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Where's
The Pretext?
Lack
of WMD Kills Case for War
by
Robert Jensen
April
29, 2003
How
blatantly can an administration lie to promote a war and get away with it?
We'll find out in the coming weeks, as U.S. forces in Iraq search for evidence
of banned weapons and U.S. officials shape postwar Iraq.
Ironically,
the conduct of the war provides compelling evidence that Iraq probably had no
usable weapons of mass destruction and posed no threat outside its borders.
Everyone agreed that Saddam Hussein was most likely to use such weapons if his
regime faced collapse. But no such weapons were used, suggesting that he lacked
the weapons or a delivery capacity, suggesting the Bush administration had been
lying.
That
would not be big news. To whip up fear about Iraq, U.S. officials lied and
distorted the truth for months:
*
In his Feb. 5 U.N. speech, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell claimed that a
"poison and explosive training center camp" existed in northeastern
Iraq. A few days later, journalists visited the site and found "a
dilapidated collection of concrete outbuildings" and no evidence for
Powell's claims.
*
The Blair administration's report on weapons - which Powell lauded in his U.N.
speech for its "exquisite detail" about "Iraqi deception
activities" - was stitched together from public sources, including a
12-year-old report. One expert described it as "cut-and-paste
plagiarism."
*
U.S. officials claimed that Iraq had purchased uranium from Niger. Mohamed
ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, later explained that
the documents on which the claim was based were faked.
Propagandists
know that perception counts for more than truth. This was the approach the
administration used concerning Iraq's alleged terrorist ties. Bush officials
avoided specific claims about Iraqi involvement in past attacks on Americans -
but they sowed enough speculation to create impressions. That's why in a March
poll, 45 percent of the American people believed Hussein had been
"personally involved" in the 9/11 attacks.
This
strategy of multiple justifications provided a shifting cover story to divert
attention from the obvious reason for war: expanding the U.S. empire to control
the flow of oil and oil profits. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld called
such assertions "nonsense," though it made - and continues to make -
sense to most of the world.
Rumsfeld
and the gang hope that finding some evidence of banned weapons or weapons
programs will provide a retroactive justification - something like, "Even
if we lied, we turned out to be right."
If
no or little evidence is found, Bush has ways out. There are several
semi-plausible explanations: Weapons and records were destroyed in bombing or
looting. Hussein hid them so they can never be found. They were transferred out
of the country. There is no way to disprove such claims.
But
those rationalizations may prove unnecessary if the "liberation" of
the Iraqi people sticks as a blanket justification for the invasion. Anyone
with an ounce of compassion feels grateful that Iraqi suffering at the hands of
Hussein is over. But while the vast majority of Iraqis are glad the tyrant is
gone, they seem less excited about military occupation and U.S. domination of
their politics. Mistrust is compounded by the fact that Iraqis know the
destruction of their civilian infrastructure by the United States in the 1991
Gulf War - along with a dozen years of punishing economic sanctions maintained
at U.S. insistence - have intensified their suffering.
So
Bush's stated concern for freedom in Iraq also will be tested in the coming
weeks. If he is truly interested in democracy, he will remove U.S. forces,
acknowledging that no meaningful democratic process can proceed under
occupation by a nation with selfish interests in the outcome. If strategic
advantage was not a motive for war, Bush will not seek a permanent military
presence in Iraq from which the United States can dominate the region.
If
the United States stays in Iraq while a new government is formed, and retains
basing rights, the world will justifiably conclude that the motivation for war
was to install a compliant government to extend and deepen U.S. control over
the energy resources of the region. The question is whether the American public
is willing to face those realities or hide in the lies.
Robert Jensen is an associate
professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, a member of the Nowar
Collective, and author of the book Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas
from the Margins to the Mainstream and the pamphlet "Citizens of the
Empire." He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.