February 06, 2006
Iraq, Iran: Following Orders Is No Excuse
By Paul Craig Roberts
"A hoax on the American people,
the international community, and the United Nations
Security Council."
That is how Secretary of State
General Colin Powell’s February 2003 Iraq WMD speech to
the UN was described last Friday (Feb. 3)
on PBS by one who ought to know, Col. Lawrence
Wilkerson, chief of staff to Secretary Powell.
In a February 2005 interview with
Barbara Walters on ABC News "20/20" program, Powell
himself declared his
UN Iraq speech to be
a blot on his reputation.
Since departing the Bush
administration, both Wilkerson and Powell have made it
completely clear that they had serious doubts about the
"evidence" of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
and malevolent Iraqi intentions that was loaded by the
White House into Powell’s UN speech, a speech designed
by neoconservatives to initiate the invasion of Iraq.
Both Powell and Wilkerson knew that the "evidence"
was greatly overstated if not an outright
fabrication.
What if Secretary Powell had shared
his doubts with the UN? What if instead of reading the
Speech of Lies Powell had addressed the UN as follows:
"As a
loyal soldier following orders I came here today
intending to deliver the Bush Administration’s evidence
against Saddam Hussein. Now that I am standing here
before you, I find myself caught in conflict between
following orders and doing the right thing. I should
have resolved this conflict before I arrived. I do so
now by delivering the speech to you in its written
form—here it is—but I refuse to deliver it out of my
mouth. I cannot participate in an act of deception
against the United Nations Security Council, the
international community, and the American people. I have
no confidence in the evidence in the speech. Under the
Nuremberg Standard established by the United States in
the trials of Nazi war criminals, following orders is no
excuse. I will not participate in the war crime of naked
aggression against another state. I hereby resign as
Secretary of State of the United States."
Powell would have saved the world
from a strategic blunder, the disastrous consequences of
which are only beginning to unfold. The maelstrom set in
motion by the treachery of the neoconservatives, people
who Powell has described as
"crazy," has already cost tens of thousands of
dead and wounded and hundreds of billions of dollars,
destroyed America’s reputation, and radicalized Middle
East politics.
If Powell had refused three years
ago to deliver the Speech of Lies, we would not now be
watching an identical duplicity being rolled out against
Iran. The ultimate cost of the deception being practiced
on the American people will dwarf the terrible price
that has already been paid.
Why didn’t Powell do the right
thing? His own reputation would have been forever secure
as a man of integrity. Why did he sacrifice his
integrity to the crooked scheme of his commander in
chief?
Alas, that is the way our generals
are bred. In the politicized US military, no officer can
advance beyond the rank of Lt. Col. unless he toes the
political line. The game is played to advance in rank as
high as possible, collect the pension, and be rewarded
for compliant behavior with consultancies. Real
leadership means making waves, and that is not
tolerated.
Even in rare instances of a real
man, concerned with the honor of his country and the
safety of his troops, reaching the top, he is powerless
to prevent disastrous mistakes of the ignorant civilian
authorities.
Consider the fate of US Army Chief
of Staff General Eric Shinseki, who correctly informed
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld that the US invasion force
was not sufficiently numerous to successfully occupy and
subdue Iraq once the pitched battles were over.
Shinseki was fired for telling the
truth—as was Secretary of the Army Thomas White, Lt.
Gen. John Riggs, and four star general Kevin P. Byrnes.
Riggs was framed, demoted, and
retired for saying that the US army was overstretched in
Iraq and Afghanistan and needed more troops.
Byrnes, who was in charge of Army
training, was framed on
adultery charges for objecting to
bottom of the barrel recruitment policies that
accepted criminals and immigrants with a lack of English
proficiency.
Nothing like having an army that
can’t understand orders.
The only way a military can
constrain their civilian masters from cooking up a war
is to
resign en masse. If every general and colonel
had resigned, there would have been no invasion of Iraq.
But this would require a military
with leadership and a tradition of sticking together. A
military in which promotion is the highest virtue is
powerless to prevent disastrous mistakes, such as the
invasion of Iraq.
The Bush administration went to war
on the basis of its fantasy that if merely a few US
troops marched into Iraq, the regime would collapse and
the population would welcome Americans as liberators
with flowers and kisses. It was to be a "cakewalk
war."
No general officer in the US
military believed that. Yet few spoke out (Marine
General Anthony Zinni was a notable exception). The
entire US military command could only produce a handful
of men to warn of the looming catastrophe. Who can
forget the orchestrated media dismissals of
"over-cautious generals" that
greeted these few?
The reason Colin Powell disgraced
himself is that he could not free himself of the
conditioning that breeds success in the US military.
Who today will stand up to stop the
potential Armageddon of a US attack on Iran?
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] 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.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.