April 14, 2003
What Did The War Accomplish?
By Sam Francis
In the midst of the jubilation that greeted the
downfall of Saddam Hussein (or at least of his statue)
and the smug triumphalism that enveloped Washington as
U.S. troops marched through the Iraqi capital, Americans
might be well advised to sober up and take a harder look
at what their government has already done and what it
may soon do—in Syria, Iran or other countries that the
war party is already itching to clobber.
The war party, of course, is composed of American
Likudniks in the Bush administration and
neo-conservative media, as well as a good many citizens
who can't spell Likudnik but are inclined to confuse
chest-thumping about military victories over third-rate
Third-World armies with real patriotism.
After spreading what
apparently were just
plain lies about Saddam's "weapons of mass
destruction"—not a one of which has yet surfaced either
in combat or afterwards—the armchair warriors are now
claiming that Iraq has been "liberated."
Certainly the brutal rule of a tyrant, Saddam
Hussein, has ended, but even if he had possessed and
used weapons of mass destruction, could the carnage have
been any greater than what we have already inflicted on
Iraq? The New York Times last week reported that
the "Number of Iraqis Killed May Never Be Determined,"
as its headline read. In Basra alone, local hospitals
report handling
"between 1,000 and 2,000 corpses in three weeks of war."
A Marine officer reported that the Baghdad Division of
the Iraqi army was reduced to "zero percent fighting
strength." That means, presumably, it was wiped
out—some 10,000 soldiers. Those are just combat deaths.
There are also deaths from bombing and artillery, and
not all are dead, merely crippled for life.
What was the purpose of unleashing this kind of
savagery against a country that had never attacked the
United States or harmed any American? "The principal
reason for going after Hussein," Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, the administration's Likudnik
in Chief and probably the main architect of the war,
told the Washington Post last week, "was
the direct threat the Iraqi leader posed to U.S.
national security through his possession of weapons of
mass destruction."
What "threat"? When did Saddam ever utter any such
threat? And what weapons? This weekend, Iraqi general
and chief scientist Amir Saadi said after
surrendering that Iraq has no such weapons, which is
what he said before the war. Maybe there are some even
he doesn't know about, but there's no trace of them so
far, and why didn't Hussein use them against U.S. forces
in his last stand, to save his life or his power? If he
was unwilling to unleash mass destruction against an
invading army, why would he have wielded it against this
country?
If blowing up private homes and wiping out entire
families of civilians, along with slaughtering thousands
of Iraqis, was part of the price of "liberation," it's
not clear the war was worth it. As for the "democracy"
that has supposedly descended upon Iraq, what we mainly
saw last week was the triumph of the mob, looting
whatever it could steal from crushed government offices
or helpless civilians, coupled with the massacre of a
Shiite leader whom the mob didn't care for.
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, in yet another
administration untruth, unbosomed the absurdity that it
was all the news media's fault and the looting was just
"the same picture, of some person walking out of some
building with a vase." What moon of Neptune is this
man living on? Did it occur to no one involved in the
year-long planning of this war that an invasion intended
to "destroy the Iraqi government" would leave the
country in chaos unless another government was
immediately installed?
Democracy or what travels by that name in the West
triumphed because Western man conceived of it, fought
for it and built it—not because an invading army gave it
to him. We'll see how long
"democracy" lasts in Iraq, even aside from the
military dictatorship that we will now at least
temporarily install there.
Finally there are the suicide bombings that have
already started in Iraq and may soon start here. Four
Marines were wounded by one last week, but they were not
the first. The week before, two Iraqi women killed
three U.S. soldiers in western Iraq with a suicide bomb.
On March 29, a cab driver blew up his vehicle and killed
himself and four American troops. They won't be the
last.
Americans need to ask themselves now, while the war
party is only slobbering about going on to wage similar
wars against Syria and Iran and other enemies of Israel
in the region, what we really accomplished in Iraq and
why it was worth accomplishing at all. If you ever find
out, please let me know.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.]