June 26, 2005
Bush’s War Against Iraq Ruining America
By Paul Craig Roberts
Last Friday the price of light
sweet crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange for
August delivery closed
16 cents short of $60/barrel—the highest price ever
and an ironic outcome for the millions of Americans who
believe that cheap oil was the reason for Bush’s
invasion of Iraq.
Equally shocking to Americans was
the announcement that
China has outbid US oil giant Chevron for the American
oil company, Unocal.
Polls showing that a majority of
Europeans have a
higher opinion of China than of the US were another
blow to the pumped-up self-esteem of Americans, deluded
as they are by Bush administration hubris and claims of
American "exceptionalism."
The decline in economic and
diplomatic standing that Americans have suffered under
Bush is exceptional. How much longer will Americans
support the incompetent Bush administration that is
driving them and their country’s reputation into the
ground?
The world press sees Bush as an
arrogant hypocrite who justifies his invasion of Iraq in
the name of democracy, while protecting Uzbek’s
murderous dictator Islam Karimov, described by
Craig Murray, former UK ambassador to Uzbekistan as
"very much George Bush’s man in Central Asia."
On
May 13, Karimov had 500 protesters shot down in the
streets of Andijan and 200 massacred in Pakhtabad. Still
more civilians were massacred by Karimov while
attempting to flee into neighboring Kyrgyzstan.
It was the Bush administration that
blocked a call by NATO for an international
investigation of the Uzbek massacre. According to news
reports, Karimov has agreed, for a suitable payment from
US taxpayers, for Bush to attack Iran from bases in
Uzbekistan. Uzbekistan also serves as one of the Bush
administration’s offshore torture centers to which
suspected terrorists are sent.
Deceived American patriots dismiss
such reports as leftwing fabrications. However, human
rights groups have documented these abuses. Moreover, on
June 24 an
Italian judge ordered the arrests of 13 CIA agents,
who kidnapped a Muslim in Italy and secreted him to
Egypt, another offshore US torture center. The 13 CIA
agents managed to stick the US taxpayers with a $144,984
hotel bill in the process.
It would be interesting to have a
comparison of the hourly Uzbek and Egyptian torture
rates. US taxpayers have a right to know how many of
their hard-earned tax dollars, given up on pain of
prison sentences, are flowing to offshore torture
centers.
During his June 25 Saturday radio
message to Americans, Bush gave an upbeat report on
victory in Iraq and said: "Americans can be proud of
all that we and our coalition partners [he means his
poodle, Tony Blair, but likes the plural sound] have
accomplished in Iraq."
Gentle reader, are you proud that
American troops are torturing Iraqis? Are you proud that
tens of thousands of Iraqi women and children have been
killed and maimed with their deaths and terrible wounds
dismissed as "collateral damage"? Are you proud
that you elected and reelected a president who lied you
into an illegal war that has killed 1,755 American
troops, maimed thousands more, and destroyed your
country’s reputation?
If you are proud of this, what kind
of person are you?
While Bush schmoozed trusting
Americans over the air waves on June 25, Brian Brady of
The Scotsman (June 26) reported that Bush warned
UK PM Tony Blair earlier this month "that war-torn
Iraq remains on the brink of disaster." [Bush
warns Blair he must boost UK forces]
Moreover, the situation in
Afghanistan is deteriorating. The British, who are even
shorter on troops than the US, cannot maintain their
troop strength in Iraq and also contribute forces to
stem the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan. The
US and Britain, it seems, are trapped in two quagmires.
Vice President Cheney claims,
erroneously, that the Iraqi insurgency is in its
"last throes." But it appears that it is the US
that is on its last legs. Lt. Gen. James R. Helmly has
warned that the Army Reserve is
"rapidly degenerating into a broken force."
Everyone except the deceived American people know that
the US lacks the combat troops to continue the war it is
losing in Iraq.
As Zbigniew Brzezinski, a hawkish
US National Security Advisor during the cold war
conflict with the Soviet Union, said in response to
Bush’s Saturday radio address: "Patriotism and love of
country do not demand endless sacrifice on the part of
our troops in a war justified by slogans."
Dr.
Roberts, [email
him] a former Associate Editor of the
Wall Street Journal and a
former Contributing Editor of National Review,
was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during the
Reagan administration. He is
the author of
The Supply-Side Revolution
and, with Lawrence M. Stratton, of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes
Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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