November 29, 2004
Bush Administration Facing Failure On Every Front
By Paul Craig Roberts
Is the Bush administration
competent? There is enough information at hand on which
to base an objective opinion.
On the eve of President Bush’s
second term, the US economy has
fewer jobs than when Bush was inaugurated four years
ago.
During Bush’s first term, the US
economy was unable to create jobs in both export and
import-competitive sectors. The formerly powerful US
jobs machine has been allowed to run down to the point
that jobs can only be created in nontradable domestic
services.
The service jobs that have been
created are too few in number to offset the loss of
manufacturing and knowledge jobs. Unemployed
manufacturing workers, US software engineers,
computer programmers, and
IT workers number in the hundreds of thousands.
During Bush’s first term, the value
of the
US dollar declined dramatically in relation to other
traded currencies. The extraordinary diminution in the
dollar’s exchange value threatens its role as the
world’s reserve currency. If the dollar loses its role
as reserve currency, there will be catastrophic
consequences for US living standards and superpower
status.
The decline in the dollar’s
exchange value has failed to reduce the US trade
deficit, because the Bush administration permits China
to peg its currency to the dollar. As the dollar
declines, China’s currency declines with it, thus
maintaining China’s advantage in US markets while China
gains greater advantage in all other markets. Because
China pegs its currency to the dollar, the dollar’s
decline has not reduced the advantage of outsourcing to
China.
The ink in the federal budget is as
red as that in the trade account. A country with a $440
billion budget deficit and a $600 billion trade deficit
is not financially positioned to start a war in the
Middle East. Instead of dealing with serious economic
problems at home, Bush marched off to a gratuitous war.
Bush’s invasion of Iraq is one of
the greatest strategic blunders in history. The Bush
administration assumed that the invasion and occupation
of Iraq would be a
“cakewalk,” because the indigenous population
would welcome and support Americans as liberators.
The reality is that all available
US troops are tied down by a few thousand lightly armed
insurgents who have the support of the Iraqi people. The
US is so short of military manpower that it has been
forced to call up the reserves and the
National Guard, to keep troops deployed who have
served their time in uniform, and, now, to call up
men in their 50s who have not been in uniform for 20
years.
Bush’s invasion has turned not only
Iraqis but all of the Middle East against the US. Where
there were no terrorists and no support for terrorists,
there are now tens of thousands of terrorists. America’s
puppet regimes in Egypt, Pakistan, Jordan and Saudi
Arabia are endangered by the anti-Americanism that is
engulfing the Middle East.
Like Hitler at Stalingrad, Bush
cannot recognize the danger. Unable to occupy Iraq, Bush
plans to expand the war to Iran and Syria. The identical
Bush officials who lied about Iraq having nuclear
weapons or weapons programs now lie about Iran having
nuclear weapons or weapons programs.
Immune to evidence, the Bush
administration is delusional and capable of horrendous
miscalculation. The flowers with which the US Department
of Defense said our troops would be greeted in Iraq
turned out to be bullets, rocket-propelled grenades, and
roadside bombs.
On November 22, the US military
hospital in Landstuhl, Germany,
reported that its doctors have treated 20,802 US
troops from Iraq. Few of the injured have been able to
return to their units.
That is twice the casualty figure
reported by the Pentagon and comprises 15% of the US
army in Iraq. In exchange, since the invasion the US has
killed some 100,000 Iraqi civilians and perhaps 2,000
insurgents.
The ultimate test of competence is
ability to admit mistakes. This the Bush administration
cannot do. Steadfastly denying any mistake, Bush is
promoting those responsible for the Iraq carnage to
higher office. Will four more years of Bush terminate
America’s superpower status?
When Bush attacked Iraq, he
jettisoned a half century of American foreign policy. He
unilaterally threw diplomacy and allies out the door to
invade a country that had done nothing to the US despite
suffering a decade of American bombing and embargoes
that,
according to the UN, killed 500,000 Iraqi children.
Indiscriminate killing of Iraqi
civilians and torture in US military prisons have
destroyed the virtuous image that Bush claims for US
aggression.
Not content to cause turmoil in the
Middle East, the Bush administration is arrogantly and
foolishly stirring the pot in Ukraine, interfering in an
election in Russia’s sphere of influence.
In just four years, Bush has
created a new image of America as a reckless hypocrite
that lectures others about democracy, while engaging in
electoral fraud in Ohio and Florida and imposing a
puppet government on Iraq at the point of bayonets.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts (email
him) was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration
and formerly Associate Editor of the
Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing
Editor of National Review.
He 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.