With the chicken hawk-driven war on Iraq in high gear, Bush and Cheney
have learned that the best way to silence the Democratic Party, distract
from their miserable domestic outrages and provide the corporate and
rich classes with favors is to envelop our nation in fear. Using false or distorted statements, contrary to the findings of U.S.
intelligence agencies, to exaggerate Iraqi threats, weapons and
terrorist (al-Qaeda) connections as reasons for the war, their invasion
and prolonged occupation may produce greater risks of stateless
terrorism in the U.S. Last fall, the CIA informed Congress of just this
higher probability resulting from an Iraqi invasion.
Watching reports describing our draft-dodging President as totally
immersed in the scope and details of his Iraqi invasion, a number of
puzzling questions arise:
1.) Why is Bush pouring half of the entire U.S. military at huge cost
into the Persian Gulf while rejecting the frantic requests by cities and
states (such as New York City) for overdue monies for homeland security?
2.) What will Bush say to Americans if no weaponized nuclear, chemical
or biological materials are found in Iraq or, if found, not used, as 60
Minutes World War II vet Andy Rooney believes we ourselves would use if
a powerful foreign invasion was overwhelming our country? The CIA told
Bush that Saddam would be more likely to use these chemical and
biological weapons if the U.S. invades.
3.) With domestic necessities of the American people being ignored, why
is Bush pushing Congress for yet another huge tax cut for the wealthy
while Alan Greenspan is warning about larger budget deficits this year
and afterwards?
4.) Albeit surrounded by his little clique of ideologues, why has Bush
refused requests to meet from any of thirteen major antiwar groups
representing tens of millions of Americans? They include labor,
business, clergy, human rights, war veterans, academics with national
security experience, physicians and elected city officials who have much
to inform him. Some have battle experience in the Gulf and know about
toxic exposures to our troops. Others have returned from Iraq with first
hand knowledge about conditions. Still others are steeped in the
boomerang effect of ill-advised belligerence and distraction from more
serious global conflicts and struggles against sabotage.
Tony Blair in London received for nearly an hour a delegation from the
National Council of Churches headed by former Congressman Bob Edgar. Yet
the Council leaders have been rejected by their own President for the
past year. There is the cause and effect of history that Bush needs to
know about in the Middle East. Maybe he would not have used the word
"crusade" or have invoked God's will and his divine guidance regarding
overthrowing Saddam. Such references are viewed in Islamic societies as
meaning a religious war.
But Bush does not seek any advice, information or insights from these
informed Americans. He ignored all their written requests (see
www.essentialaction.org).
5.) Immersed in Iraq, Bush pays little attention to America. He is
spending far more time on the Middle East, and destructively so, than on
the manufacturing decline of the Middle West. And he wants to cut
veterans benefits. His unchallenged domination of the mass media leaves
little space for others to raise these issues.
Heard about opportunity cost (or opportunities lost) of his
Messianicmilitarism lately? No attention to a long frozen minimum wage,
worsening poverty, skyrocketing drug prices along with soaring consumer
bills for oil and natural gas. Heard about advances needed for energy
efficiency and solar power and less gas guzzling motor vehicles? Bush
has put America on hold!
6.) What is a weapon of mass destruction anyhow? Ask Iraqi families
whether or not Bush has sent weapons of mass destruction from the air,
from the sea and on land, to smash their country and destroy tens of
thousands of lives in order to topple one man. Haven't the economic
sanctions blocking medicines, surgical materials and sanitation
purifiers for clean drinking water taken the lives of enough Iraqi
children over a decade? Deliberately making civilians suffer for a
military overthrow of a dictator happens to be a violation of
international law.
7.) Why did know-it-all Bush, who ironically brags about making
decisions from his gut, stifle dissent from his war policy and its
likely aftermath that still simmers at sub-cabinet levels inside the
Pentagon, the CIA and the State Department? Leading retired Generals,
Admirals, diplomats and national security officials tried to articulate
the same criticism publicly over the past few months.
8.) Except for the oil and munitions industries, the war is a downer on
the economy. A few business executives have spoken up strongly. Most are
not prone to speak publicly for fear of retaliation by the Bush
Administration which, in this area, is believed to be vindictive against
corporate dissenters.
From the big Geneva Switzerland auto show last month, Automotive News'
executive editor, Peter Brown of Detroit, talked to many European auto
executives. He writes: "Personally, most of the executives oppose the
war as unnecessary and likely to lead to greater terrorism and
instability." This is pretty much the judgment of most of the U.S.
foreign policy establishmentwhose prominent ex-government officials are
also being ignored by the all-knowing, instinct-driven President.
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