 |
Mon Sep 08 2008
|
|
|
Departments War in Iraq
Someone Tell Bush That Iraq Wasn’t Responsible for 9/11 Before another War Breaks Out
by Jason Leopold
June 21, 2005
“We went to war because we were attacked,” President Bush said Saturday in his weekly radio address.
Yeah, by al-Qaeda not Iraq.
For President Bush to say publicly that the United States attacked Iraq because of 9/11 is not only an outright lie but it’s a disservice to the 1,700 men and women that died in combat in Iraq and thousands of other soldiers who were maimed believing they were fighting a war predicated on finding weapons of mass destruction. There have been no less than half-a-dozen federal probes into 9/11 all of which have concluded that there wasn’t a link between the al-Qaeda terrorists who blew up the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and Saddam Hussein’s regime.
But Bush is desperate. His ratings have slipped below 50 percent. The public is growing tired of the Iraq war. Republicans in Congress fear that a further decline in the president’s poll numbers could hurt their chances of being reelected next year. What to do? Once again, get the public to believe Iraq was responsible for 9/11 and that the war was justified. In other words, lie.
With Saturday’s radio address, Bush has publicly admitted that his rationale for launching a preemptive strike against Iraq was strictly personal. More than that, though, it proves what we, the dissenters, have said all along: the war was about regime change, nothing more.
The 9/11 terrorist attacks and the so-called threat from Iraq’s non-existent WMD’s was just an excuse—a smokescreen this administration used as a way to skirt international laws and to sell the war to a gullible media and a misinformed public—the president’s cabinet used so they could execute a decades-old plan cooked up by hardcore Neocons to spread democracy throughout the Middle East by conquering “rogue” nations such as Iraq like some modern day Roman Empire. They call it Pax Americana, Latin for “American Peace.”
“This war… is intended to mark the official emergence of the United States as a full-fledged global empire, seizing sole responsibility and authority as planetary policeman… carried out by those who believe the United States must seize the opportunity for global domination, even if it means becoming the "American imperialists" that our enemies always claimed we were,” said an editorial in the Sept. 29, 2002 edition of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, one of the only mainstream newspapers to sound an early alarm, exposing the Neocons’ secret plan for world domination.
The truth is, however, that President Bush had set the stage for war with Iraq as soon as he was sworn into office. Richard Clarke, Bush’s former counterterrorism specialist wrote in his book, “Against All Enemies,” that the Bush administration was obsessed with Iraq before 9/11. Even Paul O’Neill, the former Treasury Secretary, made claims similar to Clarke’s in his book, “The Price of Loyalty.” The White House responded to those allegations by calling both men liars and disgruntled public officials but there’s no denying that Clarke and O’Neill were on the money.
In January 2000, Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice wrote an article for Foreign Affairs magazine titled Campaign 2000 -- Promoting the National Interest promoting regime change in Iraq.
“As history marches toward markets and democracy, some states have been left by the side of the road. Iraq is the prototype. Saddam Hussein's regime is isolated, his conventional military power has been severely weakened, his people live in poverty and terror, and he has no useful place in international politics. He is therefore determined to develop WMD. Nothing will change until Saddam is gone, so the United States must mobilize whatever resources it can, including support from his opposition, to remove him. These regimes are living on borrowed time, so there need be no sense of panic about them."
She echoed that line in August 2000, during an interview with the Council on Foreign Relations saying Iraq posed the gravest threat to the US and the world.
“The containment of Iraq should be aimed ultimately at regime change because as long as Saddam is there no one in the region is safe -- most especially his own people,” she said during the Aug. 9, 2000 interview. “If Saddam gives you a reason to use force against him, then use decisive force, not just a pinprick.”
The question of whether the Bush administration targeted Iraq prior to 9/11 has long been the center of heated debate between Democrats and Republicans. The Bush administration says Iraq was not in its crosshairs prior to 9/11. But former White House officials, such as Clarke and O’Neill, claim the administration was searching for reasons to attack Iraq as soon as Bush took office in January 2001.
A January 11, 2001 article in the New York Times, “Iraq Is Focal Point as Bush Meets with Joint Chiefs,” is proof.
“George W. Bush, the nation's commander in chief to be, went to the Pentagon today for a top-secret session with the Joint Chiefs of Staff to review hot spots around the world where he might have to send American forces into harm's way,” reads the lead paragraph of the Times article.
Bush was joined at the Pentagon meeting by Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.
The Times reported that, "about half of the 75-minute meeting … focused on a discussion about Iraq and the Persian Gulf, two participants said. Iraq was the first topic briefed because 'it's the most visible and most risky area' Mr. Bush will confront after he takes office, one senior officer said."
"Iraqi policy is very much on his mind," one senior Pentagon official told the Times. "Saddam was clearly a discussion point."
---
Jason Leopold is the author of the explosive memoir, News Junkie, to be released in the spring of 2006 by Process/Feral House Books. Visit Leopold's website at www.jasonleopold.com for updates.
Email this article to a friend
|
|
 | |
Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008War in Iraq
"White phosphorous: the U.S. used it; the U.S. says it's illegal" December 28, 2005 David Swanson
"Behind the steel curtain: the real face of the occupation" December 20, 2005 Sabah Ali
"Waiting is the hardest part" December 20, 2005 Greg Rollins, CPT
"Scotland: stop the war!" December 10, 2005 David Swanson
"Not even to save our lives" December 9, 2005 Mike Ferner
"Inconvenient journalists" December 1, 2005 Robert C. Koehler, Tribune Media Services
"How pre-war Iraq intel was cooked" November 24, 2005 Jason Leopold
"Chalabi pushes Iran card in last ditch self-promotion offensive" November 16, 2005 The Insitute for International Mediation and Conflict Resolution
"Staying a wrong course" October 17, 2005 Stephen Crockett
"US war photos" October 16, 2005 Richard S. Ehrlich
"Banging at the gates of empire -- Washington, DC; September 24-26" October 6, 2005 Peter Chabarek
"What Else Shall We Do?" October 2, 2005 Mike Ferner
"Will we use the power we have on September 24?" September 21, 2005 Mike Ferner
"The war in Iraq is increasingly unpopular and must end -- An interview with Dennis Kucinich" September 8, 2005 Kevin Zeese, DemocracyRising.US
"What eating Cindy Sheehan?" September 8, 2005 Jason Leopold
"Waiting for the outside world" September 4, 2005 Mike Ferner
"Families ask that fallen soldiers be honored Sunday by a tolling of bells" August 27, 2005 Faithful America, National Council of Churches
"Making the Iraq War and Occupation Personal" August 25, 2005 Ralph Nader
"President Bush Knows the True Reasons He Started A War in Iraq, But He's Not Going to Tell" August 25, 2005 Jason Leopold
"Armstrong bikes with president over Sheehan grave" August 25, 2005 Greg Palast
"Sheehan breakthroughs, unbridgeable divides, and taboos unbroken" August 22, 2005 David Swanson
"The people must demand peace: An interview with Tom Hayden" August 22, 2005 Kevin Zeese
"Will celebrity-addicted America miss the point? " August 18, 2005 Mike Ferner
"Jefferson would have stood with Cindy Sheehan " August 16, 2005 Thom Hartmann
"Why is violence escalating in Iraq?" August 1, 2005 Eric Straatsma, Peace Think Tank
"How the United States Marked the 3rd Anniversary of the Downing Street Memo" July 23, 2005 David Swanson, www.afterdowningstreet.org
"Someone Tell Bush That Iraq Wasn’t Responsible for 9/11 Before another War Breaks Out" June 21, 2005 Jason Leopold
"More damning than Downing Street" June 21, 2005 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Messengers of Truth: Untangling a Knot of Lies" June 18, 2005 Kevin Zeese
"How Much Proof Needed Before the Truth Comes Out? " June 17, 2005 Kevin Zeese
"Silent Death in Iraq " June 13, 2005 Ghazwan Al-Mukhtar
"Media Black Out Downing Street Minutes" June 8, 2005 David Swanson, www.afterdowningstreet.org
"Getting Out of Iraq Will Be Tougher than Getting Out of Vietnam" May 3, 2005 Kevin Zeese and Linda Schade
"No Troops, No Wars" March 24, 2005 Yoshie Furuhashi
"Iraq’s Election Will Not Guarantee Democracy" February 5, 2005 Gene C. Gerard
"The U.S. Supreme Court is AWOL on Iraq" January 29, 2005 Gene C. Gerard
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

All content © 1970-2008 The Columbus Free Press Disclaimer |