Only after the invasion would Americans learn conclusively that Iraq
possessed no WMD, that Iraq had no significant ties to al Qaeda. Then
the questions cascaded: Were the false assertions by the Bush/Cheney
regime mere mistakes or were they evil lies?
The Bush/Cheney regime responded by blaming the failure to find WMD on
the poor intelligence provided by America's intelligence community —
adding that the intelligence services of other countries also
mistakenly believed that Iraq possessed WMD. Although such scapegoating
contained a large nugget of truth, it was designed to obscure two
important facts: (1) the intelligence reports often contained
qualifiers, expressions of doubts about Iraq's WMD that were not
publicized by the Bush/Cheney regime before the invasion and (2) senior
officials in the Bush/Cheney regime embellished the faulty
intelligence, lied about it, and fabricated contrary intelligence to
render the evidence more ominous than it actually was (see
"Immorality").
Moreover, when it became certain that the UN would not approve a second
resolution, one that authorized the use of force against Iraq, the U.S.
(acting jointly with Britain and Spain) withdrew its draft of the
second resolution from the UN Security Council. Why? Because Britain's
Lord Goldsmith warned, "if the sponsors of the U.S.-UK draft resolution
sought a vote at the council and failed to get it, serious doubts would
be cast on the legality of military action against Iraq."
After withdrawing the second resolution, the Bush/Cheney regime made
the following argument: because resolution 1441 "decided that Iraq has
been and remains in material breach of all relevant resolutions," the
U.S. already possessed the authority to use force. This argument was
blatantly false, especially because it is up to the UN Security
Council, not individual members, "to decide whether and how to enforce
its resolutions." [John Burroughs and Nicole Deller, "The United
Nations Charter and the Invasion of Iraq,"
Neo-Conned Again pp. 368-69]
Such slimy behavior fooled almost nobody in the world except a large
number of Americans, including Americans in the news media. Which
explained why the UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, called the
Bush/Cheney regime's subsequent invasion of Iraq "illegal." In fact, as
the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal put it (in the wake of Nazi Germany's
defeat), "To initiate a war of aggression" is "the supreme
international crime."
Lesser war crimes by the Bush/Cheney regime already had been committed. As the
Guardian
reported, "Evidence of prisoner abuse and possible war crimes at
Guantanamo Bay reached the highest level of the Bush administration as
early as autumn 2002, but Donald Rumsfeld, the defense secretary, chose
to do nothing about it." ["Bush team 'knew of abuse' at Guantanamo,"
Sept. 13, 2004] The paper also reported, "The secret 'special access
program' facilitating much of the mistreatment, widely held to have
contravened the Geneva convention, was established following a direct
order from the president." [Ibid]
The criminal rot from Guantanamo was "eventually transferred wholesale"
to Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, where subsequent revelations of prisoner
torture there by U.S. soldiers irreparably dishonored the United States
in the eyes of the world. Writing in the 27 June 2007 issue of the
New Yorker,
Seymour Hersh notes a May 2004 meeting, during which Army Major General
Antonio M. Taguba informed Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz
and others about the torture of prisoners occurring at Abu Ghraib.
Taguba "described a naked detainee lying on the wet floor, handcuffed,
with an interrogator shoving things up his rectum, and said, 'That's
not abuse. That's torture.'"
According to Hersh, General Craddock and Vice-Admiral Timothy Keating,
the director of the Joint Staff of the J.C.S., were e-mailed a summary
of the Abu Ghraib abuses in January 2004. Thus, Rumsfeld appears to
have lied when, "in his appearances before the Senate and the House
Armed Services Committees on May 7th, [he] claimed to have had no idea
of the extensive abuse." [Hersh,
New Yorker 27 June 2007] Only when the scandal became public, did the regime's cover-up fall apart.
Yet, the crimes continue. According to Human Rights Watch, "In the past
five years the administration has authorized torture and other abusive
interrogation techniques, "disappeared" dozens of suspected terrorists
into secret prisons, twisted domestic law to permit indefinite
detention without charge of persons suspected of links to terrorism,
and confined hundreds at Guantanamo Bay without charge while denying
them information about the basis for their detention and meaningful
opportunity to contest it. The administration has sought to exempt its
actions from court oversight." [Human Rights Watch, "United States,"
World Report 2007]
II. Immorality
In order to support their BIG LIE about the grave and growing threat to
the U.S. posed by Iraq, the Bush/Cheney regime not only pressured the
intelligence community to produce conclusions that supported its own
preconceptions about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and ties to al
Qaeda, it also embellished and lied about that intelligence. Moreover,
it fabricated damning intelligence where the intelligence community
found none.
Thus, to say "the intelligence community got it wrong" or "intelligence
agencies in other countries also concluded that Iraq possessed WMD"
still doesn't explain Cheney's deceptive half-truth, asserted at the
Veterans of Foreign Wars 103rd National Convention on August 26, 2002.
Cheney told his audience, "The Iraq regime has in fact been very busy
enhancing its capabilities in the field of chemical and biological
agents." Worse, he claimed, "We now know that Saddam has resumed his
efforts to acquire nuclear weapons."
To support that claim, Cheney cited evidence provided by Saddam
Hussein's son-in-law, Hussein Kamel Hassan, who claimed that Iraq
possessed WMD. What Cheney failed to mention, however, was that Kamel
also said: "All chemical weapons were destroyed. I ordered the
destruction of all chemical weapons. All weapons-biological, chemical,
missile, nuclear-were destroyed." Only after the illegal, immoral
invasion would we learn that Kamel had told the truth - and that Cheney
had deceived us.
Neither do the glib assertions, "the intelligence community got it
wrong" and "intelligence agencies in other countries also concluded
that Iraq possessed WMD" explain why the then National Security
Advisor, Condoleezza Rice, would assert that the high-strength aluminum
tubes that Iraq was allegedly attempting to purchase could "only" be
used in a nuclear weapons program. In fact, when she told her lie, Ms.
Rice already knew that disagreement existed within the intelligence
community about how such tubes might be used.
Building upon that lie, Ms. Rice then fear mongered by asserting: "The
problem here is that there will always be some uncertainty about how
quickly he [Saddam] can acquire nuclear weapons. But we don't want the
smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud."
When, in September 2002, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said,
"American intelligence had "bulletproof" evidence of links between Al
Qaeda and the government of President Saddam Hussein of Iraq," he
deceived Americans about the nature of that intelligence. First,
America's intelligence community already had dismissed such "links" as
insignificant. Second, because the intelligence community already had
discounted such "links", a rogue intelligence unit headed by neocon
ideologue Douglas Feith was set up inside the Pentagon and specifically
tasked with finding such links.
Feith's "Gestapo Office" proceeded to fabricate "intelligence" from
shards of evidence already dismissed by the intelligence community.
Such shards were then passed to neocon Paul Wolfowitz, then Rumsfeld
and Cheney for public dissemination. Former Director of Central
Intelligence, George Tenet, has commented on such intelligence in his
recent book,
At the Center of the Storm.
[W]e weren't too impressed with their work…especially their willingness
to blindly accept information that confirmed preconceived notions." [p.
348] Calling such work, "Feith-based analysis," [Ibid] Tenet adds, "The
best source of information was our January 2003 paper, which said that
there was no Iraqi authority, direction, or control over al-Qa'ida."
[Ibid, p. 358]
President Bush, not only conflated Iraq and 9/11 and reiterated the
canards about Iraq's WMD and ties to al-Qaeda, he also repeated Ms.
Rice's scare mongering about a mushroom cloud and added a few unique
lies of his own. For example, while speaking to reporters in mid-July
2003, our immoral President answered a question about Iraq by
asserting: "The larger point is, and the fundamental question is, did
Saddam Hussein have a weapons program? And the answer is, absolutely.
And we gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let them in."
In fact, Saddam had permitted the UN weapons inspectors to return. But
our lying President preempted their work, lest they prove that Iraq had
no WMD. As
USA Today,
reported on March 17, 2003: "In the clearest sign yet that war with
Iraq is imminent, the United States has advised U.N. weapons inspectors
to begin pulling out of Baghdad." Although such lies failed to persuade
most of the world, they did persuade the dumbest or most frightened of
Americans. And, armed with their support, the Bush/Cheney regime was
able to exert political pressure on incumbents in Congress during the
months before mid-term Congressional elections of November 2002, by
questioning the patriotism of any congressman (congresswoman)), who
didn't support the regime's rush to war.
To get a better idea of the effectiveness of such immoral political
hardball, simply compare the votes in favor of authorizing the
Bush/Cheney regime's war of choice with the actual number of
congressmen who actually read the October 2002 National Intelligence
Estimate - the document that supposedly proved (while actually raising
doubts about) the existence of Iraq's threatening WMD, and thus
justified war.
On the "Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution
of 2002," the House of Representatives adopted the resolution on
October 10, 2002, by a vote of 296-133 and the Senate adopted the
resolution on October 11, 2002, by a vote of 77-23. Yet, "no more than
six senators and a handful of House members who did not serve on the
house and senate Intelligence Committess read beyond the five-page
National Intelligence Estimate executive summary." [Tenet, quoting from
the
Washington Post , p. 337] Such gross negligence on the part of our congressional representatives constitutes a distinct type of immorality.
But nothing captures the immorality of the Bush/Cheney regime as the
contrast separating the President's very gestures on the eve of
initiating his war of choice and the devasting impact it made - and
continues to make - in Iraq. Recall that during the moments before Bush
"gave his national address announcing that the war had begun, a camera
cought Bush pumping his fist as though instead of intiating a war he
had kicked a winning field goal or hit a home run. 'Feels good,' he
said." [Paul Waldman,
Fraud, p. 8]
Some two weeks later, at eleven A.M on March 30, fourteen-year-old
Arkan Daif was killed by an explosion that lacerated his body with
white-hot shrapnel. One piece tore off the back of his skull. You see,
Arkan and two cousins were digging a trench in front of his house; a
feeble attempt to protect it from the bombs that Bush unleashed two
weeks earlier with such inhuman insouciance. [Anthony Shadid,
Night Draws Near, pp. 73-74]
To date, Bush's immoral insouciance has claimed the lives of more than
3,500 American sokdiers, wounded another 29,000 plus - many having
their brains shattered or becoming double or triple amputees — killed
or wounded hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and caused some five million
Iraqis to flee their homes for other parts of Iraq or for safety
outside the country.
Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer
whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The
Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military
History, the Moscow Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is
President of the Russian-American International Studies Association
(RAISA).
waltuhler@aol.com