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Iraq’s defense minister is assuring everyone that the
military agreement that Iraq entered into with Iran last week does not provide
that Iran would train Iraq’s troops. That job, he insisted, remains with
the U.S. government.
Let that sink in for a moment.
The U.S. government invades Iraq for the purpose of toppling Saddam Hussein
from power and installing a puppet regime headed by the likes of Pentagon favorite
Ahmad Chalabi or CIA favorite Iyad Allawi. Fixing the intelligence and facts
around the policy, as the Downing Street Memo reflects, President Bush uses
the prospect of WMDs to scare and cow the Congress and the American people into
supporting his invasion of Iraq.
When the WMDs fail to materialize, Bush focuses on other rationales for the
invasion, among which is “democracy-spreading.” That rationale involves
a “caucus
plan” whose obvious aim is to put a U.S.-approved ruler into office,
in much the same manner that the current mayor of Baghdad was “democratically
elected” by a panel whose members were
carefully chosen by U.S. officials.
However, Iraqi Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, rejecting Bush’s “caucus
plan” for selecting Iraq’s new ruler, outmaneuvers Bush by instead
demanding a national
election. The election delivers control of Iraq to Sistani, who was born
in Iran, and his Shi’ite followers, which could not have been a surprising
result to Sistani, given that Shi’ites are the majority faction in Iraq.
Ever since power was turned over to the newly elected Shi’ite regime,
the Pentagon has been using its military power to ensure the continuation of
that regime. U.S. troops have been fighting, killing, and dying to protect the
new regime from internal and external aggressors, thereby effectively making
the Pentagon Iraq’s new department of defense.
Let that sink in for a moment.
Last week the new Iraqi regime entered into a military pact with Iran, which
President Bush and the Pentagon have long maintained is part of an “axis
of evil” and which is even the potential target of another U.S. military
invasion.
So, U.S. troops have killed, maimed, and died and destroyed Iraq, with the
result of installing a Shi’ite regime in Iraq that is now aligning itself
with the Shi’ite regime in Iran, which U.S. officials say is a sworn enemy
of the United States. And U.S. troops continue to kill, maim, and die to ensure
the continuation of the Iraqi Shi’ite regime even while the president
and the Pentagon consider invading Iran for the purpose of ousting the Iraqi
Shi’ite regime there.
Let that sink in for a moment.
Innocent British citizens have now died as a result of terrorist attacks rooted
in anger for Bush’s invasion of Iraq. And the American people live in
constant fear of terrorism, not to mention perpetual assaults on their freedom
by their own government.
U.S. officials, meanwhile, continue to maintain that Sistani’s Islamic
Shi’ite regime has brought “freedom” to the Iraqi people,
unlike the oppressive tyranny that the Islamic Shi’ite regime has brought
to the Iranian people.
Yet, the new Iraqi regime is already in the process of establishing torture
camps for detainees, and in the southern city of Basra alcohol venders and
video sellers are being shut
down or bombed and women are being forced to “dress appropriately”
by official or unofficial morality police.
Let that sink in for a moment.
Imagine that the U.S. invaded Vietnam and held a national election that the
communists ended up winning. Imagine further that the U.S. continued its military
occupation of Vietnam to ensure that the new democratically elected communist
regime remained in power. Imagine U.S. officials’ asking Americans to
“support the troops” who were fighting and dying to preserve “democracy
and freedom” in Vietnam.
Let that sink in for a moment.
As Jim Powell describes so well in his new book Wilson’s
War, Woodrow Wilson’s “democracy-spreading” rationale
for intervening in World War I resulted in many perverse
outcomes, not the least of which was the triumph of Lenin and Soviet communism
and the rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazism, which ultimately led to World War II.
As George Santayana said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned
to repeat it.” Already we’re seeing some of the perverse outcomes
of President Bush’s “democracy-spreading” rationale for invading
Iraq, including the Pentagon’s serving as the department of defense for
Iraq’s newly elected Islamic Shi’ite-controlled government, whose
rulers know as much about the genuine principles of freedom as the average Democrat
or Republican, both of whom continue to call Iraq “free.”
It’s all just part and parcel of U.S. foreign policy and the
failure of America’s foreign wars.