September 30, 2005
Bush Is Cooking Up Two More Wars
By Paul Craig Roberts
Mired in interminable conflict in
Iraq and
Afghanistan, the Bush administration is moving
toward initiating two more wars, one with
Iran and one with North Korea. With no US troops
available, the Bush administration is revamping US war
doctrine to allow for
“preventative nuclear attack.” In short, the
Bush administration is planning to make the US the first
country in history to initiate war with nuclear weapons.
The Pentagon document,
“Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations,” calls for
the use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear
adversaries in order “to ensure success of US and
multinational operations.”
In the case of Iran and North
Korea, the Bush administration is using diplomacy not
for diplomatic purposes of reaching agreements, but in
order to set the two countries up for nuclear attack.
In the case of Iran, the Bush administration’s plan is
now obvious. The Bush administration is leveling false
charges against Iran, just as it did against Iraq, of
conspiring to make nuclear weapons. These charges are
known to be false by the Bush administration and by the
entire world.
For the past two years the
International Atomic Energy Agency has had unfettered
access to inspect Iran for any sign of a nuclear weapons
program. The
head of the IAEA has announced that there is no sign
of a weapons program. The Bush administration
nevertheless insists that Iran is making weapons, but
can produce no evidence. As in the case of Iraq, the
Bush administration substitutes allegations for facts.
Gordon Prather, an expert on the
subject, has reported the straight facts in fine
detail. Readers can become familiar with them by
consulting his
archive at Antiwar.com.
By bullying the 35 members of the
IAEA, the Bush administration last week managed to get
22 votes that could lead to the referral of Iran to the
UN Security Council. The Bush administration will now
lobby for the referral. Once it has the referral, even
if the Security Council does not act on it, the Bush
administration can use it as an excuse to attack Iran.
The Bush administration knows that few Americans have
any knowledge of international law and procedures and
will simply believe whatever President Bush says. The
highly concentrated US media is a proven walkover for
the war-mongering Bush administration.
As Dr. Prather has shown, Iran has
gone beyond compliance to propose that new additional
safeguards be established to monitor its nuclear energy
program. The bad intentions are on the part of the Bush
administration.
The Bush administration’s plan is
to create Iranian intransigence in place of cooperation
by forcing the Iranian government to stand up to the
bullying by reducing its cooperation. The goal of the
Bush administration is to attack Iran, not to create
cooperative relationships.
Needless to say, Iranians are angry
at the Bush administration’s manipulation of the IAEA
members. Last Wednesday protesters in Tehran attacked
the British embassy, which serves as a proxy for the
non-existent US embassy, and legislation was introduced
that, if it passes, will scale back Iran’s cooperation
with the IAEA. Iran has also threatened to cut off oil
deliveries to some of the countries that caved in to US
pressure, thereby permitting the US to increase tensions
and escalate the conflict.
The Bush administration is betting
that it can demonize Iran the way it did Iraq. As both
Congress and the American public have failed to hold
Bush accountable for deceiving them about Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction, the administration assumes that its
tactics will work a second time.
However, a nuclear attack on Iran
would leave the Bush administration isolated. The US
would instantly become a pariah nation, loathed and
hated everywhere else.
Moreover, it would leave our
battered troops in Iraq in a perilous situation. The
only reason our army in Iraq has not been destroyed is
that the Shi’ites, who comprise the vast majority of the
population, have not taken up arms against us, expecting
the US to turn over Iraq to them. As the Iraqi Shi’ites
are allied with the Iranians, who also are Shi’ite, the
US cannot attack Iran without destroying its position in
Iraq.
The Bush administration, filled
with hubris and delusion, is too stupid to know this.
The American people need to ask
themselves why of all the countries in the world, only
the US and Israel believe that it is imperative to
attack Iran. If Iran is such a threat to the world, why
isn’t Russia, for example, concerned and ready to
invade?
Americans need to ask themselves
the same question about North Korea. Why is the US,
half a world away, so concerned about North Korea? If
North Korea is such a threat, would not China, sitting
on its border, know it? Wouldn’t Japan know it? South
Korea? Wouldn’t some other country besides the US see
the problem and take action? According to the Voice of
America (August 11, 2005), “Senior South Korean
officials on Thursday defended what they say is North
Korea’s ‘natural right’ to pursue civilian nuclear
power. The move may cause friction with the United
States, which has expressed firm opposition to the North
having any nuclear facilities whatsoever.”
If the US doesn’t want other
countries to develop nuclear weapons, the US must stop
bombing, invading and threatening invasions and nuclear
attacks. How does President Bush serve the cause of
peace by making countries paranoid by declaring them to
be our enemies.
For there to be peace, the US must
drop its belligerent role. The proper function of
diplomacy is to build trust by drawing countries into
economic and cultural relationships, not to isolate them
for attack. It is past time for the US to give up its
quarter century feud with Iran. US interference in
Iranian internal affairs was the source of the feud. We
need to acknowledge it and get over it.
The Korean war ended a half century
ago. Isn’t it time the US acknowledged the war’s end
and signed a treaty with North Korea? The Korean war
was essentially a war between the US and China. It was
Chinese troops that prevented American victory. Yet we
are getting on with China, a much greater potential
threat to the US than North Korea or Iran could ever
be.
By creating instability in the
Middle East, the US undermines
Israel’s security. As a few thousand Iraqi
insurgents have proven, American armies are not going to
be able to sit over the oil in the Middle East. If we
can’t produce enough valuable goods or maintain a strong
currency, we won’t have access to the oil. There is no
possibility whatsoever of the US pushing around powers
like China, India, or Russia.
Bush’s hubris makes him
unrealistic. He greatly overestimates America’s power.
Congress and the American people must find a way to
supply the judgment that is missing in the executive
branch.
There would be no terrorism if the
US would stop interfering in the internal affairs of
Middle Eastern countries and if Israel stopped stealing
the West Bank from the Palestinians. The Bush
administration knows this, and that is why the
administration spreads the propagandistic lie that
“they” (Muslims) hate us and our way of life. This lie
is the excuse for American aggression.
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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