November 21, 2004
Won’t Get Fooled Again?
By Paul Craig Roberts
It is not yet Bush’s second term.
All available US troops are tied down in Iraq by a few
thousand lightly armed insurgents. Go-it-alone Bush has
isolated America from her allies. And the neocons want to
spread their war to Iran.
The Bush administration is
recycling the lies that it used to invade Iraq: Iran is
acquiring nuclear weapons that will be given to
terrorists. In a display of loyalty to a ruthless neocon
administration calculated to win him appointments to
corporate boards, outgoing Secretary of State Colin
Powell told reporters that Iran was working on nuclear
missiles.
The source for this effort to
spread hysteria? One "walk-in" source with unverified
documents. Most likely, the source is a member of an
Iranian exile group given the assignment by neocons
Richard Perle and John Bolton.
One might think that Powell would
be suffering shame enough for lying to the UN about
Iraq. Apparently not, as his last act against world
peace is to spread neocon propaganda that Iran is going
nuke.
The US media, now a tamed
propaganda organ for the White House, dutifully repeated
Powell’s unverified claims, thus providing "reports"
for Bush to cite as evidence that Iran was rushing ahead
with the development of nuclear weapons.
The International Atomic Energy
Agency conducts regular inspections in Iran. The IAEA
recently issued a report stating that it has found no
evidence of a nuclear weapons program in Iran.
Real evidence, however, is no match
for neocon propaganda.
And the propaganda is pouring out
of the well-oiled neocon machine. French, German and
British agreements that confine Iran to the peaceful use
of nuclear energy are in the way of the
neoconservatives’ intention to spread the war to Iran
and must be discredited.
On November 20, Caroline Glick,
deputy managing editor of the Jerusalem Post
hysterically accused Europe of defending "Iran’s
ability to attain the wherewithal to destroy the Jewish
state." Glick "exposes" France’s efforts to
prevent the outbreak of wider war in the Middle East as
a trick: "France wishes only to box in the US to the
point that the Americans will not be able to continue to
fight the war against terrorism." [H-hour
has arrived, Caroline B. Glick November 20,
2004]
The neoconservative Heritage
Foundation promptly broadcast Glick’s hysterical rants
into the Republican noise machine, reviving talk radio
calls for nuking France,
"America’s oldest enemy."
Three years ago Ann Coulter was
fired by National Review, a neocon publication,
when she
declared: "We should invade [Muslim]
countries, kill their leaders and convert them to
Christianity." Today
such violent words are common parlance.
There is no evidence whatsoever in
behalf of the claims the Bush administration is making
about Iranian nukes. The purpose of these false claims
is to create fear that will breach the public’s
opposition to a draft. The neocons are desperate for
troops for their Middle Eastern War.
For a decade or longer, the neocons
who control the Bush administration’s foreign and
military policies have been writing papers advocating a
US-Israeli conquest of the Middle East. A moronic
president has given them their chance.
Anxious to get their war underway,
the neocons launched their invasion before they had the
necessary manpower for the task. Bogged down in Iraq,
the neocons are desperate to widen the war before the
American public has enough of the pointless carnage and
forces a withdrawal.
Thus, before the Iraqi war is
finished, the neocon propaganda machine is at work
creating fear that the US is in danger from Iranian
nukes unless America preemptively attacks Iran.
Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me
twice, shame on me. But Americans are perfectly set up
to be fooled twice. Right-wing talk radio has
conservative patriots absolutely demanding to be fooled.
Christian rapture propagandists have conservative
congregations waiting to be wafted up to heaven. The
Republican, corporate, Jewish owned media is with
President Bush. Military types are determined to avenge
the
Vietnam loss by winning the war against Islam into
which they have been conned.
Critics are dismissed as
"enemies" who are "against us." Reason and
common sense are not features of the Bush
administration. It is all blind emotion, a replay of
The Triumph of the Will.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice