Islamist terrorism, the eradication of which President
Bush listed among his reasons for invading Iraq, has now
made its way to Spain. Good show, Mr. Bush. When he says
the world is safer one year after the war, one must
wonder which world he means.
The Spanish are being slandered by the La-Z-Boy warriors
as appeasers because right after 200 of their fellow
citizens were killed in train bombings, they threw out
the ruling Popular Party, under whose leadership the
country was dragged into Bushs war, and elected the
Socialist Party, which vows to remove Spanish troops from
Iraq. (Its a peculiar band of socialists, since
their leader says he dislikes government intervention in
the economy.) The American war party and its media
boosters like to throw the word appeaser
around, along with Munich,
Chamberlain, and Hitler. When you
cant make an argument for your position, these
words create an excellent distraction.
In fact, the socialists were pulling ahead of the Popular
Party before the bombings occurred. What seems to have
upset the people of Spain most about the ruling party was
its attempt to blame Basque separatists for the bombings
and to hide the indications that the killers were most
likely associated with al-Qaeda. Some people dont
like to be lied to by their government. (Alas, Americans
seem not to be among them.) When millions of Spaniards
took to the streets to mourn their losses, they looked
angry and justice-bent, not cowed. To equate withdrawal
from Iraq with surrender to terrorists is rank demagogy.
In case anyone needs a reminder, Saddam Husseins
government had nothing to do with the attacks of
September 11, 2001. That secular government was anathema
to Osama bin Laden and his Islamist fanatics.
Its got to be embarrassing to anyone who backed the
war that terrorism is spreading, not receding, since the
worlds mastermind of all evil, Saddam Hussein, was
deposed and arrested. Iraq itself is writhing from the
violence, now aimed at civilian social workers and
missionaries. Any country whose government defied its
peoples wishes and backed the Bush war is now at
risk. That is part of the presidents legacy.
As an aside, it should be noted that if Bushs
presumptive opponent, Sen. John Kerry, had gotten his way
and a full international coalition had participated in
the war, many more countries would be walking on eggs
today.
No matter how devastating the evidence against the
administrations policy no weapons of mass
destruction, no Iraqi alliance with bin Laden the
president and his people have only clichés to offer.
We will meet this test with strength and resolve.
Democracy is taking root in Iraq and there is no turning
back, the White House press secretary said.
This is a time of testing. We will continue to stay
to finish the job for the Iraqi people. In other
words, the administration continues to think the American
people are morons. Its not enough that nearly 600
Americans and thousands of Iraqis have been killed, and
thousands maimed for life. The president and his people
must insult our intelligence too.
You dont believe it? When Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld was asked whether the deaths of the Americans
were worth it, he said, Oh, my goodness, yes.
Theres just no question.... Twenty-five million
people in Iraq are free.
Even if those Iraqis really were free, Rumsfelds
reply would have been abominable. Where does the
president of the United States get the power to require
that American citizens die for the people of Iraq?
Its not in the Constitution, which, first, confines
military power to the defense of the U.S. territory, and,
second, reserves the power to declare war not to the
president but to Congress. (Kerry seems unaware of that.)
True, no one was conscripted for the Iraq war. But I
dont recall the troops being allowed to opt out of
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Perhaps the ones who enlisted
out of a desire to defend their homes would have skipped
the Middle East adventure if given the chance. Ask Army
Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia, who refused to return to his
unit after being on leave from Iraq. I am saying no
to war; I have chosen peace, he said. The
organization Citizen Soldier estimates that 600 other
servicemen have done what Mejia did.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Send him email.
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