August 28, 2007
More Shame, More Sorrow
By Paul Craig Roberts
In the administration of George W. Bush, the Republican
Party has achieved the greatest combination of idiocy
and evil in human history.
The Republicans have bogged America down in a gratuitous
and illegal war. The war has destroyed Iraq, killed
between 650,000 and 1,000,000 Iraqi civilians, displaced
4,000,000 Iraqis, and littered the country with depleted
uranium. Bush’s war remains unwon despite its five year
duration and $1 trillion in out-of-pocket and incurred
future costs.
Bush’s invasion of Iraq is a war crime under the
Nuremberg standard, a direct counterpart to Hitler’s
invasion of Poland. Both were based on lies and
deception, and the declared reasons for both were masks
for secret agendas.
Bush’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, his planned
attack on Iran [See Considering a war with Iran: A
discussion paper on WMD in the Middle East,
PDF], and his support for
Israel’s attack on Lebanon and genocidal policies toward
the Palestinians have radicalized the Middle East and
Muslims worldwide. American and Israeli aggression have
vindicated Osama bin Laden’s propaganda, produced
massive recruits for Al Qaeda, and unleashed
destabilizing forces throughout the Middle East
Bush’s wars are strengthening Islam. Abdullah Gul has
just been elected president of Turkey. Gul is described
by the American media as
"former Islamist." Gul is supported by the
ruling political party of prime minister Erdogan,
another "former Islamist."
Gul’s election to the presidency by 76% of the Turkish
parliament has upset Turkey’s secularized military, long
in the pay of the US government. On August 27 Turkey’s
military chief, General Yasar Buyukanit, declared that
"centers of evil" "systematically try to corrode the
secular nature of the Turkish Republic." [
Turkish
army warns of 'centres of evil' over Gul, By
Donald Macintyre, Independent, (UK) August 28, 2007]The
Turkish military, many believe at the request and pay of
the US, has overthrown four Turkish governments since
1960, the last only 10 years ago.
With President Bush’s rant about "
bringing
democracy to the Middle East," the Turkish
military is less able to impose Western values on an
Islamic people. Similarly, the American puppet in Egypt
cannot as easily suppress the Islamic values and
aspirations of Egyptians.
US puppet rulers in Jordan and Pakistan, and even the
Saudis and oil emirates, report the ground shaking under
their feet. America’s puppet in Pakistan is in trouble,
and his difficulties are compounded by US military
incursions into Pakistan. The Bush administration is
considering contingency plans to seize Pakistan’s
nuclear weapons in the event the American puppet is
overthrown, delusional contingency plans considering the
over-stretched US military.
In the postwar years, the US managed with its money and
influence to secularize an elite class in Middle Eastern
countries, an elite that identifies with the West and
not with their own cultures. This artificial elite has
produced a wide political gap between the masses of the
people and the rulers. Increasingly, Muslim masses
perceive their rulers as allied with foreign powers
against them.
In Iraq the American puppet government of Nuri al-Maliki
seems to be on its last legs. The Sunnis have pulled
their support, as has the most important Shi’ite leader,
Muqtada al-Sadr, who realizes that the Maliki government
is too complicit in US crimes to be a legitimate
government of Iraq. With both the Bush administration
and Congress blaming Maliki for America’s failure in
Iraq, Maliki’s fate looks increasingly to be that of Ngo
Dinh Diem, America’s Vietnam puppet who was blamed for
the failure of US intervention in Vietnam.
Just as Hitler long denied German defeats on the Russian
front and even in his last days was ordering
non-existent German divisions to relieve Berlin, the
Bush regime finds a new straw to grasp in Iraq each time
the previous straw proves to be a delusion. The latest
straw is "the surge." While Americans surge, the
British have been defeated in southern Iraq and have
withdrawn to two bases in eerie similarity to the French
at Dien Bien Phu. The British bases are subjected to
between 30 and 60 mortar and rocket attacks each day.
British generals want their troops out of Iraq. The
longer UK Prime Minister Brown keeps them in Iraq in
order to appease the Bush administration, the harder it
will be to rescue the survivors.
With American retreat south to Kuwait now potentially
cut off, how will the US extract its troops and
equipment when American defeat can no longer be denied?
The Bush administration and its politicized military are
already blaming the failure of "the surge" on
Iran. Iran is alleged to be training and arming Iraqis
who resist the US occupation. Bush has said he will hold
Iran responsible. There is abundant evidence that the
Bush administration is preparing yet another illegal
attack on a Muslim country without assessing the
consequences.
The Bush administration seems destined to produce such
disasters that it will be driven to the use of nuclear
weapons in order to avoid defeat. The Bush
administration possesses the combination of evil and
stupidity required to escalate a failed "cakewalk
war" into a nuclear one.
Many of the administration’s most evil members—Wolfowitz,
Feith, Libby, Rumsfeld, Rove, and Gonzales—have been
discarded as the tragedy deepens, but Cheney remains
ensconced as does the moron in the White House. Before
they fall, Bush and Cheney will bring more sorrow to the
world and more shame to Americans.
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.