-Caveat Lector-

http://www.commondreams.org/views01/1027-04.htm


Published on Friday, October 26, 2001 by In These Times
The Road Ahead: It's Only Going to Get Worse
by Doug Ireland The political mood in the country has never been more
belligerent. Public opinion polls taken even before the full force of
anthrax hysteria engulfed the country showed that four-fifths support
not only the use of ground troops in Afghanistan, but also military
action against other countries in the Middle East—and three-quarters
of Americans favor military action against countries outside the
Middle East.
These numbers free the Bush administration from any political
constraints on widening the war beyond Afghanistan. The “zero
casualties” mentality that governed our military brass for the past
two decades went up in smoke when the hijacked plane exploded in the
Pentagon. It has now evaporated in the country as well. In the wake
of the bioterrorism scare, fear and frustration will drive even
higher the public frenzy to lash out with bombs and bullets at
someone—anyone.
The escalation strategy is now clear, particularly after Dubya’s
October 11 prime-time press conference: We will expand military
strikes against other countries ad seriatim. There is no question
that Iraq is next on the list. The new chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, Gen. Richard Myers, let slip on Meet the Press that we are
selecting targets in Iraq. And when Dubya went out of his way to
publicly praise Paul Wolfowitz, the Pentagon’s No. 2 and its most
fervent hawk on Iraq, his goal became obvious.
The administration is already leaking selected “intelligence”
designed to soften up the American people for a new war in Iraq—we
are being told of meetings between the hijacker’s leader, Mohammed
Atta, and Iraqi secret service officers in Czechoslovakia, and of the
British-educated Iraqi scientist Rihab Tabar (nicknamed “Dr. Germ”)
as the mastermind behind the anthrax attacks (even though the former
head of Russia’s chemical and biological warfare program—Ken Abilek,
now a U.S.-based consultant—told Ted Koppel on Nightline that he is
convinced al-Qaeda purchased the anthrax and other toxins and
technology from Russian scientists left impoverished when their huge
chemical and biological weapons establishment of 30,000 technicians
was dismantled). But the sanguineous despot Saddam Hussein is easy to
hate, and it will take very little to convince Americans that he must
be the next target in the long war.
We are plunging down that bloody road with no debate in Congress.
Indeed, major figures in both parties—like Joe Lieberman and John
McCain—are already voicing their support for hitting Iraq. And this
even though the Gulf War demonstrated that Saddam cannot be toppled
by air power alone—it will require investing the entire country with
a huge army of occupation to end the Ba’ath regime’s sorry history.
The use of tactical nuclear weapons in Afghanistan is already being
called for by congressional Republicans—not just hard-right
ignoramuses like Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl, but also moderate Long Island
Rep. Peter King and influential Indiana Rep. Steve Buyer. When an
invasion of Iraq confronts our finger-in-the-wind elected
representatives with the prospect of thousands of their constituents
coming home in body bags, the cry of “nuke Saddam” will be
widespread.
However, Bush will not move with full force against Iraq until the
Taliban falls. And those in the punditocracy like the Wall Street
Journal’s Al Hunt—who predicted on CNN that the Taliban will collapse
“within a week”—are dreaming. The air campaign to pave the way for
the minority Northern Alliance’s entrance into Kabul is only
stiffening the resistance among Southern Afghanistan’s Pashtun
majority, for the fratricidal history of Afghan civil war makes the
prospect of ethnic cleansing in the event of an Alliance victory very
real.
International politics is rather like chess; one has to be able to
think eight to ten moves ahead. That’s something American presidents
of the past 50 years have not been very good at—they cannot see
farther than the next election. Bush is no chess player, and the
madness of militarizing the campaign against terrorism becomes
clearer every day, for war has its own momentum—once set in motion,
the machine operates on its own inexorable logic, divorced from
rational political goals.
U.S. military action in Afghanistan is already outpacing Bush’s murky
political objectives. American efforts to put together a coalition
government under the aegis of the octogenarian King Zahir have
stalled amid the squabbling of the heroin-dealing warlords who are
our purchased allies. Pakistan, of course, detests the Northern
Alliance, and neither has it forgotten that the king tried to annex
part of Pakistan in the ’60s.
President Pervez Musharraf will face enormous difficulty in keeping
the lid on growing opposition in Pakistan if a hastily cobbled-
together regime considered hostile to Pakistani interests takes
symbolic power in Kabul. Musharraf’s limited purge of his military
and intelligence chiefs is an admission of weakness, not a
demonstration of strength: More than a quarter of Pakistan’s military
are Pashtun, and, in addition to the ethnic and religious sympathies
that bind much of the officer corps and most of the Pakistani
intelligence service to the Taliban, the corruption of the Pakistani
military by heroin-trafficking links them economically to the Taliban-
supporting local Afghan chieftains as well.
In this context, the American bombing has created what the BBC has
rightly characterized as a “humanitarian, political and security
crisis” on the Afghan-Pakistani border, where tens of thousands of
hunger-mad Afghan refugees are massing. The BBC and others have
filmed the Taliban rounding up the men, separating them from the
women and children, and stocking them in barbed-wire camps for
conscription or ethnic cleansing. But whether Pakistan continues to

 keep them out at gunpoint, or lets them enter (something that this
country, which is $140 billion in debt and already hosting some 4
million refugees, cannot afford to do), these refugees constitute a
political powder keg whose existence further destabilizes Musharraf
and increases his vulnerability to a coup. (If he goes, who controls
Pakistan’s nukes?)
Add to this volatile mix the mounting civilian casualties from
American bombing (including the destruction of a hospital, confirmed
by U.N. observers) and one wonders how long Musharraf can hold
on—particularly with India using the war as cover to step up its
military activity in Kashmir, thus inflaming both the Pakistani
military and the masses in the street. Moreover, Seymour Hersh’s fine
reporting in The New Yorker has underscored just how fragile is the
sclerotic Saudi princes’ hold on their country. No wonder both
Pakistan and the Saudis are pleading for Bush to stop the bombing. If
the terrorists think the air campaign in Afghanistan has made the
endlessly corrupt Saud family ripe for overthrow, they could strike
the highly vulnerable Saudi oil fields, ending the cash flow that
allows the 6,000 princes to stay in power (an eventuality which would
drive oil to $100 a barrel and send the world economy plummeting
rapidly into a Depression).
Yet these gaping flaws in Bush’s war policy are not being challenged
by congressional Democrats, whose leaders—Tom Daschle and Dick
Gephardt—still harbor illusions that they are viable presidential
candidates, and so are loath to challenge on any front the conduct of
a popular war. Now, in the wake of the anthrax scare that sent the
cowardly House skedaddling, the Bushies are floating a proposal to
let the president govern by decree for at least 30 days without any
congressional approval or restraint if he decides a “national
emergency” warrants it. The power of the purse is Congress’ only real
rein on a president, and abandoning it even temporarily would blow a
major hole in our constitutional system of checks and balances that
could not easily be repaired.
If you think the country wouldn’t sit still for such a measure, think
again. Just look at the exaggerated anthrax scare—after all, as Dr.
Ezekiel Emanuel pointed out on the Wall Street Journal’s op-ed page,
“280 people would have to die of anthrax to equal the risk of driving
50 miles in a car (about one in a million).” Yet Americans are
gorging themselves on overpriced Cipro (10 bottles cost $2,100 in New
York but only $160 in Mexico), thus leaving the pill-poppers prey to
lethal, antibiotic-resistant strains of influenza and other diseases;
buying useless gas masks (ineffective without full body suits); and
flooding emergency rooms with demands for anthrax tests at the first
runny nose.
State and local health systems, the first line of defense against
bioterrorism, are already teetering on the edge of collapse, their
overworked personnel exhausted to the point of limited competence. If
the public has become so deranged at what is, at the moment, a very
limited danger, imagine what happens when our citizenry finds out
that our country is completely unprepared for the kind of massive
deaths the spread of plague or Ebola-type viruses, all airborne,
could engender.
The likelihood of Bush being granted sweeping powers will measurably
increase when Republicans almost certainly retake both houses of
Congress next year during a deepening war with more U.S. casualties.
Meanwhile, the rush to shred our civil liberties is unimpeded. The
House rejected the compromise anti-terrorism bill that Rep. John
Conyers and others managed to engineer in the Judiciary Committee,
and substituted for it the much more draconian Senate version, which
Tom Daschle helped whip through the Senate with only one dissenting
vote—Russ Feingold of Wisconsin. (In the House, only 75 Democrats
stood up to oppose the unadulterated Ashcroft package.)
At this point, it is hard to see a way out of the crisis the long war
is creating for our democracy. One is reminded of the old Russian
proverb: An optimist is only a pessimist who has not yet heard the
bad news.
©2001 The Institute for Public Affairs
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