-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

George Bush I: The Man Who Helped Make September 11 a Reality
by William L. Anderson

As Americans embarrassingly stumble into a
mawkish "remembrance" of those awful attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon a
year ago, I would like to take time to "honor" (if
that is an appropriate word) the man who more
than anyone else made those attacks a reality:
George H.W. Bush. While conservatives blame
Bill Clinton and Democrats still are looking to
find if the present George W. Bush
Administration was culpable (it was), I would
like to turn to the real source, the man whose
legacy we seem to have forgotten.

If anything, conservatives claim that the only
problem of Bush I was the failure to "take out"
Saddam Hussein in the Gulf War. Actually, I
would like to question whether or not there
should have been a war in the first place and
point out that the Gulf War, for all of the
supposed glory it brought the U.S. Armed
Forces, was a huge disaster that continues to
this day to have awful repercussions upon much
of the world.

To understand the magnitude of Bush I's folly,
we need to return to 1990, when Iraq invaded
Kuwait in early August. The previous fall, the
communist regimes of Eastern Europe had fallen
and the once-formidable U.S.S.R. was
beginning to break up, as the Cold War had
ended. For people who had lived their entire
lives under the shadow of all that the struggle
between East and West had been, this was a
wonderful and heady moment.

With the end of the threat of nuclear war
between the U.S.S.R. and the USA having
ended, for a brief moment, it seemed that
prospects for a larger peace could not have
been greater  that is until that fateful day when
Iraq invaded Kuwait. In another era, this
invasion would have gone unnoticed, as the
actions of one desert regime against another
would not have had any effect upon the world
scene. However, because of the fact that a huge
portion of the world's crude oil comes from the
Persian Gulf region, that was enough to make
politicians panic, as people began to assess the
possibilities of Saddam Hussein having control
over that oil.

The U.S. Government dealings with Hussein
himself provide an informative study of how not
to engage in foreign policy. During the 1980s,
when Iraq was at war against Iran, which had
held a large number of Americans as hostage in
the last year of Jimmy Carter's administration,
Hussein was seen as a U.S. ally. Like the
Muslims who hold to the belief that "the enemy
of my enemy is my friend," the U.S. Government
courted Hussein as a "moderate" who could
stand as a bulwark in the region against the
fanaticism of the Iranian Islamic regime. After
all, Iraq was a secular country, despite its
overwhelming Muslim population, and there
was a thriving Christian community there.

Even when an Iraqi warplane attacked a U.S.
ship in the Persian Gulf in 1987, killing dozens
of U.S. sailors, the U.S. Government, then under
Ronald Reagan, accepted Iraq's apology for its
"mistake" in much the same way the U.S.
Government told the public that the deadly 1967
Israeli attack on the U.S.S. Liberty also was a
"mistake." Even when Hussein's armed forces
used poison gas against Iranian soldiers, Iraq
was still regarded as a "moderate" regime in
State Department language.

In July 1990, however, it all changed. After the
U.S. ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie,
indicated to Hussein that the Bush
Administration would not object to an invasion
of Kuwait, the Iraqis took the U.S. at its word
and sent its armies over the border, meeting
almost no resistance. (At the time, there was a
legitimate dispute at the Iraq-Kuwait border
involving the Kuwaiti practice of drilling
sideways under the border to extract oil from
pools in Iraq. No one seems to have
remembered that this was Hussein's main gripe,
although Iraqis never have regarded Kuwait,
which once was part of Iraq, as a legitimate
state in the first place.)

After Iraq invaded Kuwait, Bush demanded that
the Iraqis leave at once. Saddam, once our ally,
all of a sudden was a demon, a threat to world
peace and someone who was obsessed with
obtaining and building "weapons of mass
destruction." The Saudi Arabian Royal Family
also privately expressed fear that Saddam (who
probably was more popular in Saudi Arabia
than the corrupt rulers of the royal family)
would turn his military might towards them.

The Saudis, as well as the Israelis and others
who saw this as a golden opportunity for a U.S.
military response, began to raise the specter of
Iraq "controlling" the world's largest single oil
source. Journalists began to write about the
possible reappearance of the dreaded "gas
lines," forgetting that the chaos at the gas pumps
in the USA during the 1970s was the direct
result of government price controls on domestic
crude oil and gasoline. The prospect of the U.S.
Armed Forces being able to set up permanent
bases also appealed to a number of Democrats
and Republicans, not to mention Israeli
politicians who realized that dragging their best
"ally" into the Middle East morass would
further cement ties between the USA and Israel.

None of this is to suggest that Saddam was a
"good guy" or someone one of us would want
for a neighbor  or a head of state. However, he
was just as oppressive before his armies
attacked Kuwait as he was afterwards, yet the
U.S. Government eagerly did business with him.
All during the 1980s he was openly developing
his WMDs, but few in this country said anything
about his megalomania or his alleged threats to
humanity.

Not surprisingly, a spate of atrocity stories
sprang from Kuwait. No doubt, some were true,
but many others were false and done with the
full knowledge of the U.S. State Department. At
the same time, oil prices climbed upward, in
part due to the uncertainty that understandably
ruled the markets and due also in part to Bush's
embargo on oil from Iraq and Kuwait. Many in
the government, as well as some of the
"experts" in the oil industry, were predicting
prices of $70 or more a barrel. (Oil prices
actually briefly climbed to about $41 a barrel
before plummeting to about $20 after the war
began.)

What few people were pointing out was that
Saddam could not prop up his own government
without selling oil. The idea that his armies
would conquer the entire Arabian Peninsula,
then withhold the vast amounts of oil there as a
way to hold the western democracies hostage
needs to be better examined, as it has always
been held out as a justification for going to war.
(After the war was over, Bush crowed to a
group of enthusiastic supporters that had the
USA gone to war, oil would have gone to $100
a barrel.)

I have no idea what goes on in the mind of a
dictator, and especially someone like Hussein.
Whether or not he had the idea of grabbing oil
and holding the West hostage I cannot say. Even
had that been his plan, one has to question if it
could work.

First, his armies would have had to successfully
carry such a plan of conquest, which was not an
automatic given, although Iraq had the largest
and best-equipped army in the region. The
Persian Gulf area is large and a place of hostile
conditions and weather, and the more spread out
his armies would have been in this area, the
more vulnerable he and they would have been.
In other words, even had he planned to seize the
entire peninsula instead of just Kuwait, I have
my doubts he could have succeeded as easily as
many were saying.

Second, oil does no one any good when it is in
the ground. Withholding oil might have gained
him some short-term results, but in the longer
term, the only way he could have made the
revenues necessary to keep his government
afloat would have been to sell the oil, and lots
of it. Furthermore, had he actually launched this
grand scheme instead of simply holding on to
Kuwait (which is what he insisted all along was
all he had planned to do), Saddam would have
been practically inviting an invasion of western
armed forces into his country, and I believe he
understood that point quite well. Instead, he
invaded Kuwait after he mistakenly believed
that the USA would not retaliate against him.

To make matters worse, a number of different
groups, from the neoconservatives to Israel's
political allies painted this whole episode as a
replay of the Munich crisis of 1938, with
Hussein being the new Hitler. While Saddam
was a pretty nasty guy with a moustache who
would utter some bad things about Israel and the
Jews, to compare his regime and its armed
forces to the military machine of the Third
Reich is ludicrous. For that matter, even the
vaunted Wehrmacht had already lost steam by
1943 and was backpedaling from many of its
earlier conquests even before the Allied
invasions at Normandy. If the mighty German
armed forces could not hold their own, what
makes one think that Iraq could have succeeded
where better armies had failed?

This is not to say that Bush's venture had
unanimous support, even in Congress, which
barely granted him permission to go to war,
although no declaration of war was actually
given. Unfortunately, leftists who opposed
Bush, chanting, "No blood for oil," were
claiming that had the government implemented
all of the crackpot conservationist and
alternative energy schemes that had been
churned out by economic illiterates during the
1970s and early 1980s, the USA would have
been "energy independent" and would not have
been affected by the events in the Gulf. Thus,
they undermined their own arguments by trying
to use the crisis to promote their own statist
and useless  programs.

There is no doubt, however, that many oil
executives were relieved to know Bush was
going to war, as this seemed to be confirmation
for them that the U.S. Government would do
anything to protect oil interests. Furthermore, I
suppose they were happy to see the
implementation of permanent U.S. military
bases in Islamic countries such as Saudi Arabia.

After the war, Bush claimed that the great
victory by anti-Saddam forces would help
create a "new world order." Indeed, we have
our "new world order," although it is not
exactly what the elder Bush thought would
happen.

First, the war made the economic situation at
home even worse, something that led to his
electoral defeat by Bill Clinton in 1992.
Second, the wanton slaughter of the Iraqis, the
implementation of a permanent regime of
sanctions against Iraq, and the presence of U.S.
troops on Muslim soil has enraged many Middle
Easterners, giving strength to the followers of
Osama bin Laden and others who have made it
their mission in life to drive the Americans out.

Third, the idea that the placement of U.S. bases
in places like Saudi Arabia has not made Israel
any more secure. In fact, it seems that the
situation has so galvanized anti-U.S. and
anti-Israel sentiment to the point that Israel is
less secure now than it was before the Gulf
War.

Last, the Gulf War ultimately gave us the events
of September 11. I have no doubt that had the
elder Bush listened to voices of reason instead
of the war hawks, the World Trade Towers
would still be standing and Saddam would just
be another dictator to ignore instead of being a
vengeful head of state wanting revenge. The
peaceful promises that seemed in reach after the
end of the Cold War have vanished, and now
we have an ongoing war against "terrorism," as
the younger Bush contemplates "finishing the
job" that his father began. The evil genie was let
out of the bottle in 1990, and I doubt it will ever
be corked, at least in my lifetime.

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