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The Emperor Has Spoken
by
Sheldon Richman,
December 12, 2005
Its a measure of the imperial nature of the modern American presidency that George W. Bush misstates the truth even as he defends himself against the charge that he misstates the truth.
It takes extraordinary disrespect for the American people to look them in the eyes and say that Congress had seen the same intelligence about Saddam Husseins nonexistent weapons of mass destruction as he did, and that a Senate committee had cleared his administration of twisting the WMD intelligence to serve its Iraq war agenda.
Neither of these claims is true, as many have pointed out. No congressional committee has examined the charge that the administration suppressed the substantial doubts within intelligence circles about the information furnished by Iraqi defectors of dubious credibility.
Moreover, those evidenced-based doubts were not shared with the House and Senate intelligence committees in the run-up to the war. The Los Angeles Time recently reported that German intelligence personnel had told U.S. officials that administration claims about mobile biological-weapons laboratories were not credible, having come from an unreliable defector. Yet then-Secretary of State Colin Powell made those labs a big part of his major speech to the UN Security Council. And those allegations played no small role in scaring Americans into backing President Bushs drive to war.
The Bush administration has never shown much confidence in the unvarnished truth. The latest example is the revelation that the U.S. military has paid Iraqi newspapers to publish favorable Pentagon-written news better, propaganda pieces.
Thus President Bushs latest PR campaign has to be
judged in its proper context. His poll numbers are in the
toilet, and congressional elections are less than a year
away. His speeches about staying the course and the light
at the end of the tunnel are Nixonesque. When will we
hear him speak of Iraqization?
The president gives the impression that if he uses the
word victory enough times, we will believe
him.
To revive his poll numbers he has hired a political
scientist, Peter Feaver, to craft a message and campaign.
As reported in the New York Times, Feaver
came to Bushs attention by arguing that Americans
would accept high military casualties if they could be
persuaded they were for a good cause. Feaver is able to
measure what he calls casualty sensitivity.
He and his Duke University coauthors have written,
Mounting casualties did not produce a reflexive
collapse in public support. The Iraq case suggests that
under the right conditions, the public will continue to
support military operations even when they come with a
relatively high human cost.
And what would those right conditions be?
Apparently, they include filling the air with a lot of
talk about victory, alleged Iraqi assumption of security
responsibilities, and the usual war-on-terror buncombe.
This last was in ample supply in Bushs recent
speech at the U.S. Naval Academy. In that speech, he
called Iraq the central front in the war on
terror, although he acknowledged that non-Iraqis
make up but a small part of resistance to the U.S.
presence there.
Facts be damned; the president is not giving up on
convincing the American people, contrary to the evidence,
that Iraq had something to do with 9/11. He insists on
ignoring the self-fulfilling character of his war: it has
made Iraq a hotbed of anti-American violence because it
has made the U.S. forces an army of occupation. None of
this confirms Bushs position that they
hate us because of our way of life.
They hated us because of a long
history of U.S. intervention in the Middle East, and Bush
has only given them more reason to hate
us now.
But in fact, its not the American people that
anyone hates; its the American policy. Readers
familiar with Orwells Nineteen
Eighty-Four will have no trouble recognizing whats
going on here.
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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