An Unjust War 
 
by Charley Reese 

It would pay us all to remember that the war in Iraq was both unjust and
illegal. We launched a war of aggression against a country that was not
attacking us, did not have the means to attack us, and had never expressed
any intention of attacking us.

Thus, America's attack against Iraq is the same as Germany's attack against
Poland in 1939. We were the aggressor, pure and simple, and for whatever
real reason we attacked Iraq, it was not to save America from any danger,
imminent or otherwise.

You can believe the two whitewash jobs blaming everything on intelligence if
you wish to do so. I don't believe them. Our intelligence agencies make
plenty of mistakes, but I don't believe that the information they provided
the Bush administration was as clear-cut as the Bush people claimed. In
other words, I think the Bush administration lied to the American people
about weapons of mass destruction.

This illegal, unjust and unprovoked war against a sovereign country is what
has alienated the rest of the world. This alienation runs deep and will have
very long-term implications. 

No sane leader of any nation in the world can trust America anymore. We have
demonstrated that if we desire to attack a nation, we will fabricate the
excuse and attack it, despite international law and international opinion.
We have demonstrated that a nation need not provoke us or threaten us to
become a victim of our aggression. We have said to the world that the only
law we respect is the law of the jungle, and that might makes right. That's
why so many people consider us to be a rogue nation and a threat to world
peace.

The sad part is that the American people have been so sheeplike. They
believed the blarney about weapons of mass destruction, even the stupid
parts such as Bush claiming Iraq's tiny little drone airplanes could attack
the U.S. When those lies were exposed, they believed that the war was
justified by Saddam Hussein's cruelty. We've slept with many bloody
dictators, including Saddam. Now they believe that we went there to spread
democracy. 

That's a bunch of hooey. The present interim government is corrupt to the
core. The British Broadcasting Corp. did a lot of interviews with Iraqis,
and not one of them mentioned wanting democracy or freedom. They all said
they want a strong government that can provide security and end corruption.

Given the world's distrust and alienation, how do you think the Bush
administration is going to garner support to stop the proliferation of
nuclear weapons? Do you think Russia, China, India and other countries love
us? Do you think even the Europeans will not try to weaken our global
monopoly on the use of force? 

There is a great irony here. Imperialism produces exactly the effects that
the critics of isolation claim it produces. Imperialism isolates America. An
American policy of noninterference and cooperation would produce allies.

I don't intend to blame the Bush administration entirely. Both the
Republicans and the Democrats are committed to an imperialistic policy. Nor
was the war against Iraq the first instance of unprovoked and illegal acts
of aggression. We invaded Grenada and Panama, and launched aerial attacks
against Libya and Serbia. 

Don't take too much comfort in the fact that we are, at the moment, the
800-pound gorilla. Everybody hates the gorilla and will try to do everything
to weaken it. Given the venality and incompetence of our government, the
shaky state of our economy, the apathy of our people and the decadence of
our culture, I don't think we'll be king of the jungle for very much longer.


http://www.antiwar.com/reese/?articleid=5577
<http://www.antiwar.com/reese/?articleid=5577> 

by Charley Reese 



                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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