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June
2, 2003
Arundhati
Roy
Day of the Jackals
Norman
Madarasz
Behind the Neo-Con Curtain: Plato,
Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom
Alain
Frachon and Daniel Vernet
The Strategist and the Philosopher: Strauss and Wohlstetter
Anthony
Gancarski
Anti-Imperialism, Then & Now
Standard
Schaefer
Wasted at the Pentagon
Jason
Leopold
Rocky's Advice to the Dems
Guthrie
& Albert
HUAC 58 Years Letter
Steve
Perry
The Politics of Terror Alerts
May
31, 2003
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Cockburn
A Whiner Called Horowitz
Gary Leupp
The Frauds of War
Dave
Lindorff
Clinton, Bush, Lies and Impeachment
Tom Stephens
Does It Matter that the Bush Administration Lied?
Sasan
Fayazmanesh
Who Is Next?
Joanne
Mariner
Trivializing Terrorism
Wayne
Madsen
Ayatollah Rumseld's Busy Week
Larry Magnuson
Is a Television a Radio or a Billboard?
Elaine
Cassel
Wake Up, America!
Gila Svirsky
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Kitchen Dreams
Chris Clarke
Barbra Streisand: Environmental Hypocrite
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Gravity's End Zone
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Tripp
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Neve
Gordon
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Steiner
Endangered Ocean
Robert
Freeman
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Sean
Carter
Utah Gets Fired Up for Executions
Daniel
Bacher
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Popular Uprising, Inc.
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an Interpretation of Bush's Character
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June
6, 2003
The Buck Stops with Bush
The Big Lie
By DAVID KRIEGER
The Bush administration told the American people
over and over again that war against Iraq was necessary because
Saddam Hussein was lying about not having weapons of mass destruction.
We were told that Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction
were an imminent threat to the United States. We were told that
our government knew where those weapons of mass destruction were
located. And yet, after another brutal war in which thousands
of innocent civilians were killed, the Bush Administration can
produce no evidence that Saddam Hussein had the weapons of mass
destruction.
Prior to the war, the Bush administration
offered detailed descriptions of Iraq's weapons programs, including
the claims famously made by Colin Powell before the UN Security
Council. Bush administration claims included assertions that
Iraq had a program for enriching uranium, that it had weaponized
thousands of liters of biological weapons, including anthrax
and botulism, and that Iraq could launch these weapons on very
short notice.
Prior to the war, when Saddam Hussein
opened his palaces to UN inspectors, destroyed missiles with
ranges barely longer than UN restrictions and allowed the US
to send U-2 spy planes over Iraq, the Bush Administration said
it was too little, too late.
Prior to the war, when the Chief UN Weapons
Inspector, Hans Blix, said that the inspectors were receiving
increased cooperation from the Iraqis and pleaded for more time
to continue their work, George Bush said he was growing impatient.
Prior to the war, when members of the
Security Counsel of the United Nations said they were not ready
to support the use of force against Iraq, George Bush demonstrated
his disdain for international law and the Security Counsel of
the United Nations by launching a preventive war against Iraq.
The failure to find weapons of mass destruction
after the war is causing widespread skepticism throughout the
world about the justification for going to war. It has become
a major political scandal in the UK, where prior to the war Tony
Blair echoed the Bush administration's claims of Iraq possessing
weapons of mass destruction.
In the UK, Robin Cook, who resigned in
protest from Tony Blair's cabinet over the war in Iraq, has written:
"Britain was conned into a war to disarm a phantom threat
in which not even our major ally really believed. The truth is
that the US chose to attack Iraq not because it posed a threat,
but because they knew it was weak and expected its military to
collapse. It is a truth that leaves the British government in
an uncomfortable position."
It is a truth that also leaves the American
people in an uncomfortable position. It would seem that we were
also "conned into a war" by Mr. Bush and his administration.
In a war that was sold to the American
people and the Congress on the basis of misrepresentations by
the Bush administration, more than 170 American soldiers were
killed, more than 5,000 innocent civilians lost their lives,
and thousands of Iraqi soldiers were slaughtered.
In the aftermath of the war, US soldiers
continue to be targets of Iraqi dissatisfaction. Eleven US soldiers
were killed in the past week. Iraq remains a dangerous place,
but not because of weapons of mass destruction.
When the US and British forces invaded
Iraq, one might have expected Saddam Hussein to use weapons of
mass destruction if he had them. Rather, the Bush administration
would have us believe that Saddam Hussein, while preparing for
the US invasion or during the US attack, was busy destroying
his weapons of mass destruction or moving them into another country.
Rather than show any contrition for leading
the American people into war under false pretenses, President
Bush has claimed that weapons of mass destruction have been found.
He makes this claim on the basis of the discovery of two mobile
laboratories, presumably meant for making biological weapons,
but which contain no evidence, according to the CIA, that weapons
were actually made.
Far more honest is Lt. General James
Conway, the commander of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force,
who stated to reporters, "It was a surprise to me then,
it remains a surprise to me now, that we have not uncovered weapons,
as you say, in some of the forward dispersal areas. Believe me,
it's not for lack of trying. We've been to virtually every ammunition
supply point between the Kuwaiti border and Baghdad, but they're
simply not there."
Congress, which plans to hold hearings
next week on lessons learned in Iraq, should delve into the "credibility
gap" between the Bush administration's claims regarding
Iraqi weapons of mass destruction as a pretext for war and the
failure to locate these weapons in the aftermath of the war.
These claims cannot be dismissed, as some members of Congress
would do, as simple exaggerations. They appear to be serious
misrepresentations to the American people and the people of the
world.
The Bush administration has much to account
for regarding its highly publicized claims prior to the war that
Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. While it is appropriate
to acknowledge the tyrannical nature of Saddam Hussein's regime,
concern for the human rights of the Iraqi people was not the
justification of the Bush administration for initiating a preventive
war. Their justification, stated repeatedly, was the imminent
threat of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, and it was on this
basis that the Bush administration defied international law and
the Security Council of the United Nations.
The buck stops with Mr. Bush. Lying about
the reasons for war and misleading the American people into supporting
a war has the look and feel of "high crimes and misdemeanors,"
for which the Constitution provides impeachment as the remedy.
David Krieger
is president of the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation. He is the editor of Hope in a Dark
Time (Capra Press, 2003), and author of Choose
Hope, Your Role in Waging Peace in the Nuclear Age (Middleway
Press, 2002). He can be contacted at dkrieger@napf.org.
Today's
Features
Arundhati
Roy
Day of the Jackals
Norman
Madarasz
Behind the Neo-Con Curtain: Plato,
Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom
Alain
Frachon and Daniel Vernet
The Strategist and the Philosopher: Strauss and Wohlstetter
Anthony
Gancarski
Anti-Imperialism, Then & Now
Standard
Schaefer
Wasted at the Pentagon
Jason
Leopold
Rocky's Advice to the Dems
Guthrie
& Albert
HUAC 58 Years Letter
Steve
Perry
The Politics of Terror Alerts
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