http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/ritter/33788/
It's Criminal
Posted by Scott Ritter at 9:59 AM on March
20, 2006.
As America reaches the
third anniversary of President Bush's decision to invade and occupy Iraq, there
is for the first time the unsettling realization brought about by the clarity
of acts that emerges only after the passage of time that something horrible has
happened.
This awakening of
collective awareness on the part of the American people is reflected not only
in the numerous polls which show President Bush's popularity plummeting to
all-time lows, largely because of the war in Iraq, but also the collective
shrug of the shoulders on the part of the one-time cheerleaders for the war in
Iraq -- the mainstream American media -- when covering the hollow rhetoric of
the President as he tries to rally a nation around a cause that has long since
lost its allure.
No amount of flowery
language and repeated pulls at the patriotic heartstrings of America, no
repeated assault on the senses and sensibilities through repetitious referral
to the events of 9/11 can jump start a second phase of the kind of mindless
nationalistic fervor that greeted the erstwhile Cowboy President when he first
herded a compliant America down the path of war with Iraq three years ago.
Looking back on the
string of unfulfilled objectives, broken promises, squandered dreams, shattered
bodies and eviscerated lives that was and is the war in Iraq, one thought
emerges plain and clear. This isn't simply a result of bad governance. This is
criminal.
Bad governance is
telling the American people that a war with Iraq would be concluded in a manner
of months, and would cost the American taxpayer less that $2 billion, when in
fact the war has gone on for three years now, with no end in sight, and over a
quarter-trillion dollars have been expended, with untold billions more to be
spent.
Criminal governance is
the fabrication of a justification for war (weapons of mass destruction),
hiding the President’s true intentions from the American people and the
Congress of the United States (Bush signed off on the Iraq war plans in late
August 2002, and yet continued to publicly state that no decision for military
action had been made), and shredding international law by waging an aggressive
war of pre-emption void of any United Nations Security Council resolution
authorizing such actions.
Bad governance is
manipulating war planning on the part of military professionals so that we
enter into a conflict with far too few troops for the task, with no plan for
how to proceed once the fighting ended and the reality of occupation set in.
Criminal governance is
violating every principle of the laws of war in the conduct of the occupation
of Iraq, manipulating the economic and political direction of Iraq, suppressing
its population, and engaging in wanton acts of widespread murder, torture and
abuse of the Iraqi people.
The fact is the war in
Iraq has degenerated into one giant hate crime.
American
soldiers and Marines are being thrown into a cauldron of our own making,
scalded by a conflict with no purpose or direction, with the end result being
that in order to survive these fighting men and women have dehumanized the
totality of the Iraqi people.
The ancestors of
ancient Babylon have become nothing more than "sand niggers",
"rag-heads", "camel jockeys", "ninja women" or
"haji" in the hearts and minds of American fighting men who are now
killing Iraqis in ever increasing numbers. Gone is any talk of rebuilding Iraq.
We are there to destroy it. The criminal nature of the war in Iraq is starting
to become common knowledge among observers of the war.
It has long sense been
common knowledge on the part of those waging it. In Vietnam Americans were
shocked by the revelations of Mai Lai and the murder of innocent Vietnamese
civilians by American fighting men. But Mai Lai is repeated in bits and pieces
every day in Iraq, with the American military occupation slaughtering family
after family of Iraqis in the name of bringing peace and security.
The realization that
something has gone horribly wrong in Iraq, however, has not translated into any
kind of discernable action on the part of the American people. While pundit
after pundit breaks ranks with the Bush administration on Iraq, often
repudiating their own pre-war chest beating and encouragement of the war, the
fact is that the manifesto which manifested itself in the invasion of Iraq --
the 2002 National Security Strategy of the United States -- continues to
dictate the manner and nature of America's interfacing with the rest of the
world in unquestioned fashion.
Indeed, President Bush
has, on the eve of the third anniversary of the Iraqi war, promulgated a new,
improved version of this manifesto, the 2006 National Security Strategy of the
United States, which re-affirms America's commitment to the principles of
pre-emptive war. In short, the President has re-certified America as the
greatest threat to international peace and security in modern times, especially
when one considers that even as America is engaged in the brutal rape and
occupation of Iraq, President Bush has his eyes firmly set on another war of
aggression in Iran.
What are the American
people doing in response? There is a huge difference between becoming aware and
taking action. While poll numbers on Iraq reflect a growing unease about the
war, this unease has not manifested itself into any discernable reaction of
consequence. The Democratic Party has remained largely mute, largely because of
the culpability on the part of much of its membership in facilitating and
sustaining the Iraqi war and its underlining doctrine of global domination by
the United States.
But in the face of the
near total subservience on the part of the Republican Party in supporting the
policies of President Bush no matter how illegal and harmful they are to
America and the world, the Democratic Party must shake
itself free of the doldrums it currently finds itself stuck in. The time for
passive recognition that the war in Iraq has gone bad is long past.
The time for concrete
political action has arrived. The Democrats need to recognize that the political
struggle in America today is not a trivial extension of the partisan Red
State-Blue State nonsense the American media likes to bandy about, but rather a
far more serious struggle of national survival, if one in fact defines the
American nation as being reflective of the ideals and values set forth by the
Constitution of the United States.
The Iraq War, if
anything, is a reflection of the total abrogation of constitutional
responsibility and process by the Congress of the United States. As a result,
the President has led a nation down the path of illegal war of aggression which
has damaged America's reputation abroad, and its very fabric here at home. The
Republican-controlled Congress has done little to stop this collective march
towards national self-destruction, rubber-stamping the president's illegal
actions with little regard to either the rule of law or Congress's status as a
second but equal branch of government.
This must end.
The fact is that
America today stands on the brink of having everything we stand for as a nation
being swept away by a power-crazed President and a compliant Congress, both of
whom are Republican. Whatever direction the Democratic Party takes in the
future, it must be with the recognition that the hopes and dreams of saving the
United States as a nation of laws founded in the words and principles of the
Constitution rest heavily on their shoulders. The Democratic Party must become
laser-like in its rejection of the war in Iraq, resolute in condemning this war
for what it is, an illegal war of aggression, and determined in fighting for
the concept of a nation governed by the rule of law by holding President Bush
accountable for his illegal actions.
In short, the rallying
cry of the Democratic Party must become impeachment. Given the magnitude of the
crimes committed by the United States in Iraq under the direction and
leadership of President Bush and his administration, there is simply no other
recourse that can bring a halt to the madness in Iraq, and the insanity being
planned in Iran and elsewhere.
The remedy is clear.
The question now is whether the Democratic Party is up to the task.
Scott Ritter served as
chief U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 until his resignation in 1998. He is the author of, most recently, Iraq Confidential: The
Untold Story of the Intelligence Conspiracy to Undermine the U.N. and Overthrow
Saddam Hussein (Nation Books, 2005).