February 11, 2008
Bush Calls on France for Help
By Paul Craig Roberts
"We support the troops!" That’s the excuse the
Democrats have given for continuing to fund Bush’s
aggression against Iraq and Afghanistan. But, of course,
war funding doesn’t support the troops. War funding
supports an evil machine that chews up and spits out the
lives and well being of the troops, along with that of
hundreds of thousands of Iraqi and Afghan, men, women,
and children. War funding supports Bush’s aggression in
Iraq and Afghanistan and his continuing efforts to
occupy both countries in order to turn them into puppet
states.
Polls show that a majority of the troops and their
families do not support Bush’s aggression. The fact that
Ron Paul’s campaign for the Republican presidential
nomination received the lion’s share of contributions
from military families also underlines the great divide
between the troops and those who would "support"
them by keeping them in Iraq and Afghanistan. What all
those ribbon decals on the back of SUVs, which proclaim
"support the troops," really mean is support
Bush’s wars of aggression against Muslims.
According to the Washington Post (Feb.
9, 2008), Bush’s $3.1 trillion federal budget
provides no funding for his
proposal in his
State of the Union address to permit military
members to transfer their unused education benefits to
family members. Bush got applause for his nationally
televised words, but the troops and their families got
no money in his budget.
Government analysts calculate the education benefits
would cost in the range of $1-2 billion annually—the
cost of funding the war for two days.
The only money that Bush and Congress want to give
the troops is what is required to keep them at war.
Everyone has read the horror stories of the lack of care
for the physically and emotionally wounded troops who
have made it back from Iraq.
In contrast, to fund Bush’s war, Bush and Congress
have already spent in out-of-pocket and future costs at
least $1,000 billion. Every American can draw up lists
of better uses of this immense fortune than blowing up a
country’s infrastructure and killing hundreds of
thousands of its citizens.
Nothing good whatsoever has been accomplished by
Bush’s invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. It was obvious
to anyone with a lick of sense in 2002, six months prior
to Bush’s invasion of Iraq on March 18, 2003, that an
invasion would be a strategic blunder.
William S. Lind,
myself and others made that prediction in October,
2002. Three years later,
Lt. Gen. William Odom, former director of the
National Security Agency, vindicated us by
declaring Bush’s invasion of Iraq to be "the
greatest strategic disaster in U.S. history."
If the head of the NSA doesn’t know a
"strategic disaster" when he sees one, who does?
Gen. Odom’s assessment is certainly correct. Bush,
Cheney, the neocons, and the sycophant media were
completely wrong. Look at the situation today. Unable to
defeat the Sunni insurgency, the US "superpower"
has had to resort to paying tens of millions of dollars
to insurgency leaders to bribe them not to attack US
troops. In addition, Bush is supplying the insurgents
with weapons "to fight al Qaeda." The Sunni
leaders gladly accept the money and weapons, but how
long can they survive being collaborators with the
American enemy that has destroyed their country and the
Sunni place in the sun?
It was obvious to everyone but Bush and the neocons
that overthrowing Saddam Hussein in the name of
democracy would put the majority Shi’ites, who are
allied with Iran, in place as the new rulers of Iraq. So
far the Iraqi Shi’ites have bided their time and have
not joined in earnest the insurgency against the US
occupation. Instead, they, like the Sunnis, have
directed most of their attention to cleansing
neighborhoods of one another. The reasons that
violence—although still higher than Americans could live
with—is down are that most of the neighborhoods are now
segregated, al Sadr has ordered his militia to stand
down, and the Sunni insurgents are being paid not to
attack US troops.
Bush started a war, and now to avoid losing it Bush
pays Iraqis not to attack US troops!
The Sunnis and Shi’ites are stronger than ever, while
the US troops are worn down and demoralized from
multiple lengthy combat tours that violate traditional
US military policy.
It was also obvious that Bush’s invasions would
destabilize nuclear-armed Pakistan. On February 8,
seasoned foreign correspondent Warren Strobel reported
for the McClatchy newspapers that
"Pakistan is now the central front in America’s war on
terror."
On February 9, the Washington Post reported:
"Pakistan faces a growing threat from a new generation
of radicalized, battle-hardened militants who embrace
jihad and have become allied with local and
international terrorists intent on toppling the
pro-Western government [shorthand for paid US puppet],
a senior U.S. intelligence official told reporters
yesterday."[Pakistani
Militants Teaming Up, Officials Say]
US officials have been pressing Pakistan, to no
effect, to allow US troops to join the Pakistani army’s
fight against Pakistani tribes allied with the Taliban.
US officials, "speaking on condition of anonymity,"
are trying to muster support for an expanded US military
role in Pakistan by alleging that Osama bin Laden and
Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar are in Pakistan with
their top commanders. Bush wants to bomb Pakistan in
order to win the war in Afghanistan.
With all available US troops tied down in Iraq, the
US is using NATO soldiers as mercenaries to try to
counter a resurgent Taliban. Europeans are tiring of
their role as an European proxy for America’s legions,
and the NATO commander speaks of a NATO defeat in
Afghanistan.
NATO was an alliance created to resist a Soviet
invasion of Europe. The US has kept an unnecessary NATO
alive for 18 years as a source of troops for its foreign
adventures. Europeans dislike being mercenaries for
American Empire, especially one that slaughters
civilians.
Desperate for troops, US Defense Secretary Robert
Gates is trying to scare Europeans with the threat of
"international terrorism," but Europeans know that
the best way to bring terrorism to Europe is to send
troops to fight Muslims for the Americans. Whether Gates
will get the German and French soldiers that he so
desperately needs depends on whether the US can give the
German and French leaders, Angela Merkel and Nicolas
Sarkozy, enough billions of dollars to divide among
their parties to embolden them to override public
opinion and send their soldiers to die for US and
Israeli hegemony in the Middle East.
Gates
told Europe that NATO’s survival is at stake: "We
must not—we cannot—become a two-tiered alliance of those
willing to fight and those who are not." In a rare
bit of honesty for an American government official,
Gates admitted at the NATO conference in Munich last
week that Europeans’ anger at the US over Iraq is the
reason Europe won’t send enough troops to fight the
Taliban in Afghanistan, thus putting what Gates
disingenuously called "the international mission in
Afghanistan" at risk of failure.
The Afghanistan "mission," like the Iraq
"mission," was a mission for US and Israel hegemony.
The official reason for invading Afghanistan was 9/11
and the alleged refusal of the Taliban to hand over
Osama bin Laden. It had nothing whatsoever to do with
Europe, NATO, or any "international mission." The
official reason for invading Iraq was alleged, but
nonexistent, weapons of mass destruction that allegedly
threatened America—another, but more deadly, 9/11 in the
making according to the Bush regime.
If the US now needs foreign troops to save its bacon
in these two lost wars, it should demand them from
Israel. Israel is why the US is at war in the Middle
East. Let Israel supply the troops. The neocons who
dominated the Bush regime and took America to illegal
wars are allied with the extreme right-wing government
of Israel. The goal of neoconservatism is to remove all
obstacles to Israeli territorial expansion. The Zionist
aim is to grab the entirely of the West Bank and
southern Lebanon, with more to follow later.
Remember "mission accomplished"? Remember all
the strutting neocons with their promises of a
"cakewalk war"? Remember all the ignorant bragging
about having "defeated the Taliban"? All of these
lies were designed to tie American down in interminable
wars in the Middle East for Israel’s benefit. There is
no other reason for Bush’s invasions. We know for
certain that Bush and his entire administration lied
through their teeth about the Taliban and about weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq.
What a total crock of ignorance and deception the
Bush regime represents. Bush, defeated in Iraq, defeated
in Afghanistan, with Pakistan crumbling in front of his
eyes, is now reduced to begging the French, whom it was
such grand sport for his neocon officials to denigrate,
to send soldiers to save his ass in Afghanistan.
What a laughing stock Bush has made of America. What
ruination this utter idiot and his supporters have
brought to America. What total traitors the
neoconservatives are. Every last one of them should be
immediately arrested for high treason. Neonconservatives
are America’s greatest enemies, and they control our
government! All Americans have to show for six years of
Bush’s "war on terror" is an incipient police
state.
Now standing in the wings is mad John "hundred
year war" McCain. Will the American electorate wipe
out the Republican Party before this insane party wipes
out America?
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois
Mitterrand. 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.