January 11, 2007
The "Surge" Is A Red Herring
By Paul Craig Roberts
Bush’s "surge" speech is a
hoax, but members of Congress and media commentators are
discussing the surge
as if it were real.
I invite the reader to examine the
speech. The "surge" content consists of
nonsensical propagandistic statements. The real content
of the speech is toward the end where Bush mentions Iran
and Syria.
Bush makes it clear that success in
Iraq does not depend on the surge. Rather,
"Succeeding in Iraq . . . begins with addressing Iran
and Syria."
Bush asserts that "these two
regimes are allowing terrorists and insurgents to use
their territory to move in and out of Iraq. Iran is
providing material support for attacks on American
troops."[Full
text]
Bush’s assertions are
propagandistic lies.
The Iraq insurgency is Sunni. Iran
is Shi’ite. If Iran is supporting anyone in Iraq it is
the Shi’ites, who have not been part of the insurgency.
Indeed, the Sunni and Shi’ites are engaged in a civil
war within Iraq.
Does any intelligent person really
believe that Iranian Shi’ites are going to arm Iraqi
Sunnis who are killing Iraqi Shi’ites allied with Iran?
Does anyone really believe that Iranian Shi’ites are
going to provide sanctuary for Iraqi Sunnis?
Bush can tell blatant
propagandistic lies, because Congress and the American
people don’t know enough facts to realize the absurdity
of Bush’s assertions.
Why is Bush telling these lies?
Here is the answer: Bush says, "We will disrupt the
attacks on our forces. We will interrupt the flow of
support from Iran and Syria. And we will seek out and
destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and
training to our enemies in Iraq."
In those words, Bush states
perfectly clearly that victory in Iraq requires US
forces to attack Iran and Syria. Moreover, Bush says,
"We are also taking other steps to bolster the security
of Iraq and protect American interests in the Middle
East. I recently ordered the deployment of an additional
carrier strike group to the region."
What do two US aircraft carrier
attack groups in the Persian Gulf have to do with a
guerilla ground war in Iraq?
The "surge" is merely a
tactic to buy time while war with Iran and Syria can be
orchestrated. The neoconservative/Israeli cabal feared
that the pressure that Congress, the public, and the
American foreign policy establishment were putting on
Bush to de-escalate in Iraq would terminate their plan
to achieve hegemony in the Middle East. Failure in Iraq
would mean the end of the neoconservatives’ influence.
It would be impossible to start a new war with Iran
after losing the war in Iraq.
The neoconservatives and the
right-wing Israeli government have clearly stated their
plans to overthrow Muslim governments throughout the
region and to deracinate Islam. These plans existed long
before 9/11.
Near the end of his "surge"
speech, Bush adopts the neoconservative program as US
policy. The struggle, Bush says, echoing the
neoconservatives and the Israeli right-wing, goes far
beyond Iraq. "The challenge," Bush says, is
"playing out across the broader Middle East. . . . It is
the decisive ideological struggle of our time."
America is pitted against "extremists" who
"have declared their intention to destroy our way of
life." "The most realistic way to protect the
American people," Bush says, is "by advancing
liberty across a troubled region."
This, of course, is a massive
duplicitous lie. We have brought no liberty to Iraq, but
we have destroyed their way of life. Bush suggests that
Muslims in Afghanistan, Lebanon and Palestine are
waiting and hoping for more invasions to free them of
violence. Did Bush’s invasion free Iraq from violence or
did it bring violence to Iraq?
It is extraordinary that anyone can
listen to this blatant declaration of US aggression in
the Middle East without demanding Bush’s immediate
impeachment.
Republican US Senator
Chuck Hagel declared Bush’s plan to be "the most
dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country
since Vietnam."[
Senators to Bush: Stay out of Iran, January
11, 2007 ] In truth, it is far worse. It is naked
aggression justified by transparent lies. No one has
ever heard governments in Iraq, Syria, or Iran declare
"their intention to destroy our way of life." To
the contrary, it is the United States and Israel that
are trying to destroy the Muslim way of life.
The crystal clear truth is that
fanatical neoconservatives and Israelis are using Bush
to commit the United States to a catastrophic course.
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.