-to-the-editor, online analyses, leaning on our legislators, etc., 
etc.,�all
these and more have to be employed, for the sake of our democratic republic and for the
world.

The most obvious place to start is for Bush&Co.'s nose to be bloodied badly in the 
upcoming
November elections, to remove some of the administration's aura of invincibility. 
(Already,
polls indicate a fast-dropping Bush approval rating, along with less support for an 
Iraq
invasion; plus, the sinking economy is beginning to affect people directly.)

I'm not saying that defeating enough Republicans to deny the House and Senate to them
will be a panacea. A lot of the Democrats running are not much better. But what a Dem
election victory would mean (in association with a growing number of courageous GOP
moderates) is that it would be easier to gum up Bush&Co. adventurism abroad, make it
more difficult for Ashcroft to continue shredding the Constitution, keep ideologue 
judges off
the bench, make it easier for serious investigations of Bush&Co. crimes, scandals, bad
policies to be initiated in the Congress, possibly leading even to resignations or
impeachments.

If we can't stop them now, in 2002, it will be even harder in 2004, with that much more
power concentrated in Bush&Co. hands. So, if you have to, hold your nose and donate
money and time and energy to electing Democrats in November. (I wish the objective
conditions were ripe for serious Green campaigns right now, but they aren't; the most 
we
can hope for at this time is to move things back toward the middle.) We can get rid of 
the
worst apples later.

The point, the only point, is to break the momentum of Bush&Co. in their actions abroad
and here at home, and to help create the conditions that will lead to their removal 
from
office, by the ballot or by resignation/impeachment. It can be done. More citizens seem
open to hearing about reasonable alternatives, especially as the economy continues to
falter. Let's get to work.


Bernard Weiner, Ph.D., has taught American government and international politics at
Western Washington University and San Diego State University; he was with the San
Francisco Chronicle for nearly 20 years, and has published in The Nation, Village 
Voice,
Progressive, and widely on the Internet.



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