http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=15663

Why the Anti-War Movement Was Right

By Arianna Huffington, AlterNet
April 16, 2003

The Bible tells us that pride goeth before the fall. In Iraq, it 
cameth right after it.

 From the moment that statue of Saddam hit the ground, the mood around 
the Rumsfeld campfire has been all high-fives, I-told-you-sos, and 
endless smug prattling about how the speedy fall of Baghdad is proof 
positive that those who opposed the invasion of Iraq were dead wrong.

What utter nonsense. In fact, the speedy fall of Baghdad proves the 
anti-war movement was dead right.

The whole pretext for our unilateral charge into Iraq was that the 
American people were in imminent danger from Saddam and his mighty 
war machine. The threat was so clear and present that we couldn't 
even give inspectors searching for weapons of mass destruction - hey, 
remember those? - another 30 days, as France wanted.

Well, it turns out that, far from being on the verge of destroying 
Western civilization, Saddam and his 21st century Gestapo couldn't 
even muster a half-hearted defense of their own capital. The hawks' 
cakewalk disproves their own dire warnings; they can't have it both 
ways.

The invasion has proved wildly successful in one other regard: It has 
unified most of the world - especially the Arab world - against us. 
Back in 1991, more than a half-dozen Arab nations were part of our 
Desert Storm coalition. Operation Iraqi Freedom's "coalition of the 
willing" had zero. Not even the polygamous potentates of Kuwait - 
whose butts we saved last time out and who were most threatened by 
whatever threat Iraq still presented - would join us. And, I'm sorry, 
but substituting Bulgaria and the island of Tonga for Egypt and Oman 
is just not going to cut it when it comes to winning hearts and minds 
on the Arab street.

In fact, almost everything about the invasion - from the go-it-alone 
build-up to the mayhem the fall of Saddam has unleashed - has played 
right into the hands of those intent on demonizing our country. 
Islamic extremists must be having a field day signing up recruits for 
the holy war they're preparing to wage against us. Instead of Uncle 
Sam wants you, their recruiting posters feature a different kind of 
patriotic image: an American soldier ill-advisedly draping the 
American flag over Saddam's face.

The anti-war movement did not oppose the war out of fear that America 
was going to lose. It was the Bush administration's pathological and 
frantic obsession with an immediate, damn-the-consequences invasion 
that fueled the protests.

And please don't point to jubilant Iraqis dancing in the streets to 
validate the case for "pre-emptive liberation." You'd be doing the 
Baghdad Bugaloo too if the murderous tyrant who'd been eating off 
golden plates while your family starved finally got what was coming 
to him. It in no way proves that running roughshod over international 
law and pouring Iraqi oil - now brought to you by the good folks at 
Halliburton - onto the flames of anti-American hatred was a good 
idea. It wasn't before the war, and it still isn't now. The 
unintended consequences have barely begun to unfold.

And the idea that our slamdunk of Saddam actually proves the White 
House was right is particularly dangerous because it encourages the 
Wolfowitzes and the Perles and the Cheneys to argue that we should be 
invading Syria or Iran or North Korea or Cuba as soon as we catch our 
breath. They've tasted blood.

It's important to remember that the Arab world has seen a very 
different war than we have. They are seeing babies with limbs blown 
off, children wailing beside their dead mothers, Arab journalists 
killed by American tanks and bombers, holy men hacked to death and 
dragged through the streets. They are seeing American forces leaving 
behind a wake of destruction, looting, hunger, humiliation, and chaos.

Who's been handling our war PR, Osama bin Laden? The language and 
imagery are all wrong. Having Tom DeLay gush about our "army of 
virtue" at the same time we're blowing up mosques is definitely not 
sending the right message to a Muslim world already suspicious that 
we're waging a war on Islam.

Neither is Ari Fleischer's claim that the administration can't do 
anything to keep Christian missionaries - including those who have 
described the Islamic prophet Muhammad as a "demon-possessed 
pedophile" and a "terrorist" - from going on a holy crusade to 
Baghdad. You think the Arab world might take that the wrong way? If 
there is one thing that could bring Sunnis and Shiites together, it's 
the common hatred of evangelical zealots who denigrate their prophet.

And it doesn't help to have the American media referring to Jay 
Garner, the retired general Don Rumsfeld picked to oversee the 
rebuilding of Iraq, as "viceroy." It reeks of colonial imperialism. 
Why not just call him "Head Bwana?" Or "Garner of Arabia?" I didn't 
realize the Supreme Court had handed Bush a scepter to go along with 
the Florida recount.

The powerful role that shame and humiliation have played in shaping 
world history is considerable, but something the Bush team seems 
utterly clueless about. Which is why the anti-war movement must be 
stalwart in its refusal to be silenced or browbeaten by the gloating 
"I told you so" chorus on the right. On the contrary, it needs to 
make sure that the doctrine of preemptive invasion is forever buried 
in the sands of Iraq.

Especially as the administration, high on the heady fumes of Saddam's 
ouster, turns its covetous eyes on Syria. I give it less than a week 
before someone starts making the case that President Assad is the 
next, next Hitler.

Arianna Huffington is the author of "Pigs at the Trough: How 
Corporate Greed and Political Corruption are Undermining America."


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