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Zen and the Art of Iraqi Regime Change
by
Sheldon Richman,
August 3, 2005
What does it mean to overemphasize the presence of what
is absent? That Zen-like question arises from an
interview the Associated Press recently published with
Douglas Feith, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfelds
departing chief policy advisor. Feith told the AP the
Bush administration overemphasized the matter
of weapons of mass destruction as the rationale for
invading Iraq and overthrowing the government of Saddam
Hussein
That has to be the understatement not only of the young
century, but of the last several centuries.
Reality to Mr. Feith: There were no weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq. Feith seems to have a clue to
the problem: Anything we said at all about
stockpiles was overemphasis, given that we didnt
find them. Yes, at the risk of sounding Zen-like
again, any emphasis would have been
overemphasis.
He added, Our intelligence community made,
apparently, an error, as to the stockpiles.
Considering that we taxpayers pay a good bit of change
for that intelligence community, the mind
boggles at the idea that it could have made such an
error innocently. Isnt it more likely
that it was accommodating the higher-ups who were
spoiling for war even before 9/11? This suspicion is
hardly undercut by the fact that other countries
intelligence agencies and even the Clinton administration
thought Saddam had WMDs.
In his interview with the AP, Feith said, It would
have been better had we done a better job of
communicating in all of its breadth the strategic
rationale for the war. Which was what? According to
the AP summary, The broader rationale, Feith said,
included the danger posed by Iraqs potential to
resume building chemical, biological and possibly nuclear
weapons know-how that the Iraqi regime developed
before the 1991 Gulf War.
It is doubtful the American people would have supported
an invasion of Iraq on the grounds that Saddam might some
day try to develop weapons. Why should he use them
against the United States? Without provocation hed
have no reason to commit personal and national suicide.
The administration realized that people had to be
panicked into supporting the war. Thats why, as
former defense official Paul Wolfowitz conceded, the
various parts of the administration agreed to build its
case on the alleged WMDs rather than other issues. That
case was spiced up with hints that Saddam had something
to do with 9/11, though he did not. Feith approved this
strategy: Had Saddam Hussein not been a supporter
of terrorism and a guy who developed and used WMD, I
dont think that simply saying hes a tyrant
and we have a chance to replace a tyrant would have
motivated the war.
But Saddam had no record of supporting terrorism against
the United States. His efforts were confined to helping
Palestinians who are under occupation. (Not that this
excuses his encouraging the murder of innocents.) As for
Saddams development and use of WMDs (i.e., poison
gas), that occurred during Iraqs war with Iran,
when he was a U.S. ally. Memories are fleeting: the
Reagan administration supplied Saddam with WMD materials
back then. Rumsfeld was a special envoy in the effort.
Feith told the AP he is annoyed that people think the
lack of weapons means there was no reason to go to war.
According to the AP, such people ignore the broader
reasoning, he said, which included the dangers posed by
Saddams record of aggression against Kuwait,
hostility toward the United States, a rhetorical
and financial support for terrorism and a weakening
of the worlds resolve to contain his
ambitions.
But how could these have been good reasons for the
American people to be forced into a war of conquest,
which, as predicted, has spawned violence not only in
Iraq but in Spain and England, with the United States
perhaps next? America cannot be a prosperous and peaceful
place if its government insists on policing the world.
Empire is expensive. Protecting far-flung
interests costs money and, inevitably, lives.
Do you want to know the price of empire? Its random
searches of subway passengers in New York City. And
thats just the beginning.
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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