|
The
Bush Administration has not made it easy on its
supporters. David Brooks now admits that he was
gripped with a "childish fantasy" about Iraq.
Tucker Carlson is "ashamed" and "enraged" at himself.
Tom Friedman, admitting to being "a little slow,"
is finally off the reservation. Die-hard Republican
publicist William Kristol admits of Bush, "He
did drive us into a ditch." The neocon fantasist
and sometime Republican speechwriter Mark Helprin
complains on the Wall Street Journal editorial
page--the movement's Pravda--of "the inescapable
fact that the war has been run incompetently,
with an apparently deliberate contempt for history,
strategy, and thought, and with too little regard
for the American soldier, whose mounting casualties
seem to have no effect on the boastfulness of
the civilian leadership."
Most
of the regretful hawks blame the Administration
for its failure to execute what they consider
a noble endeavor. But it is a noble endeavor only
in the way it would be noble to give all your
money to one of those deposed Ethiopian princesses
who fill your inbox with pleas to send them all
your money for a guarantee of future riches. In
other words, yes, while it might have been nice
to liberate Iraq from Saddam's clutches, it was
a lot more likely that under Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld
and Co., we would end up arresting innocent people,
holding them without trial and systematically
torturing and sexually humiliating them; all the
while saying, as the Daily Show's Rob Corddry
so brilliantly put it, "Remember, it's not important
that we did torture these people. What's important
is that we are not the kind of people who would
torture these people."
Take
a look at the sequence of events leading to the
revelations of the Abu Ghraib scandal in The New
Yorker: It began, as Seymour Hersh notes, with
Rumsfeld's desire to extract information from
informants about the location of certain "high-value"
targets in Afghanistan along with his unwillingness
to apply the terms of the Geneva Conventions to
prisoners captured in the War on Terrorism. Next
came the bait-and-switch application in Iraq of
tactics drawn from the War on Terrorism, upon
which Bush and his Administration had based their
entire case for offensive war. Add to this the
refusal to provide the military with sufficient
manpower resources to carry out the necessary
tasks of the occupation, and throw in a willingness
to use what one former official quoted by Hersh
terms "recycled hillbillies"--untrained, inexperienced
and overworked in a military prison located inside
a hostile fire zone with rogue interrogators and
virtually no nighttime supervision.
All
of this made something like what eventually took
place at Abu Ghraib all but inevitable--just as
the Administration's aversion to accountability
dictated the attempted cover-up that followed.
The abuse was called to the attention of the occupation
authorities as early as May 2003, and in November
a scathing report of the International Committee
of the Red Cross was reviewed by senior US military
officials in Iraq, a full two months before the
Army launched its investigation. Amnesty International
had complained last summer of Iraqi detainees
being subjected to "crude, inhuman or degrading
treatment." Aides to Colin Powell and Paul Bremer
insist that they, too, raised concerns within
Administration circles but were ignored as well.
Nothing was done to put an end to the officially
sanctioned sadism--which also turned out to be
a propaganda gift to anti-American terrorists
the world over--until mid-January of this year,
when the whistleblower Specialist Joseph Darby
turned over photos to the Army's Criminal Investigation
Division.
The
existence of an internal Army report on the Abu
Ghraib abuses, according to Time, was flatly denied
to Intelligence Committee Democrats when they
asked the Pentagon about it in January. In February,
when Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba's report confirmed
the earlier charges and provided the pornographic
evidence, the story was still kept secret from
Congress and the American people. Finally it was
apparently leaked by one of the defendants' lawyers
to Hersh and 60 Minutes II, but even then, Secretary
Rumsfeld and Joint Chiefs Chairman Richard Myers
professed to be almost perfectly clueless. Briefing
the Senate Intelligence Committee hours before
the photos were to be broadcast on CBS (already
delayed two weeks at Myers's request), Rumsfeld
mentioned nothing about the approaching firestorm.
Neither got around to reading the report until
days later.
What
was Bush's public response to the man responsible
for what Senator Ted Kennedy aptly terms "America's
steepest and deepest fall from grace in the history
of our country"? It was to congratulate him for
doing "a superb job." In Congress the word came
from Dick Cheney's office to "get off [Rumsfeld's]
case."
These
are the men not just the neocons but self-described
progressives and human-rights advocates believed
capable of carrying out the delicate and difficult
mission of bringing democracy and modernism to
the Arab world, while safeguarding the security
and good name of the United States. Excuse me,
but just what was so hard to understand about
this bunch? We knew they were dishonest. We knew
they were fanatical. We knew they were purposely
ignorant and bragged about not reading newspapers.
We knew they were vindictive. We knew they were
lawless. We knew they were obsessively secretive.
We knew they had no time or patience for those
who raised difficult questions. We knew they were
driven by fantasies of religious warfare, personal
vengeance and ideological triumph. We knew they
had no respect for civil liberties. And we knew
they took no responsibility for the consequences
of their incompetence. Just what is surprising
about the manner in which they've conducted the
war?
And
how pathetic is it that the only cable network
really grappling with the media's failure is Comedy
Central? Let's give the last word to the Daily
Show's incomparable Stephen Colbert: "The journalists
I know love America, but now all anybody wants
to talk about is the bad journalists--the journalists
that hurt America.... Who didn't uncover the flaws
in our prewar intelligence? Who gave a free pass
on the Saddam-Al Qaeda connection? Who dropped
Afghanistan from the headlines at the first whiff
of this Iraqi snipe hunt? The United States press
corps, that's who."
Topplebush.com
Posted: May 28, 2004
|