I
know some smart Republicans so it should not be a contradiction
to talk of their intellectual rigor. But it is quite amazing how
the subjects of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation empire all succumb
eventually to the tabloid disease of facile, flippant, and utterly
pathetic 'analysis', passing it off all the while as something worthy
of consideration. I append below the words of one of the US's pre-eminent
conservative journalists; the material in red is the NUN's
'common sense' responses to his uncommonly insensible comments
.B.
Shuai, Editor, The Non-Union News
The
Peacenik Top 10
A look at the ten most popular objections to war
and some common-sense responses to them.
by Fred Barnes, executive editor, The Weekly Standard, 03/06/2003
THOSE
OPPOSED to military action in Iraq to depose Saddam Hussein, destroy
his weapons of mass destruction, and liberate the 24 million Iraqi
citizens under his control cite at least 10 objections to going
to war now. These objections range from the arguable to the totally
absurd. Let's examine them.
(1)
Rush to war. This is a favorite of congressional Democrats.
But the rush is more like a baby crawl. Iraq has been in material
breach of United Nations resolutions since a few weeks after the
Gulf War ended in 1991. New resolutions have been approved, inspectors
ousted, and the United Nations made to look impotent. President
Bush has taken all the steps asked of him before going to war: getting
the approval of Congress, getting another U.N. resolution (with
perhaps yet another on the way), and building a coalition of supporters.
He's hardly rushing.
Constructing
his argument carefully, Mr Barnes ignores the fact that the 'rush
to war' refers to the sudden passion for war that Bush discovered
last summer and the indecent alacrity with which he has pursued
that goal since that time. Until he had Paul Wolfowitz whispering
in his ear, Bush had been content to address the Iraq issue by following
Colin Powell and Condoleeza Rice's recommendation of reforming the
sanctions regime. Of course this is also a slippery criticism of
the George I who was president when these material breaches started
and did nothing about them; OF COURSE Bill Clinton did nothing,
which is why George II was raised up by the Lord to smite these
evil-doers.
(2)
It's a war for oil. The United States could buy all the oil
it wants from Iraq by lifting the sanctions and helping to reconstruct
the Iraqi oilfields. It's the French and Russians who have oil deals
with Saddam and thus are fixated on that issue. They don't want
a war that would upset those deals.
Poppycock
of the first order; it is true that there are those who simplistically
equate American thirst for oil and its push for war, and Mr Barnes
would love it if that was all there was to it. Nonetheless, if the
world's second largest oil reserves were under Greenland instead
of Iraq no US president would give a hoot who was ruling Iraq or
who they were gassing. And the Danes would be either the uneasy
friend or the implacable enemy of the US much as the nations around
the Persian Gulf now are. But let's get real here; the 'war for
oil' objection is generated by the Bush administration's own absurd
insistence on claiming that its motive is the removal of a repressive
regime for moral reasons as if oil had nothing to do with the calculation
at all. Since I myself have lived in a country where the oppression
is more long-lived and the 'evil' more brutal (Burma) than it is
in Iraq, this claim only begs the question of 'Why Iraq? Why not
draw up a list of such nations and start at the top rather than
the middle?' Well, the answer, very simply, is oil; not necessarily
as a source of wealth for Friends of Bush, but as a strategic commodity
whose safe supply is the key to the stability of markets and the
economic health of important allies. In this scheme Iraq is merely
conveniently low-hanging fruit in the battle against 'evil', but
is a prime target in the essential struggle to secure world energy
supplies. Mr Barnes is simply lying in what he regards as an amusing
manner.
(3)
War with Iraq will bring more terrorism. This is a hardy
perennial. It was claimed before the Gulf war and the Afghanistan
campaign--and when bombs fell on al Qaeda and the Taliban during
Ramadan. Rather than more terrorism, removing Saddam will bring
more respect for the United States. Terrorists will be increasingly
fearful.
This
is so obviously nonsensical that it strikes me as unquestionable
proof of Mr Barne's imbecility. He need only go inquire of the Israelis
what victory in the Six Day War (and the subsequent decision to
hold on to the West Bank and allow or encourage fanatics of several
religions to set up shop there) has brought them over the last 35
years to know that it is not a speculation but a certainty that
war, victorious or otherwise, will only increase terrorism. Whether
or not this is a sufficient reason not to go to war is another argument
altogether. I would argue that the expectation that US action will
increase terrorist activity would not be a good reason to stop the
push for war if war were the best solution to begin with (which
it is clearly not). BUT, there is no question, no matter where you
stand on the war, that lying about its likely results is a dangerous
and foolish tactic. Even Rev Ashcroft (recently in Davos) said that
stopping the existing terrorist threat was simply beyond
the capabilities of any security apparatus. He and 'homeland' security
czar Ridge are absolutely sure that war will bring more terrorism
and are planning accordingly.
(4)
The Arab street will erupt. Another perennial. This is often
predicted but rarely happens. A swift, decisive victory over Saddam
will quiet the Arab street. So far, only the American street has
erupted--against the French and Germans.
Mr
Barnes clearly does not look out of his own window in Washington
or take a gander at the streets of cities across America and around
the world. Of course vocal opponents of the Bush policies, no matter
which 'street' they inhabit have been summarily dismissed as the
sort of 'focus group' that Bush simply refuses to recognize as having
the right to provide input on his high councils. The Prince of Darkness
himself (Defense Advisory Board head Richard Perle) has recently
said unequivocally that public policy cannot be made on the basis
of how many people are in the street opposing or supporting a particular
line. The selective historical blindness of people like Mr Perle
makes it impossible for them to remember even as far back as the
70s (Vietnam, the Women's Movement), or the 50s (the Civil Rights
Movement) for examples of the undeniable power on policy making
of VOTERS marching for their beliefs. Indeed, the Bush administration
itself is keenly responsive to the public protest activities of
the anti-reproductive rights people. I am sure that Karl Rove could
explain this to Mr Barnes. The problem is that the 'might makes
right' calculations of Mr Barnes et al leads them to believe
that it does not matter what anyone thinks as long as America is
victorious. Only a child, and a petulant and particularly stupid
one, would believe this.
(5)
Bush is doing it for his dad. President Bush the elder stopped
short of deposing Saddam in the Gulf war and to this day believes
he did the right thing. So do his top aides, such as national security
adviser Brent Scowcroft. Instead, they agreed to a truce with Saddam
conditioned on Iraq's full disarmament. Also, consider the source
of this charge: Martin Sheen.
Ha
ha, very funny. Bush himself made this admission and trying to cover
it up with Hollywood bashing is pretty darn lame. What WOULD be
a valid counter would be that certainly Bush is not going to war
only because Saddam tried to kill his father, or even that
Saddam had the temerity to outlast George I in office.
(6)
Attacking Iraq would be unprovoked aggression. No, it wouldn't.
Andrew Sullivan has pointed out a significant fact: There was no
peace treaty, only the truce, so the state of war resumes when the
conditions are violated. By attacking now, the United States would
be ending the war, not starting it.
I
will grant the possible relevance of this point if Mr Barnes were
not again misstating the position. We must always remember that
the Bush claim, made most recently in his faux press conference
of March 5, that Iraq represents a direct and imminent threat to
the US, has been COMPLETELY refuted by the acceptance by the Bush
administration of the need to consult the US Congress and receive
backing from the UN Security Council. Both entities unequivocally
recognize the right of the United States to attack a foe to defend
from an imminent rather than an actual attack. All the claims that
going to the United Nations would represent an unacceptable 'veto'
by an international body on the actions of a soveriegn state are
hogwash. No such mechanism exists were there anything approaching
a demonstrable threat, which, despite all the earnest demonstrations,
still has not been demonstrated. It is precisely the function of
both the US 'War Powers Act' (no matter its questionable but untested
constitutionality) and the United Nations' conflict resolution mechanism
to prevent unsubstantiated claims of threat from being acted upon.
(7)
Containment is working. The problem is the right threat is
not being contained: the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
Sure, with U.S. troops and U.N. inspectors in the area, Saddam won't
attack Jordan or Syria or other neighbors. But he could slip chemical
or biological agents to terrorists without anyone knowing. And that's
the threat.
Not
only is containment working, but now that the US government is really
on board with it, providing it the unquestionable advantage of being
backed up by enormous military force, it is working better than
ever. The real problem with Mr Barnes and all the other people hectoring
about the "WMDs being passed on to non-state actors/terrorists
is that if the US is supposed to worry about this and make it the
basis of immediate action then it is as plain as the pretzel in
Bush's throat that the entire US military apparatus should today
be switched to the Korean peninsula to deal with the leader voted
most likely to do something as insane as equipping terrorists with
real WMDs. (yes, please note that chemical and biological weapons
are not true WMDs and the conceit that they are is a purely strategic
contention by the US, the reality of this language shift just another
casualty of the rhetorical 'shock and awe' practiced so expertly
by the Bush administration.) The incessant conflation by Bush administration
officials (again, most recently by Bush himself in his faux press
conference of 5 March) of state and non-state actors in the terrorism
game is impressive but still erroneous. The chance that a control-junky
like Saddam would pass to people outside his sphere of influence
weapons which would be used in ways other than those he personally
chooses is virtually nil. The same could not be said of Kim Jong-il,
unfortunately.
(8)
America doesn't have enough allies. What? Forty or so isn't
enough? Is the case for war weakened in the slightest by the absence
of the French or the Angolans? No. And despite what Democrats like
Howard Dean say, a war with Iraq would not be "unilateral,"
which would mean the United States would be acting alone.
Yes,
I see US allies or at least the ones they can buy on short notice
swarming around offering their support, and most conspicuous among
them are America's three most important friends, the governments
of the United Kingdom, England, and Great Britain. But again Barnes
misstates the objection so he can attempt to refute it; it is not
about the number of allies. The point is that those countries (i.e.,
peoples) whose values and interests have traditionally been aligned
with the US's are, even when their governments have been squeezed
into supporting the war effort, overwhelmingly opposed to the US
plan to invade Iraq. If nothing else such opposition might give
a reasonable person cause for reflection rather than reactionary
rejection. But the real issue ought to be what allies the US needs
to keep itself safe or to advance that part of its global agenda
which cannot be advanced solely by military force. I realize that
back there the cheap seats there are those shouting "Hobbesian
dynamics will bring the US all the 'allies' it requires", but
that is one really marvelous world that the Bushites will have created
if that is all the US can depend on.
(9)
Win without war. That's a nice goal. Unfortunately, it's
Saddam's goal. With no war, he wins and emerges as the new strongman
in the Middle East, forcing people to come to terms with him.
Again,
Mr Barnes neglects to note that this is in fact Bush's own
oft-stated desire unless he is admitting what most reasonable people
could see long ago, that this stance was nothing more than a cynical
pose on the part of Bush to deflect criticism that he is a war monger.
(10)
Bush is seeking a new American empire. This is a favorite
accusation of Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich,
the man who once recited the Gettysburg Address in Donald Duck's
voice. I'll let Secretary of State Colin Powell answer this one.
When hectored by a former archbishop of Canterbury on this subject
recently, he said: "We have gone forth from our shores repeatedly
over the last 100 years . . . and put wonderful young men and women
at risk, many of whom have lost their lives, and we have asked for
nothing except enough ground to bury them in." Well said.
Mmmmnnnn.
Well that is very pretty, and would were it really true. The US
push for war against Iraq is not just an element in, but is the
keystone of, a bold policy agenda with the goal of permanent US
world hegemony established not by a set of democratic values or
even the persuasive logic of the free market but by the raw application
of naked military might. Paranoid fantasy you say? Nonsense. The
originators of this agenda are mostly former members of the previous
Bush administration who have returned to power and influence with
the younger Bush and they are completely unashamed by their plans
and don't care who knows it. Their credo is best embodied in the
National Security Policy promulgated last September. That document
as well as other statements of the so-called 'vulcans' (also known
as the 'chickenhawks') can be found on their website, the Project
for the New American Century.
No
doubt opponents are capable of coming up with new arguments against
war with Iraq. They'd better do so soon because so far they haven't
convinced anyone outside the reflexively anti-Bush crowd.
I
hope Mr Barnes believes this because a person so thoroughly self-deluded
is probably in deep need of comfort. The much more tragic truth
is that a critique of the Bush administration's policies is virtually
impossible to find in the mainstream commercial press. And what
a surprise that is. After all, despite the traditional canard of
the liberal prejudice of the press, the public airwaves and newsprint
are almost completely dominated by the right and their supporters.
One
of the most curious aspects of that fact is the discovery by, of
all people, Rupert Murdoch, that facile, flippant, and utterly disinformative
'analysis' such as that trumpeted by The Weekly Standard
and perfected on the Fox News outlets, SELLS. It sells mostly because
it uses juvenile humor and perfectly mirrors the viewer/reader's
own solipsistic and self-satisfied views on almost everything, and
congratulates the narrow, the reactionary, and the insipid in all
of us. The reason that there is no 'liberal Rush Limbaugh' is that
it seems that so-called liberals find it hard to accept the value
of turning any and all significant issues and the debates that revolve
around them into mere entertainment depending on the sort of perception
and wit normally associated with adolescent boys.
The
Front PageWar
and Rumors of WarFood
for Thought
|