NEW YORK -- U.S. forces are rapidly massing in the Arabian Gulf to invade Iraq.
Four heavy brigades have been positioned near Iraq, a huge new air complex is
now operational in Qatar and American special forces are active in Iraqi Kurdistan.
The White House is hoping its threats of war will provoke a coup against Saddam
Hussein by the Iraqi Army. But if one does not come, the George Bush administration
shows every sign of plunging into an unprovoked war that the rest of the world
will view as blatant aggression.
Even America's closest allies are appalled by the tide of warmongering and
jingoism that has engulfed the United States. Bush's recently proclaimed doctrine
of "pre-emptive intervention" anywhere on Earth is nothing less than a frightening
revival of the old imperialist Brezhnev Doctrine of 25 years ago that called for
Soviet intervention wherever socialism was threatened.
"Bush, himself the most intellectually backward American president of my political
lifetime, is surrounded by advisers whose bellicosity is exceeded only by their
political, military and diplomatic illiteracy." Such were the stinging words of
Gerald Kaufman, highly respected former foreign affairs spokesman of Britain's
ruling Labour party, America's closest ally.
Bush's accelerating campaign to invade Iraq and turn it into another U.S. oil
protectorate is also provoking a storm of outrage across Europe, the Mideast and
Asia, where people believe pollution and climate change are far bigger and more
urgent threats than the bogeyman of Baghdad.
There are two important exceptions. First, Israel. Last week, Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, sounding like he was giving orders to a subordinate, demanded Bush
speed up plans to attack Iraq. Right on cue, American supporters of Sharon's far-right
Likud party, led by the Bush administration's Rasputin, Richard Perle, intensified
their clamor to send American GIs to fight Iraq.
Virtual monopoly on U.S. media
These bloodthirsty "neo-conservatives" - most of whom evaded military service
in their own country - dominate the Pentagon and exercise a virtual monopoly on
U.S. media commentary on the Mideast. They are ardently backed by loony Armageddon-seekers
of the Christian far right.
Senior Republican senator Chuck Hagel spoke for many when he asked if Perle
was so eager to attack, why didn't he join the first assault wave against Baghdad.
Brent Scowcroft, former national security adviser to Bush's father, warned an
attack on Iraq would be a disastrous mistake.
Meanwhile, in Congressional hearings last week, former UN arms inspector Scott
Ritter courageously stated what many Americans believe, but dare not say: "A handful
of ideologues have hijacked the national security policy of the United States
for their own ambitions." Ritter insisted Iraq was totally disarmed and no threat
to the U.S. or the Mideast. The Bush administration - or, more precisely, the
people pulling its strings - does not want renewed inspections of Iraq, Ritter
said, it only wants war.
A torrent of propaganda, lies and half-truths about Iraq has been pouring from
the White House in a campaign reminiscent of old Soviet agitprop. The government-appointed
"defense" team representing accused 9/11 plot member Zacharias Moussaui reportedly
urged him to falsely claim Iraq was behind the attacks. Moussaui refused. The
head of Czech intelligence said there were no contacts in Prague between Iraq
and al-Qaida, a key Bush reason for attacking Saddam. CIA veterans and European
intelligence officials scoff at White House claims Iraq is a threat to the world.
The other exception to worldwide outrage over America's Mideast policies was
Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida. In 1998, bin Laden carefully outlined his grand strategy
to: 1) liberate Palestine; 2) drive the U.S. occupying troops from Saudi Arabia
and 3) end the punishment of Iraq's people. To attain these goals, bin Laden planned
to provoke the U.S. into a large number of fruitless military involvements that
would wear it out and bleed its military and financial power.
Afghanistan, which costs American taxpayers $5 billion monthly, is the first
step. Iraq, whose leader is hated by bin Laden - a hatred equally returned by
Saddam - will be No. 2. Then, Iran, Syria, Libya - all also on Perle's hit list
- and so on until a host of Lilliputian conflicts tie down the American imperial
giant.
George Bush, who takes pride in not reading books, and calls Greeks "Grecians,"
is charging like a Texas bull into the trap set for him by both bin Laden and
Gen. Sharon.
Israel has been trying for 20 years to get the U.S. to go to war against the
Arabs and Iran, knowing this will permanently enlist America's vast wealth and
power in its cause, and permanently alienate the U.S. from the Islamic world.
If ever the United States needed real friends, it is now. And real friends
like Canada, Germany and France are trying to deter the empty, misguided George
Bush and his hijacked cabinet from committing an outright aggression that risks
plunging the Mideast into chaos, or even nuclear war.
Copyright © 2002, CANOE, a division of Netgraphe Inc.
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