Second, the Bush Administration neoconservatives invaded
Iraq in furtherance of their grand plan to remake and democratize the Middle East by the
force of arms in an attempt to make it safer for Israel. Of all the members of the axis of
evil for the Bush Administration to wage war against, Iraq was the most
"doable", owing to the incessant demonization of Iraq stemming from 1990 onward
by both Bush Administrations and the Clinton Administration. In addition, Iraq, which once
boasted the fourth largest army in the world had seen its armed forces decimated to only
forty percent of its pre-Gulf War One military strength by US military action in that just
conflict fought to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation.
What the neo-conservatives in the Bush Administration fail to realize is that Iraq and
Iran are majority Shiite and Syria majority radical Sunni so that if these countries were
to become true democracies they would elect anti-American tyrants and terrorists as their
leaders. In fact, Iran is a democracy today and has done precisely that. Moreover, Iran is
a far greater threat both in terms of their nuclear capability, IRBM capability and
support of terrorists including Al Qaeda, which is far more pronounced than was ever the
case with Iraq.
Realist conservatives opposed the neo-conservative internationalist plan to invade Iraq
out of fear that our invasion would merely serve to transform it into a carbon copy of
9-11 terrorist supporting Iran that would truly threaten the US homeland as secular
Baathist-led Iraq never could or would. Now, the United States is faced with a no-win
scenario. If the US withdraws from Iraq as it is in its national interests to do, it will
leave behind a country dominated by supporters of international terrorism against it where
one did not exist before. If the US continues to occupy Iraq with 150,000 troops, it will
begin losing an increasing number of soldiers as recent news headlines have indicated and
waste billions without any real hope of achieving a pro-Western democracy as the
population continues to radicalize against those they perceive, rightly or wrongly, to be
foreign occupiers and invaders.
Third, the Administration invaded Iraq in an attempt to re-empower the United Nations
by forcing it to enforce its resolutions even more aggressively than it wanted to. Far
from opposing the UN like all conservatives should, the Bush Administration consistently
used Iraq's alleged violation of eighteen UN sanctions as their prime justification for
the war. Furthermore, the Administration initially attempted to avoid getting approval
from Congress, the only constitutional authority on whether the US can or cannot initiate
the use of military force against another country, which has not first attacked us.
The Bush Administration attempted to use every possible justification they could come
up with in the hopes of obtaining greater popular support for the war both at the national
and international level. They needed to do so because Saddam and Iraq had committed no
aggression or act of provocation to justify an all-out attack against it by the United
States. In a dozen years since Gulf War One nothing had changed. Saddam was firmly in the
box and everyone knew it. In fact, in 1998 there was tremendous international pressure to
drop UN sanctions against Iraq due to their prior large-scale compliance with UN mandates.
Almost immediately following 9-11, neo-conservatives in the Bush Administration led by
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Vice President
Dick Cheney and others tried to create the illusion of a connection between Iraq, a
secular socialist state and Al Qaeda, an Islamist extremist terrorist group. In this
attempt they were almost entirely unsuccessful.
Secretary Wolfowitz actually admitted that the WMD justification was "the only one
that stuck" despite scanty evidence of a continuing Iraqi WMD program and the fact
that Iraq had already destroyed the most of its WMD arsenal under UN supervision so that
they posed a far lesser threat than in 1990 before the First Gulf War. Ultimately the
Administration's justification of "liberating" the Iraqi people was just an
afterthought. The American people didn't hear a word about the need to
"liberate" the people of Iraq until just before the war. The Administration used
that word to cover up the fact that they were using US military forces illegitimately to
launch an aggressive war upon a country that had never attacked us and as Secretary of
State Colin Powell eloquently put it less than two years ago, "threatened not the
United States."
Once the war began, suddenly we were told that finding WMD was no longer a top priority
and international inspectors were told they would not be welcome in the new US occupied
Iraq. One wonders if the Administration might have obtained intelligence that Saddam had
in fact destroyed what little was left of his arsenal before the US invasion, but decided
not to release this info to the American public to avoid the embarrassment and a major
loss of US prestige and credibility which was by then firmly on the line in Iraq. With
their credibility already badly damaged by this deception wrought upon the American people
over the real rationale for the war, we may never know for sure.
It is high time for the American people and their duly elected representatives in
Congress to demand that President Bush, who proclaimed "mission accomplished" in
Iraq in a speech over two months ago to declare victory and withdraw all US troops from
Iraq by Christmas. The indefinite commitment of over one-third of our Army to the
occupation of Iraq leaves the US incapable of sending reinforcements to help defend
against hypothetical attacks against our allies on the Korean peninsula and Taiwan where
the next conflict will likely erupt.
The Administrations attempt at nation-building and indeed empire-building in Iraq
constitutes the very antithesis of conservatism and is doomed to ultimate failure. If
continued, it will further provoke an increasingly visible global backlash of
anti-Americanism which will likely culminate in further catastrophic terrorist attacks
against the US homeland, resulting in the deaths of hundreds and perhaps thousands more
Americans. The prompt withdrawal of our forces from Iraq is absolutely necessary to
minimize further loss of life among our heroic and selflessly-serving military servicemen.
It is also essential to do so in order to conserve our military strength and save untold
billions of dollars in taxpayer funds for winnable missions that clearly advance, rather
than jeopardize the US national security interest.