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Bush's Wooden-Headedness Kills
President George W. Bush is convinced, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, that he is on the right course in the war in Iraq and the struggle against terrorism. He says he will not change his mind. Thus, we are at an historic moment; and we would be well advised to see what light historians might shed on our current predicament in Iraq and the basic (but unanswered) question as to why so many people resort to terrorism against us.
Historian Barbara Tuchman addressed the kind of situation we face at this juncture in our country's history in her best-selling book, "The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam." (Had she lived, she surely would have updated the book to take Iraq into account).
Tuchman wrote:
"Wooden-headedness...plays a remarkably large role in government. It consists in assessing a situation in terms of preconceived fixed notions while ignoring or rejecting any contrary signs. It is acting according to wish while not allowing oneself to be deflected by the facts."
Tuchman referred in this context to 16th century Philip II of Spain as the Nobel-laureate (so to speak) woodenhead of all time: "No experience of the failure of his policy could shake his belief in its essential excellence." Comparisons, I know, can be invidious, but Philip amassed too much power and drained state revenues by failed adventures overseas, leading to Spain's decline. Sadly, Tuchman, who died in 1989, cannot opine as to whether history will see George W. Bush as having displaced Philip as supreme woodenhead. Bush would have a good shot at it, it seems to me.
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. Ralph Waldo Emerson
In her book, Tuchman emphasized that courtiers can reinforce the ruler's certitude, as was the case with Philip, and is the now the case with George. And if the courtiers are really good at it, they are awarded the Medal of Freedom-as was the case with former CIA director George Tenet, former Army General Tommy Franks, and former U.S. proconsul in Baghdad Paul Bremer-each of whom richly deserved a Heck of a job, Brownie-type salute. As Tuchman pointed out:
"Once a policy has been adopted and implemented, all subsequent activity becomes an effort to justify it...Adjustment is painful. For the ruler it is easier, once he has entered the policy box, to stay inside. For the lesser official it is better...not to make waves, not to press evidence that the chief will find painful to accept. Psychologists call the process of screening out discordant information "cognitive dissonance," an academic disguise for "Don't confuse me with the facts."
Bush's genius is that he knows this instinctively-without having to take Tuchman's book to read in Crawford. And, by all signs, he likes it that way. That is why he has assembled a truly amazing array of sycophants around him, whose only pedigree is loyalty to George W. Bush.
And that is precisely why we Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), in our first Memorandum for the President (Feb. 5, 2003), closed with this admonition:
"After watching Secretary Powell today [giving his speech at the U.N.], we are convinced that you would be better served if you widened the discussion beyond violations of Resolution 1441, and beyond the circle of those advisers clearly bent on a war for which we see no compelling reason and from which we believe the unintended consequences are likely to be catastrophic."
Our views, and those of others-like Scott Ritter, who knew more about what had happened to Iraqi "weapons of mass destruction" than virtually anyone-made no dent in the wooden head. Not that the president really believed there were such weapons there. If he did, he was badly misled by Vice President Dick Cheney, who was well aware that the "evidence," such as it was, was bogus. Senior White House officials told my former colleagues at CIA eight months before the war that they needed to focus on "regime change," not WMD. And the White House did not wish to hear any more about WMD from CIA's super-source-the Iraqi foreign minister, whom CIA operations officers had "turned" to work in place for the U.S. rather than Saddam.
The Attack on Iraq and Terrorism
In the same 5 Feb. 03 Memorandum, we strongly warned the president (as did many others) of the consequences, should he order our troops to invade Iraq:
"It is our view that an invasion of Iraq would ensure overflowing recruitment centers for terrorists into the indefinite future. Far from eliminating the threat it would enhance it exponentially."
We cited a CIA study done the previous fall that pointed out:
"The forces fueling hatred of the U.S. and fueling al-Qa'ida recruiting are not being addressed...the underlying causes that drive terrorists will persist."
And we noted that that CIA report cited a 2002 Gallup poll of almost 10,000 Muslims in nine countries in which respondents described the United States as "ruthless, aggressive, conceited, arrogant, easily provoked and biased." We hoped against hope that someone could break through the coterie around President George W. Bush and give him a chance to hear why "they hate us." Someone, for example, from the U.S. Defense Science Board, a panel established to provide independent advice to the secretary of defense, which on Sept. 23, 2004 completed on an unclassified study on "Strategic Communication." With little risk to their day-jobs, that distinguished board directly contradicted the line taken by the president: "Muslims do not 'hate our freedom,' but rather, they hate our policies. The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favor of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the longstanding, even increasing support for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan, and the Gulf States. Thus, when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving hypocrisy..."
It is hard to guess whether such straight talk might make a dent in presidential wood. The pity is that the palace guard around him headed by centurion-in-chief Cheney can, and does, keep such information from getting through. Even if the president were to read the New York Times, as many of us still do, he would have had to wait two months for the "paper of record" to put this story on the record and, even then, he would have been shortchanged.
Times writer Thom Shanker, to his credit, wrote a story on the findings of the Defense Science Board panel on Nov. 24, 2004 (better two months late than never). Shanker, too, cited the paragraph immediately above, but only the first and last sentences survived. To someone's discredit, the offending middle sentence was surgically removed before the paper went to press.
NIE Ducks Key Issues
The latest National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) titled "The Terrorist Threat to the US Homeland," is a disappointment, at least judging from its declassified Key Judgments that were made public on July 17. The judgments caused a stir by describing a "persistent and evolving terrorist threat" and pointing out that al-Qa'ida has secured safe haven in the border area between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
And then came the "mushroom-cloud" warning:
"al-Qa'ida will continue to try to acquire and employ chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear material in attacks and would not hesitate to use them if it develops what it deems is sufficient capability."
Now that I've got your attention, I must tell you there is in the Key Judgments absolutely no hint as to how likely it might be that al-Qa'ida will be able to acquire such material. The message seems to be simply: Be afraid. Let us "assess" and "judge," but don't ask us about sources or provenance.
The Unaddressed Why of It All
Worse still, the Key Judgments throw no light at all on why al-Qa'ida or other terrorist groups would want to use such weapons against the U.S. With this key element missing, the paper reads like a long police bulletin: Be alert; heightened threat; terrorists want to do bad things to us. We don't know if they can; but "we assess" they will try to do very bad things...and don't ask us why. They're evildoers; is that not enough for you?
The estimate bears the earmarks of having been drafted originally by law enforcement agencies like the Department of Homeland Security, whose portfolio include terrorist threats to the U.S., and the FBI. There are pitfalls here. There is a tendency to inflate the threat, when one has a parochial interest in building up one's capacity to deal with it
In the past, the Pentagon would routinely magnify external threats by writing what we disdainfully called "budgetary intelligence" to justify burgeoning budgets. There is more than a whiff of that in the Key Judgments. The National Intelligence Council, which has purview over NIEs, is supposed to monitor this. But there is no sign in the Key Judgments that judicious restraint has been applied.
So, even if the president and Cheney wished to know what actually fuels all this terrorism, they would receive little if any help from this estimate.
Help Needed
And since 9/11, the Michael (Heck-of-a-Job-Brownie) Browns have proliferated in the national security apparatus almost as quickly as lapel flag-pins.
Ms. Fran Townsend, the young woman with the portfolio for terrorism at the National Security Council seems ill suited to the job. She confessed to being frustrated at al-Qa'ida's success in rebuilding its infrastructure and links to affiliates and the fact that Osama bin Laden and his top lieutenants have found safe haven, as the estimate makes clear.
And she was far from comfortable responding to journalists' questions, as can be seen from her answer to this one:
Q. The president was warned before the war that this was actually going to help al-Qa'ida gain influence...Isn't that something the president ignored?
A. But you're assuming this is a zero-sum game, which is what I don't understand. The fact is, we are harassing them in Afghanistan. We're harassing them in Iraq. We're harassing them in other ways non-militarily around the world. And the answer is, every time you poke the hornet's nest, they are bound to come back and push back on you. That doesn't suggest to me that we shouldn't be doing it.
Is this what passes for a strategic plan to counter terrorists? If so, it certainly highlights the need for adult supervision in the White House....and for creating the capability to prepare honest, sophisticated estimates, which in turn can enable policies of some vision and imagination.
But all this matters little, if wooden-headedness continues to prevail with the president and Cheney. As long as they are permitted to preside over keystone-cops law enforcement operations, with an occasional military surge here and there, the men and women in our armed forces, and the rest of us, will be in greater danger.
In the end, though, wood is not difficult to drill through with the proper tools.
Thanks to the prescience and courage of those who crafted our Constitution, a wood-tool is available. It is a precision tool that, with some courage, can be employed almost immediately. It is called impeachment, the orderly political process the Founders left to us for use when the president and/or vice president or other high official needs to be removed to save the Republic.
Let the members of Congress, who enjoy calling one another "distinguished," distinguish themselves by rising to the occasion. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. reminded us at another such juncture, that there is such a thing as too late. Too-late has already come to more than 3,600 young men and women in our armed forces, as well as thousands now missing limbs and other once functional parts of their bodies and minds. Not to mention the carnage visited on hundreds of thousands more whose only sin is that they are Iraqis.


21 Comments so far
Show AllImpeachment in the House may be possible, but conviction in the Senate requires 67 votes, which means at least 16 Republican Senators have to vote to convict. Otherwise Bush remains in office.
If we can't remove Bush from the White House, is there some way to restrict his power to do more harm, for example, by bombing Iran? Is it possible for Congress to prevent the Joint Chiefs of Staff from carrying out an order from the President to bomb Iran without a Declaration of War?
As bad as the situation may be, it could get much worse in an instant, if Bush attacks another country. Impeachment in the House without conviction in the Senate won't prevent it.
I'd like to offer another history lesson which may be relevant to this article.
In the thirties, Adolph Hitler was popular with the majority of Germans for various reasons, but some were wise enough in anticipating the consequences for Germany by the militant approach to all their problems in Nazi propaganda. Colonel Claus Von Stauffenberg was one of them.
Born into an aristocratic family and highly educated, Von Stauffenberg joined the Army in 1925. By 1936, three years after the Nazis took control to protect the "Homeland", and before the first shot was ever fired, he began studying how to stage a "coup d etat". It was extremely difficult to build the resistance to overthrow Hitler as spies and informers were plentiful, courtesy of the Gestapo. In fact, if a German was caught with a "typewriter" in their home, they were hauled in for questioning. "what are you typing,?", and who reads it? The Party controlled 100% of the media (press, radio and movies) as alternative newspapers and magazines were illegal and publishing houses closed.
By 1944, any German with common sense at all, figured they were going to loss the war, so why continue on and let more "supermen and women" be killed for a pathetic, paronoid, dictator, who became more delusional and withdrawn from the public every time more defeats by the allies were reported, but they knew he wanted to "Stay The Course", just like the "coward-in-chief occupying the White House and the draft-dodger VP who would not even serve two years in the Army (when we still had a draft), but has no qualm about sending others to the next plane of existence.
So, the heroic Von Stauffenberg, along with about 2000 other German citizens, most famously the able General Erwin Rommel, plotted to rid the nation they loved, of Hitler. and the Colonel carried the suitcase in with the bomb which didn't do the job, but cost him his life as well as Rommel's and most of the other 2000. As intelligent as they are, and as brave on the field of battle ( and I find war an abomination ), the "government bombarded them with fear on a daily basis and they were "diming" each other to see who was "more patriotic"
"IGNORANCE IS NOT BLISS, IT IS UNFORGIVABLE", because when the "vast majority let a small minority" do the THINKING for them, you wind up living in tyranny. It's been like that for thousands of years. Why do we let it happen? Look up "THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE of 1914, on the internet, and see what is possible if the "troops" become the "DECIDERS" instead of having a semi-illiterate puppet send them in harms way.
I believe that impeachment COULD be successful.
The very act should be able to expose the American people to the sleaze and corruption that is the hallmark of the current administration.
But even if unsuccessful I firmly believe it is the Congress' duty. It IS NOT a decision for the Congress to make, but rather an unavoidable duty under our Constitution.
Remember, Nixon was impeached but never convicted. The impeachment was enough to rid us of the slimeball. It would also do the job on Dumbya and the Dodger/Shooter.
He can not bomb Iran without authorization and he will not get it. When the people in the states where Republican Senators are running for reelection start to express their opinions, start to look for a major change. If they tell Bush to get out and he refuses, look for impeachment.
peaceman:
Thanks for that tip about the Christmas Truce 1914. I had forgotten about that. It is my "impossible dream" that there is still enough good will left in mankind for such a thing to be possible today. It seems to me that those who actually live through the darkest nights of mankind's soul are more inclined to look for and embrace the light than those who just imagine it.
Hooray! Ray McGovern and the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) are among the few who provide true assessment of our situation.
If only the rest of CommonDreams empty-head writers could provide such quantitative reports.
BigNoseKate: Beautifully stated, I agree with your comment. There is enough good will left in mankind. In fact there always has, but the "ruling class" in every society have used the people to achieve their goal, which ultimately comes down to the basic two things...money and power. Growing up in the 50's, we were told that the Russians were monsters and wanted to enslave the world and that Orientals had no value for life and didn't care if they lived or died. Some of us believed it! ( Here I was, little "Sgt Rock " from the comic books of that era ) a nine year old kid practicing air raid alerts at school by getting under our desks and covering our heads in case Kruschev dropped the big ones on us. It's funny, now, but our ruling class had us feeling uneasy about the Commies. You'll laugh when I tell you this, but that nine year old was thinking about secretly parachuting into Moscow and blowing up the Kremlin, thus saving the "world from Communism". And I'm sure, my counterpart in Russia had similar thoughts about saving "the world from the greedy capitalists" ( whom,I may add, never have enough! ). If we actually met and had a conversation, the things in life that mean the most to us were similar, and real differences are less than the ruling class wants us to know.
George W bush "is convinced he is on the right course. . . . He will not change his mind." This makes him woodenheaded and he and his corporate cohorts have accepted this convenient "cover" to direct attention away from their fascist agenda.
This agenda has been defined daily by people of common sense, thinking writers, lecturers, professors, economists, etc., and is so well-known that grounds for impeachment are obvious.
If we continue to postpone IMPEACHMENT, then the woodenheads win. So IMPEACH1 for God's sake. NOW
It looks like the criminal Bush cabal plan to attack Iran after the first of the year, after pretending to give diplomacy a chance.
McGovern writes:
"President George W. Bush is convinced, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, that he is on the right course in the war in Iraq and the struggle against terrorism."
Maybe Bush is on the right course, but the right course has nothing to do with Iraqi sectarian violence, stability of the government, security for the public, and safe return for the troops. If the goal is to gain strategic leverage over Russia, China, and Europe by maintaining control over Iraq's oil -- specifically by making sure it stays in the ground -- then the whole thing is going perfectly. Maybe he is on the right course according to his true objectives, and so there is no need to change.
The second part -- that he is failing in his treatment of terrorism -- I believe is also false. I buy into the assessment of Noam Chomsky. The goal is to increase terrorism as a pretext to advance a right wing agenda. Bush and Bin Laden need each other to continue exactly as they are.
Terrorism is good for business.
We need to start forcing the discussion where it really belongs -- that is, do we want our leaders to continue use the military to create favorable economic conditions for business back home?
All the rest of the discussion is background noise that has no bearing on the decision process.
Poet, I've been reading Mr. McGovern's output for some time and have yet to find fault with his analyses. Could you point me to one?
VIPS' cause is obvious in their name, "Sanity". I applaud that aim and would list myself as an ally of their cause.
Yes, the CIA is guilty of many horrors (as are lots of other more well-meaning organisations) but you antipathy would be more practically directed towards their superiors who sanction those horrors rather than to powerless, well intentioned ex-members.
Beware of Ray McGovern and all the
VIPS which is the group he represents. Under the rubric of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" he and his bunch seek to cultivate and seduce whom they will to their cause.
Their critiques of Bushco and the current CIA of Gatesco may be correct. but their advocacy is for yet another unelected, unaccountable, star chamber oligararchy--themselves.
They represent the agency which (in their own time) was responsible for the premptive regime change in countries throughout the globe, the justification of a nuclear arms race , and a "cold" war" that squandered decades of time and multiple trillions in money and manpower that might have been otherwise put to more constructive uses to solve the problems plauging mankind and truly protect the most vulnerable and "at risk" of humanity.
Just 'cause a totalitarian wears a swastika armband in the form of a smiley-face does not make him or her any less a roralitarian. Ask Ernst Roehm, Leon Trotsky, or Lin Biao.
@ Shane:
"...If only the rest of CommonDreams empty-head writers could provide such quantitative reports."
That remark seems to me to be a rather cruel jibe, -a slur on the many GOOD souls writing here at C-D who are **doing their best** to try to make sense of a complex and dire situation.
We cannot all be experts in all fields! - but most of the writers at C-D appear to have their HEARTS in the right place, and feel impassioned enough to keep on trying to bring some sanity to an insane situation, - the latter courtesy of their madcap leaders.
What is wrong with that, pray tell? And why denigrate people as 'empty-headed' when patently they don't (actually) have 'empty' heads, but minds full of a thousand different thoughts and ideas as to how best end the current mess. Isn't that a lot better than just sitting around doing nothing? ~ I certainly think so.
My experience and estimate of Common Dreams writers differs from yours Shane. I find that overall they are not 'empty headed' at all.
And... most important of all, generally speaking, neither are their HEARTS empty either.
I cannot be altogether sure about your heart Shane. Are you perhaps a little 'empty hearted' I wonder? ~ (I do hope not).
_________________________
A wise person from the East once said: "Reserve your best criticism for yourself" whilst one from the area betwixt East and West suggested, "Let he who is without faults throw the first stone" and, "Attend to the log in your own eye, before focussing on the speck in your neighbour's eye"
– then again, here in the West we have the phrase, "People who live in glasshouses shouldn't throw stones."
__________________
But is all that just another example of 'empty headedness' as well? If so, I guess my head is but a vacuous desert wherein nothing of any value ever blooms, :) -mea culpa!
Finally, regarding your use of the word 'quantitative', -did you actually mean to commend Ray McGovern for his *quantity* --or his rather his *QUALITY*?
~Might the word *qualitative* have been more appropriate I wonder?
++++++++++++++++++++++++
Overall, I believe that we on the Left could more usefully strive for an accommodating, co-operative and tolerant UNITY, -rather than sink to making derisory, divisive comments about each other, which appear to just needlessly muddy the waters.
What say you, good sir?
MIRF59: I think you're analysis is right-on, and the price to the world, beyond the pale!
This article should be nailed up on the front door of congress. Oh yeah, they won't be there. If there is any body not deserving of an August break it's our congress. I wrote one of the imperial senators the other day, Obama. I wanted to express my heartfelt opinion that he would not get my support if he did not take up the impeachment question. Under the scores of subject matter available on his website, impeachment was not available. So I selected 'endangered species' and inserted the subtitle 'politicians with backbone'. Haven't gotten a reply back. I can wait. It takes time for such a hurrendously dishonorable cause to unravel. How many will be killed, maimed, or left abandoned by the time the imperial houses return to do the emporer's bidding. Cowards, all of them!
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds."
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Plato once said:
"There is simple ignorance, which is the source of lighter offenses, and double ignorance, which is accompanied by a conceit of wisdom."
Here's one from Henry David Thoreau:
"If I knew that a man was coming to my House with the conscious design of doing me good, I should run for my life."
@UN-common-dreams
Most of the articles picked up by CD are reprinted (presumably with permission). Authors include Chomsky, Margolis and many highly respected folk. However, I contend that CD often shows poor editorial decision-making by printing poorly researched, manic articles that actually do the progressive movement a lot of damage by providing fodder for the anti-progressives. Very often, a report will pose as an op-ed but is really a personal diatribe. That is when I get angry. You call this 'writing from the HEART', which is true, but it has no place in journalistic excellence. If progressives are to avoid being labeled left-wing loonies, we must maintain a very high standard of reporting and research.
Having said that, I am not a journalist, and am probably empty-headed to boot. But I do recognize well-researched and supported reports and can discriminate from the rubbish that alas, many mistake for true journalism.
I may not always be right, but I am never wrong - Anonymous :)
Okay Shane, -thankyou for your clarification good sir.
To be honest, I wasn't 100% sure if you were levelling your critique at the main articles, -or the C-D bloggers. (I felt kinda protective of the C-D bloggers if the latter was the case, -I think overall they are really rather lovely!) :)
I think I get yr point about what is / is not 'journalistic excellence'. Of course different readers will prefer one type / style of article over another. I guess the C-D staff have an idea of their demographic / readership, (and will certainly be able to count the hits per article, etc) so maybe they select on some criteria which thus far evades us?
I *almost* agree with trying to obvert labels such as 'left wing loons' etc, if / where we can; but then, -some would have called Buddha, or Einstein, 'a total ass', -such is the profound ignorance of some of our fellows! I feel we should not always act in accordance with what 'some may think of us', or we might never act at all?
As to the 'HEART' aspect, well, -I admit that is a large part of my make-up, inclination and personal philosophy, -in which I place much store. It is an idiosyncratic stance maybe, but it is my 'Way' so I need speak of it, ('Unto thine own self be true' and all that).
I DO disagree with you Shane about, " ...and I am probably empty-headed to boot."
-I'm afraid you are quite mistaken about yourself there! (c:
And thanks for your 'protective concern' for the well being of the Progressive movement, I really respect that in you, and feel much the same myself.
I liked your last bit, (the quote).
Along the same lines, here's one you also may enjoy:
* Everyone is entitled to my own opinion! * :)
Important article. Thanks, Ray.
And, I noticed that you did not use the book, Bush on the Couch by psychiatrist Justin Frank, as a source. It would add more in-depth answers to some of the questions you pose. Frank offers a precise and lucid look into W's inner world. In the process he offers much understanding regarding the motivations and thought processes which have driven George's decisions and actions.
Highly recommended.
hahahah...ray's da man.... but listen, bush has no option but to stand for the "new"-iraq for MANY more reasons than woodenheadedness, and impeachment is not a current "war-policy" issue, but is based on bushite's treatment of the public/public-constitutional law. the war itself, is legal (althoug based on congressional sellout to bad policy). impeachment is based on constitutional illegalities not on policy-issues. besides, iraq is not solely "iraq".. who will stand with our bestest-frenz and good-peeps kurdistan if an "iraq withdrawal" is the sum-plan. ray, im a little disappointed in the vehemance-over-analysis approach, but entertainment-value does matter, and you are a hero, so it doesnt matter. everything you write deserves to be read.