This article provided by TruthOut
June 23, 2004
The United States Has Lost its Moral Authority
By U.S. Senator Ernest F. Hollings
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Peoples the world
around have a history of culture and religion. In the
Mideast, the religion is predominantly Muslim and the
culture tribal. The Muslim religion is strong, i.e., those
that don't conform are considered infidels; those of a
tribal culture look for tribal leadership, not democracy. We
liberated Kuwait, but it immediately rejected democracy.
In 1996, a task force was formed
in Jerusalem including Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and
David Wurmser. They submitted a plan for Israel to incoming
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Clean Break. It
proposed that negotiations with the Palestinians be cut off
and, instead, the Mideast be made friendly to Israel by
democratizing it. First Lebanon would be bombed, then Syria
invaded on the pretext of weapons of mass destruction.
Afterward, Saddam Hussein was to be removed in Iraq and
replaced with a Hashemite ruler favorable to Israel.
The plan was rejected by
Netanyahu, so Perle started working for a similar approach
to the Mideast for the United States. Taking on the support
of Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Stephen Cambone, Scooter
Libby, Donald Rumsfeld et al., he enlisted the support of
the Project for the New American Century.
The plan hit paydirt with the
election of George W. Bush. Perle took on the Defense Policy
Board. Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith became one, two and
three at the Defense Department, and Cheney as vice
president took Scooter Libby and David Wurmser as his
deputies. Clean Break was streamlined to go directly into
Iraq.
Iraq, as a threat to the United
States, was all contrived. Richard Clarke stated in his
book, Against All Enemies, with John McLaughlin of the CIA
confirming, that there was no evidence or intelligence of
"Iraqi support for terrorism against the United
States" from 1993 until 2003 when we invaded. The State
Department on 9/11 had a list of 45 countries wherein al
Qaeda was operating. While the United States was listed, it
didn't list the country of Iraq.
President Bush must have known
that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. We
have no al Qaeda, no weapons of mass destruction and no
terrorism from Iraq; we were intentionally misled by the
Bush administration.
Which explains why
President-elect Bush sought a briefing on Iraq from Defense
Secretary William Cohen in January before taking the oath of
office and why Iraq was the principal concern at his first
National Security Council meeting - all before 9/11. When
9/11 occurred, we knew immediately that it was caused by
Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan. Within days we were not only
going into Afghanistan, but President Bush was asking for a
plan to invade Iraq - even though Iraq had no involvement.
After 15 months, Iraq has yet to
be secured. Its borders were left open after "mission
accomplished," allowing terrorists throughout the
Mideast to come join with the insurgents to reek havoc. As a
result, our troops are hunkered down, going out to trouble
spots and escorting convoys.
In the war against terrorism,
we've given the terrorists a cause and created more
terrorism. Even though Saddam is gone, the majority of the
Iraqi people want us gone. We have proven ourselves
"infidels." With more than 800 GIs killed, 5,000
maimed for life and a cost of $200 billion, come now the
generals in command, both Richard Myers and John Abizaid,
saying we can't win. Back home the cover of The New Republic
magazine asks, "Were We Wrong?"
Walking guard duty tonight in
Baghdad, a G.I. wonders why he should lose his life when his
commander says he can't win and the people back home can't
make up their mind. Unfortunately, the peoples of the world
haven't changed their minds. They are still against us.
Heretofore, the world looked to the United States to do the
right thing. No more. The United States has lost its moral
authority.
Originally published in
The State on June 23, 2004
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