June 07, 2007
The Real Reason for Bush’s Invasion of Iraq is a
National Security Secret
By Paul Craig Roberts
American soldiers have been fighting and dying in
Iraq since 2003, and Americans do not know why.
All the reasons President Bush gave us for his war
are false. Bush said he invaded Iraq
"to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end
Saddam Hussein’s support for terrorism, and to free the
Iraqi people."
We now know that these were false claims.
Disinformation about Iraq was produced by a special unit
within the Pentagon run by Rumsfeld,
Wolfowitz and Feith. The unit operated outside the
normal intelligence channels of the CIA and DIA. Its
purpose was to create false intelligence to enable Bush
to initiate war with Iraq.
Did President Bush know that the claims put into his
speeches by his speechwriters was false?
Who instructed Bush’s speechwriters to incorporate
known lies into the President’s speeches?
Why did Vice President Cheney, the Secretary of
State, the National Security Advisor, and the Secretary
of Defense all lie to the American people and to the
entire world?
What is the real agenda?
Millions of Americans have come to their own
conclusions about the reasons for Bush’s invasion:
(1)
Oil: the US government wants to hold on to power
by expanding its control over oil, and Bush and Cheney
want to reward their oil company cronies.
(2)
Military-security complex: Police agencies favor
war as a means of expanding their power, and military
industries favor war as a means of expanding their
profits.
(3)
Neoconservative ideology: Neocons’ believe in
"American exceptionalism" and claim that America’s
virtue gives the US government the right and the
obligation to impose US hegemony on the rest of the
world, especially in the Middle East where independent
Muslim states object to Israel’s theft of Palestine.
(4)
Karl Rove: Rove used the "war president"
role to rescue Bush from attack by Democrats as an
illegitimate president elected by one vote of the US
Supreme Court.
(5)
American self-righteousness over 9/11 and lust
for revenge.
All of these reasons came together to make a cruel
war on an innocent people.
There may be other reasons about which we know not.
As it is now recognized that every reason for the war
is false or illegitimate, the question is: why does Bush
insist on persisting with a costly war, the express
reasons for which are now known to be mistakes? There
were no weapons of mass destruction, no connections to
al Qaeda, and Bush has installed a puppet Iraqi
government that cannot venture outside the heavily
fortified and US protected "green zone." The
Iraqi government governs nothing.
War without cause is murder, not war.
That Bush persists with a war for which he can
provide no legitimate reason indicates that there is a
secret agenda that has not been shared with the American
people. Are we experiencing the privatization of the US
government by police agencies, the military-security
complex, and the Israel Lobby?
That the American people and their elected
representatives continue to tolerate a war that has
killed and maimed thousands of their own soldiers,
destroyed the infrastructure of a country, killed
hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians and created 4
million refugees for no known reason raises serious
questions about the morals of the American people.
Is the impotence of the peace movement due to the
power of the Israel Lobby or have Americans become
morally degenerate as commentators increasingly assert?
One indication would be the response of presidential
candidates to the gratuitous and failed war. What we saw
at the Republican presidential candidates’ debate on
June 5 is inconsistent with the self-esteem of the
American people. All of the leading Republican
presidential candidates openly and nonchalantly endorsed
using nuclear weapons against Iran unless Iran abandons
its right to enrich uranium under the non-proliferation
treaty, to which Iran is a signatory (unlike
nuclear-armed Israel, India, and US puppet Pakistan).
What is moral degeneracy if it is not using nuclear
weapons to murder masses of innocent civilians and
spread deadly radioactivity over vast areas merely in
order to force a country to do as we order? If this
isn’t barbarism, what is barbarism?
Do the American people realize that the frontrunners
for the Republican presidential nomination are monsters
who want to murder people who have done us no harm?
After five years of war that has achieved no noble
purpose, no valid aim, indeed, no aim at all except
perhaps Osama bin Laden’s aim of stirring up
uncontrollable strife in the Middle East, how can
Republicans cheer for candidates who preach a wider war
and the use of nuclear weapons against defenseless
people?
Is the approval lavished on Republican presidential
candidates, who are willing to use nuclear weapons as
means of terrorizing Muslim peoples, an indication that
the American people have morphed into inhuman monsters?
If not, what does it indicate? Ignorant fanaticism?
Paranoia? Blind hatred? The belief that no one is of any
value but Americans?
For six and one-half years the Bush Regime has relied
on coercion, intimidation, war, and threats of war.
Diplomacy and good will have been shunned. The regime’s
blatant warmongering has resurrected the nuclear arms
race. China and Russia regard America’s drive for world
hegemony with great alarm. China has put nuclear ICBMs
on mobile platforms to increase their survivability in
event of an American attack. Russia has developed new
multi-warhead ICBMs, which can penetrate any known
missile defense, and new cruise missiles that
Putin says will be targeted on Europe if the US
persists in its aggressive military encirclement of
Russia.
An administration that resurrects the threat of
nuclear Armageddon so that its cronies in the
military-security complex can become still richer is
evil beyond compare.
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.