September 10, 2006
Bush the Pitiful
By Paul Craig Roberts
People are beginning to feel sorry
for President George W. Bush. And with good reason.
A new poll by Harris Interactive
published in the Financial Times reveals that
our traditional European allies regard the United States
as a much greater threat to world stability than Iran,
Iraq, and North Korea.
In European opinion, the
axis-of-evil is Bush’s America.
Almost twice as many British, whose
Prime Minister Tony Blair is complicit in Bush’s war
crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq, see the US as the
greatest threat to world stability than see Iran as the
danger. In Spain three times more people regard the US
as the threat than see Iran as the threat. Only in
Italy does Iran edge out the US as the greatest
perceived threat, a result no doubt due to the
propaganda that spews from the media empire of Silvio
Berlusconi, the Rupert Murdoch of Italy.
Another reason to feel sorry for
Bush is because he is regarded by his own political
party and his own Attorney General as a war criminal.
Republicans recognize that Bush has committed felonies
by violating the US War Crimes Act of 1996 (legislation
aimed at the likes of Saddam Hussein and Slobodan
Milosevic). Bush’s Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales,
and the Republican Congress have produced draft
legislation that aims to protect Bush retroactively by
gutting the 1996 War Crimes Act. Republicans
hope to quietly pass this unconstitutional
legislation before they are defeated in the November
elections.
The fact that retroactive law is
prohibited by the US Constitution adds to Bush’s shame.
Bush is also pitied because a large
majority of Americans no longer believe in the single
over-riding cause of Bush’s presidency—the “war on
terror.” A recent
Ipsos-Public Affairs poll released by the Associated
Press shows that 60 percent of Americans believe that
Bush’s invasion of Iraq has created more terrorism and
that Americans are less safe as a result of invading
Iraq.
Talking heads on television now
discuss whether Bush is an idiot. The frequency of such
discussions is likely to increase as
Bush makes such declarations as “the battle for
Iraq is now central to the ideological struggle of the
21st century.”
Bush evokes more pity, because he
has lost the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In Iraq, the Kurds in the north
have replaced the Iraqi flag with the Kurdish flag. The
rest of Iraq is governed by Sunni insurgents or Shiite
militias. The US puppet government is powerless and
dares not leave its US-protected fortified bunker.
On September 5, the dominant Shiite
political alliance prepared legislation that would
divide Iraq into Kurd, Sunni, and Shiite autonomous
regions.
So much for “democracy in Iraq”.
Apparently, no one has told Bush
that he is spending American lives and money on a cause
that the Iraqis themselves have abandoned.
Bush still crows about his defeat
of the Taliban. Those of us who have served in the
government at high levels wonder every day about Bush’s
daily briefing. Does he get one? Who gives it to him?
I think Bush’s briefing must come from Dick Cheney,
Richard Perle, and William Kristol. Where else could he
get such bogus information?
Perhaps Bush’s wife or one of his
daughters could smuggle him a copy of the
recent report on Afghanistan by the Senlis Council,
a security and development policy group that closely
monitors the situation in Afghanistan
According to this report,
“Afghanistan is spiraling into uncontrollable violence.”
The Taliban have regained control over half of the
country:
“Despite the international community’s concerted
five-year focus on military operations, the security
situation in Afghanistan is worse than in 2001. The
Taliban now have a strong grip on the southern half of
the country. Afghans perceive that the US and NATO
troops in southern and eastern Afghanistan are being
defeated by the Taliban. The legitimacy of the
international community’s presence in Afghanistan is
undermined by its incapacity to protect the Afghan
population.”
Bush was betrayed by the
neoconservatives he appointed, protected, and
promoted. Public opinion polls in the Arab and Muslim
world show that Bush’s invasions, aggressive stance
toward Syria and Iran, and unconditional support for
Israeli aggression have created a
powerful Islamic political movement that experts say
will sweep away the corrupt governments allied with the
United States.
The ignorant actions of Bush the
Pitiful have marginalized moderate Arabs and destroyed
America’s standing both in Muslim lands and the wider
world.
Bush has defeated no one, but he
has destroyed American’s reputation and his own.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-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.