Were
We Lied Into War?
Yes, yes, a thousand times yes.
by Justin Raimondo, February 19, 2016
Antiwar.com
Donald Trump threw down the gauntlet
at the last GOP presidential debate with his declaration that the Bush administration
lied us into war, and the reverberations are still roiling the
political waters on both the right and the left. If his candidacy does nothing
else, it will have performed a great service to the nation by re-litigating
this vitally important issue and drawing attention to the outrageous lack of
accountability by the elites who cheered as we turned the Middle East into a
cauldron of death and destruction. Trump has ripped the bandage off the gaping
and still suppurating wound of that ill-begotten war, and the howls of rage and
pain are being heard on both sides of the political spectrum.
On the
neoconservative right, Bill Kristol’s sputtering outrage is a bit too studied to be taken at
face value: is he really shocked that no one is coming to the defense of
himself and his fellow neocons, who elaborated (with footnotes) the very lies
that led us down the primrose path to what the late Gen. William E. Odom called “the worst strategic disaster in our history”?
Kristol’s Weekly
Standard magazine promoted every conceivable narrative pointing to
Saddam Hussein as the perpetrator of the 9/11 attacks, no matter how fantastic
and bereft of evidence. Here he is accusing the Iraqis of being behind the
dissemination of anthrax through the mails. Here is his subsidized magazine denying that the forgedNiger uranium documents – the basis of George W.
Bush’s claim in his 2003 State of the Union that Iraq was
building a nuke – were an attempt to lie us into war. Here is neocon propagandist Stephen Hayes retailing a
leaked “secret” memo to give credence to the debunked story of a meeting between 9/11 hijacker
Mohammed Atta and Iraqi intelligence.
Every
single one of these tall tales has been so thoroughly disproved that it’s
enough to recall them in order to embarrass the perpetrators beyond redemption. Kristol & Co. served as a clearing
house for these outright fabrications, which were then utilized by the Bush
administration to make the case for war. And yet we have Peter Suderman, a senior editor over at Reason magazine,
deriding Trump’s calling out of George W. Bush and his neocon intelligence-fabricators
as a “conspiracy theory” on a par withbirtherism and the weirdo
9/11 “truth” cult:
“[H]e is flirting with a kind
of 9/11 trutherism when he accuses the Bush administration of having knowingly
lied in order to push the country into war in Iraq, as he did in Saturday’s GOP
debate.
“Now, as
Byron York wrote on Twitter yesterday, you can reasonably
interpret that charge as a general nod toward the idea that the Bush
administration hyped the war effort beyond what the actual evidence could
support, that the case for the war was, well, trumped up and ultimately
misleading, built on insufficient proof, overconfidence, and mistaken
assumptions. But Trump’s attack also leaves room for more radical, less
grounded conspiracies about Bush and the war as all, and I suspect this is not
an accident.
I would
respectfully suggest that it is Suderman who needs “grounding” in the facts of
this case. I would refer him to a project undertaken by our very own Scott
Horton, whose radio program is essential listening for anyone who wants to be
so educated: Scott has prepared a reading list on the occasion of the anniversary of the
Iraq war, one that Suderman might want to make use of.
Of special
interest is Seymour Hersh’s account of the Office of Special Plans, run byAbram Shulsky. This denizen of the murkier depths of the US
intelligence community is a devotee of the philosopher Leo Strauss, who believed – as one scholar cited by Hersh put
it – “that philosophers need to tell noble lies not only to the people at large
but also to powerful politicians.” The OSP, set up in order to do an end run
around the official intelligence community, specialized in retailing the
tallest tales of Iraqi “defectors,” later proven to be self-serving fiction.
In another account of the administration’s tactics, Hersh
describes how raw (and cherry-picked) “intelligence” marked “secret” was
“funneled to newspapers, but subsequent C.I.A. and INR [State Department]
analyses of the reports – invariably scathing but also classified – would
remain secret.” Hersh points out that when the crude forgeries known as the
Niger uranium papers – the basis for George W. Bush’s contention that Iraq was
seeking uranium in “an African country – were exposed by the IAEA, Vice
President Dick Cheney went on television and denounced the UN agency as being
biased in favor of Iraq. Is this someone who was concerned with the truth?
Karen Kwiatkowski,
who worked in close quarters with this parallel intelligence operation, says "It wasn’t intelligence‚ – it was propaganda.
They’d take a little bit of intelligence, cherry-pick it, make it sound much
more exciting, usually by taking it out of context, often by juxtaposition of
two pieces of information that don’t belong together." Those who didn’t
toe the neocon party line were purged, and replaced with compliant
apparatchiks.
So was
this simply ideological blindness, or outright lying? Robert Dreyfuss and Jason
Vest, writing in Mother Jones, cite neoconservative
foreign policy expert Edward Luttwak, who “says flatly that the Bush
administration lied about the intelligence it had because it was afraid to go
to the American people and say that the war was simply about getting rid of
Saddam Hussein. Instead, says Luttwak, the White House was groping for a
rationale to satisfy the United Nations’ criteria for war. ‘Cheney was forced
into this fake posture of worrying about weapons of mass destruction,’ he says.
‘The ties to Al Qaeda? That’s complete nonsense.’”
Yet the
American people didn’t know that at the time. The pronouncements of the Bush administration,
and the War Party’s well-placed media network, led 70 percent of them to believe that the Iraqi despot was
behind the worst terrorist attacks in American history – to the point that,
even after this canard had been debunked (and denied by the White House) a
large number of Americans still believed it. Not only that, but they believed the Iraqis
had those storied “weapons of mass destruction,” and that the Bush
administration was entirely justified in launching an invasion.
This is
what Max Fisher’s account of the Trump-generated imbroglio fails to take into
account. Fisher, who analyzes foreign policy issues for the left-of-center
Vox.com,writes:
“Trump’s
10-second history of the war articulated it as many Americans, who largely
consider that war a mistake, now understand it. And, indeed, Bush did
justify the war as a quest for Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, which turned
out not to exist.
“The other Republican
candidates, who have had this fight with Trump before, did not defend the war
as their party has in the past, but rather offered the party’s standard line of
the moment, which is that Bush had been innocently misled by ‘faulty
intelligence.’
“But neither version of history
is really correct. The US primarily invaded Iraq not because of lies or because
of bad intelligence, though both featured. In fact, it invaded because of an
ideology.”
“…This is
perhaps not as satisfying as the ‘Bush lied, people died’ bumper sticker
history that has since taken hold on much of the left and elements of the Tea
Party right. Nor is it as convenient as the Republican establishment’s polite
fiction that Bush was misled by "faulty intelligence."
Fisher’s long account of how the
neoconservatives agitated for war in the name of an “idealistic” ideology that
sought to transform the Middle East into a “democratic” model is accurate as
far as it goes. Yet the idea that the neocons were – or are – above fabricating
evidence to make their case is naïve, at best. “If the problem were merely that
Bush lied,” says Fisher, “then the solution would be straightforward: Check the
administration’s facts. But how do you fact-check an ideology …?”
What if the ideology justifies
lying for a “noble” end? And of course the Bush administration’s facts were checked,
both during and after the war (see above): what we can conclude from this
fact-checking is that the policymakers 1) Started out with an agenda, 2)
Suppressed all evidence that contradicted it, and 3) Made up “factoids” out of
whole cloth, the most egregious being those contained in the Niger uranium
forgeries and the outright lies disseminated by Ahmed Chalabi and his Iraqi
National Congress.
We can see how the neoconservatives
within the administration constructed a parallel intelligence-gathering
apparatus, independent of – and usually in opposition to – the CIA and the rest
of the intelligence community. We can further see how their intelligence
product was “stovepiped” up to the highest echelons, and landed on the
President’s desk unvetted and unconfirmed. All the safeguards against
compromising the US intelligence stream were dismantled – to what purpose?
Fisher doesn’t think to ask this vital question. Instead, he attributes it to
“ideology”;
“It does not appear that the
administration encouraged them to lie, but rather that deep-rooted biases led
top officials to dismiss the mountains of intelligence that undercut their
theories and to favor deeply problematic intelligence that supported it.
“… By all appearances,
administration officials believed their allegations of Iraqi WMDs were true and
that this was indeed sufficient justification. Why else would the US launch a
desperate, high-profile search for WMDs after invading – which only ended up
drawing more attention to how false those allegations had been?
“Rather, they had deceived
themselves into seeing half-baked intelligence as affirming their desire for
war, and then had sold this to the American people as theircasus belli, when in fact it was secondary to their more high-minded
and ideological mission that would have been too difficult to explain. That,
more than overstating intelligence on WMDs, was the really egregious lie.”
But of
course they had to launch a hunt for the WMD they knew weren’t there – after
all, they had justified the war on this basis. And so what if they were never
found? They got away with it, didn’t they? There was never any real
investigation into the intelligence-gathering activities of the Office of
Special Plans, or of efforts to suppress dissent within the mainstream
intelligence agencies. This was scotched by the politicians, who never followed through with
their “phase two” investigation of the murky circumstances surrounding the
administration’s activities.
By the
time it was revealed that the war critics were right and that there weren’t any
WMD in Iraq, the neocons’ goal had already been accomplished – the destruction
of Iraq and the establishment of a permanent pretext for a US military presence
in the region. Whatever consequences would follow the revelation of the
deception – and deception it was – would be borne by the hapless George W.
Bush, who was never the sharpest blade in the drawer to begin – and whom the
neocons soon threw overboardas someone not willing or able to carry out
their full agenda.
The US intelligence stream had been
contaminated for a purpose: some entity with an agenda that included getting us
inextricably involved in the Middle East over the long term. But who?
Karen
Kwiatkowski, who worked in the office that was to become the Office of Special
Plans, is an eyewitness:
“In early winter, an incident
occurred that was seared into my memory. A coworker and I were suddenly
directed to go down to the Mall entrance to pick up some Israeli generals.
Post-9/11 rules required one escort for every three visitors, and there were
six or seven of them waiting. The Navy lieutenant commander and I hustled down.
Before we could apologize for the delay, the leader of the pack surged ahead,
his colleagues in close formation, leaving us to double-time behind the group
as they sped to Undersecretary Feith’s office on the fourth floor. Two thoughts
crossed our minds: are we following close enough to get credit for escorting
them, and do they really know where they are going? We did get credit, and they
did know. Once in Feith’s waiting room, the leader continued at speed to
Feith’s closed door. An alert secretary saw this coming and had leapt from her
desk to block the door. ‘Mr. Feith has a visitor. It will only be a few more
minutes.’ The leader craned his neck to look around the secretary’s head as he
demanded, ‘Who is in there with him?’
“This minor crisis of curiosity
past, I noticed the security sign-in roster. Our habit, up until a few weeks
before this incident, was not to sign in senior visitors like ambassadors. But
about once a year, the security inspectors send out a warning letter that they
were coming to inspect records. As a result, sign-in rosters were laid out,
visible and used. I knew this because in the previous two weeks I watched this
explanation being awkwardly presented to several North African ambassadors as
they signed in for the first time and wondered why and why now. Given all this
and seeing the sign-in roster, I asked the secretary, ‘Do you want these guys
to sign in?’ She raised her hands, both palms toward me, and waved frantically
as she shook her head. ‘No, no, no, it is not necessary, not at all.’ Her body
language told me I had committed a faux pas for even asking the question. My
fellow escort and I chatted on the way back to our office about how the
generals knew where they were going (most foreign visitors to the five-sided
asylum don’t) and how the generals didn’t have to sign in.”
Israeli
generals walking in and out of Feith’s office was the least of it. Feith
himself, along with Richard Perle, David Wurmser and his wife Meyrav (all with
links to Feith’s Office of Special Plans), had once prepared a strategy paper
for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during his first term in office. Entitled
“A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” the
paper recommended a general offensive against Israel’s neighbors:
“Israel can shape its strategic
environment, in cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing,
and even rolling back Syria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein
from power in Iraq – an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right
– as a means of foiling Syria’s regional ambitions.”
Stephen
Walt and John Mearsheimer showed in their book, The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy, that the Jewish
state’s American amen corner played an instrumental role in agitating for the
Iraq war. As they pointed out, “A Clean Break”
“[C]alled for Israel to take
steps to reorder the entire Middle East. Netanyahu did not follow their advice,
but Feith, Perle and Wurmser were soon urging the Bush administration to pursue
those same goals. The Ha’aretz columnist
Akiva Eldar warned that Feith and Perle ‘are walking a fine line between their
loyalty to American governments … and Israeli interests.’”
Whose interests were they pursuing
while they manufactured talking points based on “faulty” intelligence in order
to bamboozle Congress and the American people into fighting Israel’s war on
Saddam Hussein?
But that
was just the beginning of the long tortured road they led us down. As Ariel
Sharon told a visiting delegation of American congressmen at the time, Iran, Libya, and Syria were next on Israel’s agenda:
“’These are irresponsible
states, which must be disarmed of weapons mass destruction, and a successful
American move in Iraq as a model will make that easier to achieve,’ said the
Prime Minister to his guests, rather like a commander issuing orders to his
foot-soldiers. While noting that Israel was not itself at war with Iraq, he
went on to say that ‘the American action is of vital importance.’”
Two down, one to go.
Much of
the “faulty” intelligence that found its way to the desks of Bush and Cheney
originated with foreign intelligence agencies, and there is plenty of evidence
that much of it came straight from Tel Aviv. Certainly the Israelis had an
interest in using the United States military as a cat’s-paw against their
traditional Arab enemies, notably Iraq. And the defense of Israel was often
cited by the administration as a justification for targeting Saddam Hussein.
This wasn’t the first time a foreign entity launched a covert
operation to lure the United States into an overseas conflict, and it certainly
won’t be the last – that is, unless and until we learn the real lesson of the
Iraq war.
Yes, it was ideology
that led us to commit ourselves to become the policemen of the Middle East –
but the adherents of that ideology utilized methods that included fabricating
“evidence” of Iraqi WMD. One aspect of neoconservative ideology conveniently
left out of Fisher’s otherwise comprehensive analysis of the neocon mindset is
their dedication to Israel as a model “democracy” and our ideal ally which must
always be defended. An odd omission, to say the least.
If we look at the Iraq war as a
wildly successful covert operation to lure us into a position from which it is
almost impossible to extricate ourselves – all to the advantage of a certain
Middle Eastern “democracy” beloved by the neocons – then the whole disastrous
episode begins to make sense. If such is the case, then why should the
perpetrators care if no WMD were found after the invasion? It would be no skin
off the Israelis’ noses: Bush would get the blame, not Bibi. And of course the
operatives inside the administration responsible for skewing the intelligence
could always claim to have been mistaken: after all, everybody thought
the WMD were there, and in any case they would never be held to account. Since
when is anybody in our government held accountable for anything?
Yes, I know, this is a “conspiracy
theory,” and therefore we aren’t allowed to consider it, let alone examine the
facts that back it up. Nations never engage in conspiracies,
and government officials never lie.
And if you believe that, there’s a
bridge in Brooklyn you might be interested in purchasing….
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