Beyond Iraq - The Future of U.S.
War Crimes
excerpted from the book
In the Name of Democracy
American War Crimes in Iraq and
Beyond
edited by Jeremy Brecher, Jill
Cutler, and Brendan Smith
Metropolitan Books, 2005, paper
p103
Who bears the ultimate responsibility for an illegal invasion
and occupation, dropping cluster bombs onto residential neighborhoods,
attacking hospitals, and torturing prisoners?
The U.S. Supreme Court affirmatively answered
this question in 1945 by upholding the conviction and death sentence
of the Japanese commander Yamashita for his failure to halt the
crimes of his troops. According to the court's majority opinion,
the law of war "presupposes that its violation is to be avoided
through the control of the operation of war by its commanders."
Fifty years later, this theory of command responsibility was the
basis for The Hague Tribunal indictments of the Serbian civilian
leader, Radovan Karadzic, and the commander of the army, Ratko
Mladic. These courts understood that meaningful enforcement of
international law depends on holding those in power accountable
for both the effects of their policy decisions and the conduct
of their troops.
p103
In the Yamashita case, the U.S. Supreme Court took the doe( trine
of command responsibility even farther to include the principle
that "a person in a position of superior authority... should
also be held responsible for failure to deter the unlawful behavior
of subordinates."
p112
Rudolf Hess, the SS commandant at Auschwitz
"This so-called ill treatment and
torture in detention centers, stories of which were spread everywhere
among the people, and later by the prisoners who were freed...
were not, as some assumed, inflicted methodically, but were excesses
committed by individual prison guards, their deputies, and men
who laid violent hands on the detainees."
p119
Center for Constitutional Rights
Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, article 28:
(a) A military commander or person effectively
acting as a military commander shall be criminally responsible
for crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court committed by forces
under his or her effective command and control, or effective authority
and control as the case may be, as a result of his or her failure
to exercise control properly over such forces, where:
(i) That military commander or person
either knew or, owing to the circumstances at the time, should
have known that the forces were committing or about to commit
such crimes; and
(ii) That military commander or person
failed to take all necessary and reasonable measures within his
or her power to prevent or repress their commission or to submit
the matter to the competent authorities for investigation and
prosecution.
In the Additional Protocol of the Geneva
Convention of August 12, 1949 on the protection of victims of
international armed conflicts (Protocol I), the criminal or disciplinary
responsibility of a superior is provided for, in Art. 86, Para.
2, when such persons "knew, or had information which should
have enabled him to conclude in the circumstances at the time,
that he was committing or was going to commit such a breach and
if they did not take all feasible measures within their power
to prevent or repress the breach."
It is therefore according to international
customary law completely unambiguous that superiors make themselves
culpable under the above-mentioned conditions, when their subordinates
commit war crimes.
p131
Memorandum from Alberto R. Gonzales to the President
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: ALBERTO
R. GONZALES SUBJECT: DECISION RE APPLICATION OF THE GENEVA CONVENTION...
Ramifications of Determination that [Geneva
Convention on the Treatment of Prisoners of War] does not apply.
*Positive:
* Preserves flexibility... this new paradigm
renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on questioning of
enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its provisions.
*Substantially reduced the threat of domestic
criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. 2441).
* That Statute, enacted in 1996, prohibits
the commission of a "war crime" by or against a U.S.
official. "War crime" for these purposes is defined
to include any grave breach of [Geneva Convention on the Treatment
of Prisoners of War] ...
* . . it is difficult to predict the
motives of prosecutors and independent counsels who may in the
future decide to pursue unwarranted charges based on Section 2441.
Your determination [to not apply the Geneva Conventions] would
create a reasonable basis in law that Section 2441 does not apply,
which would provide a solid defense to any future prosecution.
p141
The basic intentions of the Bush administration were set out 2002
in The National Security Strategy of the United States. This extraordinary
document declared a war against terrorists "of uncertain
duration." It enunciated a doctrine of preventive war in
which "the United States will act against such emerging threats
before they are fully formed." The United States "will
not hesitate to act alone, if necessary, to exercise our right
of self defense by acting preemptively."
That such policies were not empty words
was demonstrated by U.S. attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq and the
train of massacres and torture that has followed them. And evidence
indicates that further war crimes are currently being planned.
Officials in the Bush administration have
made threats against countries all over the world, ranging from
"Axis of Evil" members North Korea and Iran to Cuba
to Syria, among others. Are these all empty threats? Evidence
suggests otherwise. Seymour Hersh, the journalist who did so much
to open the realities of Abu Ghraib to public scrutiny, revealed
that President Bush had signed "a series of findings and
executive orders authorizing secret commando groups and other
Special Forces units to conduct covert operations against suspected
terrorist targets in as many as ten nations in the Middle East
and South Asia." Hersh's "The Coming Wars" describes
these plans. According to Bob Herbert of the New York Times, the
Pentagon is even proposing "commencing combat operations"
whose purpose is "chiefly to obtain intelligence" -a
war crime on its face.
Meanwhile, according to numerous press
reports, the Pentagon is considering the use of teams of assassins-what
are generally known as death squads-to attack those they allege
to be the leadership of the Iraqi resistance. In "The Salvador
Option," three Newsweek reporters describe the plans to revive
strategies used to terrorize the population of El Salvador during
the civil war and Pentagon proposals to use them against the Sunni
population in Iraq.
And the Bush administration is preparing
to hide its crimes indefinitely into the future. It plans to subject
those who have not been eliminated by the "Salvador option"
to lifetime "detentions" in secret prisons around the
world.
p142
Former Reagan administration official and conservative columnist
Paul Craig Roberts argues that, with the elimination of more moderate
voices in the Bush administration, the military, and the CIA,
"there is no one left to stop them."
p143
The National Security Strategy of the United States of America
- September 2002
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
[In September 2002, well before the attack
on Iraq, a major policy report from President Bush to Congress
called The National Security Strategy of the United States laid
out the basis for the Administration's ongoing disregard of both
American and international law. As Senator Robert Byrd observed,
"Under this strategy, the President lays claim to an expansive
power to use our military to strike other nations first, even
if we have not been threatened or provoked. There is no question
that the President has the inherent authority to repel attacks
against our country, but this National Security Strategy is unconstitutional
on its face. It takes the checks and balances established in the
Constitution that limit the President's ability to use our military
at his pleasure, and throws them out the window. This doctrine
of preemptive strikes places the sole decision of war and peace
in the hands of the President and undermines the Constitutional
power of Congress to declare war."
The report's threat of "anticipatory
action" even in the event of "uncertainty... as to the
time and place of the enemy's attack" directly contradicts
the UN Charter and international law's established prohibition
of "preventive war:' The National Security Strategy of the
United States provided a charter for the Bush administration's
war crimes in the past-and it provides a charter for continuing
war crimes in the future.]
The great struggles of the twentieth century
between liberty and totalitarianism ended with a decisive victory
for the forces of freedom and a single sustainable model for national
success: freedom, democracy, and free enterprise.
Today, the United States enjoys a position
of unparalleled military strength and great economic and political
influence. In keeping with our heritage and principles, we do
not use our strength to press for unilateral advantage. We seek
instead to create a balance of power that favors human freedom:
conditions in which all nations and all societies can choose for
themselves the rewards and challenges of political and economic
liberty.
Defending our Nation against its enemies
is the first and fundamental commitment of the Federal Government.
Today, that task has changed dramatically. Enemies in the past
needed great armies and great industrial capabilities to endanger
America. Now, shadowy networks of individuals can bring great
chaos and suffering to our shores for less than it costs to purchase
a single tank. Terrorists are organized to penetrate open societies
and to turn the power of modern technologies against us.
To defeat this threat we must make use
of every tool in our arsenal-military power, better homeland defenses,
law enforcement, intelligence, and vigorous efforts to cut off
terrorist financing. The war against terrorists of global reach
is a global enterprise of uncertain duration. America will help
nations that need our assistance in combating terror. And America
will hold to account nations that are compromised by terror, including
those who harbor terrorists because the allies of terror are the
enemies of civilization. The United States and countries cooperating
with us must not allow the terrorists to develop new home bases.
Together, we will seek to deny them sanctuary at every turn.
The gravest danger our Nation faces lies
at the crossroads of radicalism and technology. Our enemies have
openly declared that they are seeking weapons of mass destruction,
and evidence indicates that they are doing so with determination.
The United States will not allow these efforts to succeed. We
will build defenses against ballistic missiles and other means
of delivery. We will cooperate with other nations to deny, contain,
and curtail our enemies' efforts to acquire dangerous technologies.
And, as a matter of common sense and self-defense, America will
act against such emerging threats before they are fully formed.
As we defend the peace, we will also take
advantage of an historic opportunity to preserve the peace. Today,
the international community has the best chance since the rise
of the nation-state in the seventeenth century to build a world
where great powers compete in peace instead of continually prepare
for war. Today, the world's great powers find ourselves on the
same side-united by common dangers of terrorist violence and chaos.
In building a balance of power that favors
freedom, the United States is guided by the conviction that all
nations have important responsibilities. Nations that enjoy freedom
must actively fight terror. Nations that depend on international
stability must help prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction.
Nations that seek international aid must govern themselves wisely,
so that aid is well spent. For freedom to thrive, accountability
must be expected and required.
The United States of America is fighting
a war against terrorists of global reach. The enemy is not a single
political regime or person or religion or ideology. The enemy
is terrorism-premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated
against innocents.
In many regions, legitimate grievances
prevent the emergence of a lasting peace. Such grievances deserve
to be, and must be, addressed within a political process. But
no cause justifies terror. The United States will make no concessions
to terrorist demands and strike no deals with them. We make no
distinction between terrorists and those who knowingly harbor
or provide aid to them.
The struggle against global terrorism
is different from any other war in our history. It will be fought
on many fronts against a particularly elusive enemy over an extended
period of time. Progress will come through the persistent accumulation
of successes -some seen, some unseen.
Today our enemies have seen the results
of what civilized nations can, and will, do against regimes that
harbor, support, and use terrorism to achieve their political
goals. Afghanistan has been liberated; coalition forces continue
to hunt down the Taliban and al Qaida. But it is not only this
battlefield on which we will engage terrorists.
Thousands of trained terrorists remain
at large with cells in North America, South America, Europe, Africa,
the Middle East, and across Asia. Our priority will be first to
disrupt and destroy terrorist organizations of global reach and
attack their leadership; command, control, and communications;
material support; and finances. This will have a disabling effect
upon the terrorists' ability to plan and operate.
While the United States will constantly
strive to enlist the support of the international community, we
will not hesitate to act alone, if necessary, to exercise our
right of self defense by acting preemptively against such terrorists,
to prevent them from doing harm / against our people and our country;
and denying further sponsor( ship, support, and sanctuary to terrorists
by convincing or compelling states to accept their sovereign responsibilities.
We must be prepared to stop rogue states and their terrorist clients
before they are able to threaten or use weapons of mass destruction
against the United States and our allies and friends. Our response
must take full advantage of strengthened alliances, the establishment
of new partnerships with former adversaries, innovation in the
use of military forces, modern technologies, including the development
of an effective missile defense system, and increased emphasis
on intelligence collection and analysis.
Traditional concepts of deterrence will
not work against a terrorist enemy whose avowed tactics are wanton
destruction and the targeting of innocents; whose so-called soldiers
seek martyrdom in death and whose most potent protection is statelessness.
The overlap between states that sponsor terror and those that
pursue WMD compels us to action.
For centuries, international law recognized
that nations need not suffer an attack before they can lawfully
take action to defend themselves against forces that present an
imminent danger of attack. Legal scholars and international jurists
often conditioned the legitimacy of preemption on the existence
of an imminent threat - most often a visible mobilization of armies,
navies, and air 'forces preparing to attack. We must adapt the
concept of imminent threat to the capabilities and objectives
of today's adversaries.
Rogue states and terrorists do not seek
to attack us using conventional means.
They know such attacks would fail. Instead,
they rely on acts of terror and, potentially, the use of weapons
of mass destruction - weapons that can be easily concealed, delivered
covertly, and used without warning. The targets of these attacks
are our military forces and our civilian population, in direct
violation of one of the principal norms of the law of warfare.
As was demonstrated by the losses on September ii, 2001, mass
civilian casualties is the specific objective of terrorists and
these losses would be exponentially more severe if terrorists
acquired and used weapons of mass destruction.
The United States has long maintained
the option of preemptive actions to counter a sufficient threat
to our national security. The greater the threat, the greater
is the risk of inaction-and the more compelling the case for taking
anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty remains
as to the time and place of the enemy's attack. To forestall or
prevent such hostile acts by our adversaries, the United States
will, if necessary, act preemptively.
p148
The Coming Wars
by Seymour Hersh
[Source: Originally appeared in the New
Yorker, January 24 and 31, 2005, Available at
www.newyorker.com/
[In a pair of New Yorker articles and
his book Chain of Command, the investigative journalist Seymour
Hersh not only revealed the prisoner abuse in Abu Ghraib but exposed
top Bush administration officials' responsibility for it. After
President Bush's reelection, Hersh began to investigate the Bush
administration's plans for military action against Iran and as
many as ten additional countries. Virtually unlimited authority
has been given to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to operate
in and against other countries without the consent of their governments,
the U.S. Congress, or the international community. Such activity
violates both American and international law on its face.
Hersh wrote the first account of the My
Lai massacre in South Vietnam in 1969. He has won more than a
dozen major journalism prizes, including the 1970 Pulitzer Prize
for International Reporting and four George Polk Awards. He is
also the author of six books, including The Price of Power: Kissinger
in the Nixon White House, which won the National Book Critics
Circle Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Award.]
George W. Bush's reelection was not his
only victory last fall. The President and his national-security
advisers have consolidated control over the military and intelligence
communities' strategic analyses and covert operations to a degree
unmatched since the rise of the post-Second World War national-security
state. Bush has an aggressive and ambitious agenda for using that
control against the mullahs in Iran and against targets in the
ongoing war on terrorism-during his second term.
Despite the deteriorating security situation
in Iraq, the Bush Administration has not reconsidered its basic
long-range policy goal in the Middle East: the establishment of
democracy throughout the region. Bush's reelection is regarded
within the Administration as evidence of America's support for
his decision to go to war. It has reaffirmed the position of the
neoconservatives in the Pentagon's civilian leadership who advocated
the invasion, including
Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of
Defense, and Douglas Feith, the Under-secretary for Policy. According
to a former high-level intelligence official, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff shortly after
the election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers had
been heard and the American people did not accept their message.
Rumsfeld added that America was committed to staying in Iraq and
that there would be no second-guessing.
"This is a war against terrorism,
and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush Administration is looking
at this as a huge war zone," the former high-level intelligence
official told me. "Next, we're going to have the Iranian
campaign. We've declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are,
are the enemy. This is the last hurrah-we've got four years, and
want to come out of this saying we won the war on terrorism."
In interviews with past and present intelligence
and military officials, I was told that the agenda had been determined
before the Presidential election, and much of it would be Rumsfeld's
responsibility. The war on terrorism would be expanded, and effectively
placed under the Pentagon's control. The President has signed
a series of findings and executive orders authorizing secret commando
groups and other Special Forces units to conduct covert operations
against suspected terrorist targets in as many as ten nations
in the Middle East and South Asia.
The Administration has been conducting
secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran at least since last
summer. Much of the focus is on the accumulation of intelligence
and targeting information on Iranian nuclear, chemical, and missile
sites, both declared and suspected. The goal is to identify and
isolate three dozen, and perhaps more, such targets that could
be destroyed by precision strikes and short-term commando raids.
"The civilians in the Pentagon want to go into Iran and destroy
as much of the military infrastructure as possible," the
government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon told me.
Some of the missions involve extraordinary
cooperation. For example, the former high-level intelligence official
told me that an American commando task force has been set up in
South Asia and is now working closely with a group of Pakistani
scientists and technicians who had dealt with Iranian counterparts.
(In 2003, the I.A.E.A. [International Atomic Energy Agency disclosed
that Iran had been secretly receiving nuclear technology from
Pakistan for more than a decade, and had withheld that information
from inspectors.) The American task force, aided by the information
from Pakistan, has been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan
in a hunt for underground installations. The task-force members,
or their locally recruited agents, secreted remote detection devices
known as sniffers-capable of sampling the atmosphere for radioactive
emissions and other evidence of nuclear-enrichment programs.
There has also been close, and largely
unacknowledged, cooperation with Israel. The government consultant
with ties to the Pentagon said that the Defense Department civilians,
under the leadership of Douglas Feith, have been working with
Israeli planners and consultants to develop and refine potential
nuclear, chemical weapons, and missile targets inside Iran.
The Pentagon's contingency plans for a
broader invasion of Iran are also being updated. Strategists at
the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, in Tampa, Florida,
have been asked to revise the military's war plan, providing for
a maximum ground and air invasion of Iran. Updating the plan makes
sense, whether or not the Administration intends to act, because
the geopolitics of the region have changed dramatically in the
last three years. Previously, an American invasion force would
have had to enter Iran by sea, by way of the Persian Gulf or the
Gulf of Oman; now troops could move in on the ground, from Afghanistan
or Iraq. Commando units and other assets could be introduced through
new bases in the Central Asian republics.
It is possible that some of the American
officials who talk about the need to eliminate Iran's nuclear
infrastructure are doing so as part of a propaganda campaign aimed
at pressuring Iran to give up its weapons planning. In my interviews
over the past two months, I was given a much harsher view. The
hawks in the Administration believe that it will soon become clear
that the Europeans' negotiated approach cannot succeed, and that
at that time the Administration will act. "We're not dealing
with a set of National Security
Council option papers here," the
former high-level intelligence official told me. "They've
already passed that wicket. It's not if we're going to do anything
against Iran. They're doing it."
The immediate goals of the attacks would
be to destroy, or at least temporarily derail, Iran's ability
to go nuclear. But there are other, equally purposeful, motives
at work. The government consultant told me that the hawks in the
Pentagon, in private discussions, have been urging a limited attack
on Iran because they believe it could lead to a toppling of the
religious leadership. "Within the soul of Iran there is a
struggle between secular nationalists and reformers, on the one
hand, and, on the other hand, the fundamentalist Islamic movement,"
the consultant told me. "The minute the aura of invincibility
which the mullahs enjoy is shattered, and with it the ability
to hoodwink the West, the Iranian regime will collapse"-like
the former Communist regimes in Romania, East Germany, and the
Soviet Union. Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz share that belief, he said.
"The idea that an American attack
on Iran's nuclear facilities would produce a popular uprising
is extremely ill-informed," said Flynt Leverett, a Middle
East scholar who worked on the National Security Council in the
Bush Administration. "You have to understand that the nuclear
ambition in Iran is supported across the political spectrum, and
Iranians will perceive attacks on these sites as attacks on their
ambitions to be a major regional player and a modern nation that's
technologically sophisticated." Leverett, who is now a senior
fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, at the Brookings
Institution, warned that an American attack, if it takes place,
"will produce an Iranian backlash against the United States
and a rallying around the regime."
According to a Pentagon consultant, an
Execute Order on the Global War on Terrorism (referred to throughout
the government as GWOT) was issued at Rumsfeld's direction. The
order specifically authorized the military "to find and finish"
terrorist targets, the consultant said. It included a target list
that cited Al Qaeda network members, Al Qaeda senior leadership,
and other high-value targets. The consultant said that the order
had been cleared throughout the national-security bureaucracy
in Washington.
Two former C.I.A. clandestine officers,
Vince Cannistraro and Philip Giraldi, who publish Intelligence
Brief, a newsletter for their business clients, reported last
month on the existence of a broad counter-terrorism Presidential
finding that permitted the Pentagon "to operate unilaterally
in a number of countries where there is a perception of a clear
and evident terrorist threat... A number of the countries are
friendly to the U.S. and are major trading partners. Most have
been cooperating in the war on terrorism." The two former
officers listed some of the countries-Algeria, Sudan, Yemen, Syria,
and Malaysia. (I was subsequently told by the former highlevel
intelligence official that Tunisia is also on the list.)
The new rules will enable the Special
Forces community to set up what it calls "action teams"
in the target countries overseas which can be used to find and
eliminate terrorist organizations. "Do you remember the right-wing
execution squads in El Salvador?" the former high-level intelligence
official asked me, referring to the military-led gangs that committed
atrocities in the early nineteen-eighties. "We founded them
and we financed them," he said. "The objective now is
to recruit locals in any area we want. And we aren't going to
tell Congress about it." A former military officer, who has
knowledge of the Pentagon's commando capabilities, said, "We're
going to be riding with the bad boys."
"It's a finesse to give power to
Rumsfeld-giving him the right to act swiftly, decisively, and
lethally," the first Pentagon adviser told e. "It's
a global free-fire zone."
p160
There Is No One Left to Stop Them
by Paul Craig Roberts
Source: www.antiwar.com/, November 19, 2004
The United States is in dire straits.
Its government is in the hands of people who connect to events
neither rationally nor morally.
If President Bush's neoconservative administration
were rational, the U.S. would never have invaded Iraq. If Bush's
government were moral, it would be ashamed of the carnage and
horror it has unleashed in Iraq.
The Bush administration has no doubts.
It knows that it is right and virtuous. Bush and the neocons dismiss
factual criticisms as evidence that the critics are "against
us."
People who know that they are right cannot
avoid sinking deeper into mistakes. The Bush administration led
the U.S. into a war on the basis of claims that are now known
to be untrue. Yet, President Bush and Vice President Cheney consistently
refuse to admit that any mistake has been made. The chances are
high, therefore, that the second Bush administration will be more
disastrous than the first.
The first Bush administration has cost
America 10,000 casualties (dead and wounded). Eight of 10 U.S.
divisions are tied down in Iraq by a few thousand lightly armed
insurgents. Polls reveal that most Iraqis regard Americans as
invaders and occupiers, not
as liberators. U.S. prestige in the Muslim
world has evaporated. The majority of Muslims who were with us,
are now against us. Sooner or later, this change of mind will
endanger our puppet regimes in Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan, and Saudi
Arabia.
In a futile effort to assert hegemony
in Iraq, the U.S. has largely destroyed Fallujah, once a city
of 300,000. Hundreds, if not thousands, of civilians have been
killed by the indiscriminate use of high explosives.
To cover up the extensive civilian deaths,
U.S. authorities count all Iraqi dead as insurgents, delivering
a high body count as claim of success for a bloody-minded operation.
The human cost for American families is 51 dead and 450 wounded
U.S. troops-casualties on par with the worst days of the Vietnam
War.
The film of a U.S. Marine shooting a captured,
wounded, and unarmed Iraqi prisoner in the head at close range
has been shown all over the world. Coming on top of proven acts
of torture at U.S. military prisons, this war crime has destroyed
what remained of America's image and moral authority.
On Nov. 17, the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights called for investigation of American war crimes in
Fallujah. This is a remarkable turn of events, showing how far
U.S. prestige and the morale of our armed forces have fallen.
However, for Bush administration partisans,
war crimes are no longer something of which to be ashamed. Reflecting
the neoconservative mindset that America's monopoly on virtue
justifies any and all U.S. actions, Fox "News" talking
heads and their Republican Party and retired military guests have
arrogantly defended the Marine who murdered the wounded Iraqi
prisoner.
Iraqi insurgents are condemned for deaths
they inflict on civilians. But when American troops fire indiscriminately
upon civilians and U.S. missile and bombing attacks kill Iraqis
in their homes, the deaths are dismissed as "collateral damage."
This double standard is a further indication that Americans have
come to the belief that U.S. ends justify any means.
A number of former top U.S. military leaders
and heads of the CIA and National Security Agency have condemned
Bush's invasion of Iraq as a "strategic blunder." These
are people who gave their lives to the service of our country
and can in no way be said to be "against us."
However, the Bush administration and its
apologists regard critics as enemies. To accept criticism means
to be held accountable, something the Bush administration is determined
to avoid. Condoleezza Rice, who failed as National Security Adviser
to prevent the Pentagon from using fabricated information to start
a Middle East war, is being elevated to secretary of state in
Bush's second term.
Indeed, the entire panoply of neoconservatives,
who intentionally fabricated the "intelligence" used
to justify the U.S. invasion of Iraq, are being rewarded by promotion
to higher offices. Stephen Hadley is moving up to National Security
Adviser. Hadley is the person who advocates "usable"
mini-nukes for the U.S. conquest of the Middle East.
The few officials who are not warmongers,
such as Secretary of State Cohn Powell and Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage, are leaving the Bush administration. Right
before our eyes, the CIA is being turned into a neoconservative
propaganda organ as numerous senior officials resign and are replaced
with yes-men.
With its current troop strength, the Bush
administration cannot achieve the Middle East goals it shares
with the Israeli government. Either the draft will have to be
restored or mini-nukes developed and deployed. As insurgents do
not mass in military formations, the mini-nukes would be used
as a genocidal weapon to wipe out entire cities that show any
resistance to neocon dictates.
Many Bush partisans send me e-mails fiercely
advocating "virtuous violence." They do not flinch at
the use of nuclear weapons against Muslims who refuse to do as
we tell them. These partisans do not doubt for a second that Bush
has the right to dictate to Muslims and everyone else (especially
the French). Many also express their conviction that all of Bush's
critics should be rounded up and sent to the Middle East in time
for the first nuke.
These attitudes represent a sharp break
from American values and foreign policy. The new [Bush] conservatives
have more in common with the Brownshirt movement that silenced
German opposition to Hitler than with America's Founding Fathers.
Bush's reelection, if won fair and square,
was won because 20 million Christian evangelicals voted against
abortion and homosexuals. However, Bush's neoconservative masters
will use his reelection as a mandate for further violence in the
Middle East. They intend to set the U.S. on a course of long and
debilitating war.
There is no one left in the Bush administration,
the CIA, or the military to stop them.
In
the Name of Democracy
Home
Page