This article originally provided by TruthOut
The War is Lost
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday 10 May 2004
We have traveled a long, dark, strange road
since the attacks of September 11. We have all suffered, we
have all known fear and anger, and sometimes hatred. Many of
us have felt - probably more than we are willing to admit it
- at one time or another a desire for revenge, so deep was
the wound inflicted upon us during that wretched,
unforgettable Tuesday morning in September of 2001.
But we have come now to the end of a week so
awful, so terrible, so wrenching that the most basic moral
fabric of that which we believe is good and great - the
basic moral fabric of the United States of America - has
been torn bitterly asunder.
We are awash in photographs of Iraqi men -
not terrorists, just people - lying in heaps on cold floors
with leashes around their necks. We are awash in photographs
of men chained so remorselessly that their backs are arched
in agony, men forced to masturbate for cameras, men forced
to pretend to have sex with one another for cameras, men
forced to endure attacks from dogs, men with electrodes
attached to them as they stand, hooded, in fear of their
lives.
The worst, amazingly, is yet to come. A new
battery of photographs and videotapes, as yet unreleased,
awaits over the horizon of our abused understanding. These
photos and videos, also from the Abu Ghraib prison, are
reported to show U.S. soldiers gang raping an Iraqi woman,
U.S. soldiers beating an Iraqi man nearly to death, U.S.
troops posing, smirks affixed, with decomposing Iraqi
bodies, and Iraqi troops under U.S. command raping young
boys.
George W. Bush would have us believe these
horrors were restricted to a sadistic few, and would have us
believe these horrors happened only in Abu Ghraib. Yet
reports are surfacing now of similar treatment at another
U.S. detention center in Iraq called Camp Bucca. According
to these reports, Iraqi prisoners in Camp Bucca were beaten,
humiliated, hogtied, and had scorpions placed on their naked
bodies.
In the eyes of the world, this is America
today. It cannot be dismissed as an anomaly because it went
on and on and on in the Abu Ghraib prison, and because now
we hear of Camp Bucca. According to the British press, there
are some 30 other cases of torture and humiliation under
investigation. The Bush administration went out of its way
to cover up this disgrace, declaring secret the Army report
on these atrocities. That, pointedly, is against the rules
and against the law. You can’t call something classified
just because it is embarrassing and disgusting. It was
secret, but now it is out, and the whole world has been
shown the dark, scabrous underbelly of our definition of
freedom.
The beginnings of actual political fallout
began to find its way into the White House last week.
Representative John Murtha of Pennsylvania, the House
Democrats’ most vocal defense hawk, joined Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi to declare that the conflict is "unwinnable."
Murtha, a Vietnam veteran, rocked the Democratic caucus when
he said at a leader’s luncheon Tuesday that the United
States cannot win the war in Iraq.
"Unwinnable." Well, it only took
about 14 months.
Also last week, calls for the resignation of
Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld became strident. Pelosi
accused Rumsfeld of being "in denial about Iraq,"
and said U.S. soldiers "are suffering great casualties
and injuries, and American taxpayers are paying an enormous
price" because Rumsfeld "has done a poor job as
secretary of defense." Representative Charlie Rangel, a
leading critic of the Iraq invasion, has filed articles of
impeachment against Rumsfeld.
So there’s the heat. But let us consider
the broader picture here in the context of that one huge
word: "Unwinnable." Why did we do this in the
first place? There have been several reasons offered over
the last 16 months for why we needed to do this thing.
It started, for real, in January 2003 when
George W. Bush said in his State of the Union speech that
Iraq was in possession of 26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000
liters of botulinum toxin, 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX,
30,000 munitions to deliver this stuff, and that Iraq was
seeking uranium from Niger to build nuclear bombs.
That reason has been scratched off the list
because, as has been made painfully clear now, there are no
such weapons in Iraq. The Niger claim, in particular, has
caused massive embarrassment for America because it was so
farcical, and has led to a federal investigation of this
White House because two administration officials took
revenge upon Joseph Wilson’s wife for Wilson’’s
exposure of the lie.
Next on the list was September 11, and the
oft-repeated accusation that Saddam Hussein must have been
at least partially responsible. That one collapsed as well -
Bush himself had to come out and say Saddam had nothing to
do with it.
Two reasons down, so the third must be
freedom and liberty for the Iraqi people. Once again,
however, facts interfere. America does not want a democratic
Iraq, because a democratic Iraq would quickly become a
Shi’ite fundamentalist Iraq allied with the Shi’ite
fundamentalist nation of Iran, a strategic situation nobody
with a brain wants to see come to pass. It has been made
clear by Paul Bremer, the American administrator of Iraq,
that whatever the new Iraqi government comes to look like,
it will have no power to make any laws of any kind, it will
have no control over the security of Iraq, and it will have
no power over the foreign troops which occupy its soil. This
is, perhaps, some bizarre new definition of democracy not
yet in the dictionary, but it is not democracy by any
currently accepted definition I have ever heard of.
So...the reason to go to war because of
weapons of mass destruction is destroyed. The reason to go
to war because of connections to September 11 is destroyed.
The reason to go to war in order to bring freedom and
democracy to Iraq is destroyed.
What is left? The one reason left has been
unfailingly flapped around by defenders of this
administration and supporters of this war: Saddam Hussein
was a terrible, terrible man. He killed his own people. He
tortured his own people. The Iraqis are better off without
him, and so the war is justified.
And here, now, is the final excuse destroyed.
We have killed more than 10,000 innocent Iraqi civilians in
this invasion, and maimed countless others. The photos from
Abu Ghraib prison show that we, like Saddam Hussein, torture
and humiliate the Iraqi people. Worst of all, we do this in
the same prison Hussein used to do his torturing. The
"rape rooms," often touted by Bush as
justification for the invasion, are back. We are the killers
now. We are the torturers now. We have achieved a moral
equivalence with the Butcher of Baghdad.
This war is lost. I mean not just the Iraq
war, but George W. Bush's ridiculous "War on
Terror" as a whole.
I say ridiculous because this "War on
Terror" was never, ever something we were going to win.
What began on September 11 with the world wrapping us in its
loving embrace has collapsed today in a literal orgy of
shame and disgrace. This happened, simply, because of the
complete failure of moral leadership at the highest levels.
We saw a prime example of this during
Friday’s farce of a Senate hearing into the Abu Ghraib
disaster which starred Don Rumsfeld. From his bully pulpit
spoke Senator Joe Lieberman, who parrots the worst of
Bush’s war propaganda with unfailingly dreary regularity.
Responding to the issue of whether or not Bush and Rumsfeld
should apologize for Abu Ghraib, Lieberman stated that none
of the terrorists had apologized for September 11.
There it was, in a nutshell. There was the
idea, oft promulgated by the administration, that September
11 made any barbarism, any extreme, any horror brought forth
by the United States acceptable, and even desirable. There
was the institutionalization of revenge as a basis for
policy. Sure, Abu Ghraib was bad, Mr. Lieberman put forth.
But September 11 happened, so all bets are off.
Thus fails the "War on Terror."
September 11 did not demand of us the lowest common
denominator, did not demand of us that we become that which
we despise and denounce. September 11 demanded that we be
better, greater, more righteous than those who brought death
to us. September 11 demanded that we be better, and in doing
so, we would show the world that those who attacked us are
far, far less than us. That would have been victory, with
nary a shot being fired.
Our leaders, however, took us in exactly the
opposite direction.
Every reason to go to Iraq has failed to
retain even a semblance of credibility. Every bit of
propaganda Osama bin Laden served up to the Muslim world for
why America should be attacked and destroyed has been given
credibility by what has taken place in Iraq. Victory in this
"War on Terror," a propaganda war from the
beginning, has been given to the September 11 attackers by
the hand of George W. Bush, and by the hand of those who
enabled his incomprehensible blundering.
The war is lost.
|