This article originally provided by TruthOut
Editor’s Note | The article describing Bush’s
statement that the War on Terror is unwinnable can be
found here. The article describing Bush’s subsequent
reversal and declaration that the War on Terror is indeed
winnable can be found here. The article
explaining how any of this makes sense cannot be found on
this plane of existence. - TO
Nausea in New York
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Wednesday 01 September 2004
"One of the interesting things people
ask me, now that we are asking questions, is, 'Can you
ever win the war on terror?' Of course you can."
- George W. Bush, April 13 2004
You just can’t make this stuff up.
George W. Bush, in an interview broadcast
Monday by the ‘Today’ show, told host Matt Lauer that he
doesn’t think his ‘War on Terror’ is winnable. "I
don't think you can win it," said Bush. "But I
think you can create conditions so that those who use terror
as a tool are less acceptable in parts of the world."
This is a dramatic departure – one might
dare call it a ‘flip-flop’ – from the scores of
comments he has made since the attacks of September 11. As
recently as July 14, Bush said, “I have a clear vision and
a strategy to win the war on terror." On April 13th,
Bush said, “One of the interesting things people ask me,
now that we are asking questions, is, 'Can you ever win the
war on terror?' Of course you can." The list of
comments like this is longer than the Avenue of the
Americas.
Someone forgot to get Rudy Giuliani the memo
about the Terror War now being unwinnable. "We'll see
an end to global terrorism,'' he said from the convention
podium on Monday night. "It may seem very difficult and
a long way off. It may even seem idealistic to say that. But
it may not be as far away and as idealistic as it seems.''
Never mind Rudy’s assertion that Bush
“can see through time” in the same speech. Between
Bush’s temporal abilities and his armchair-to-armchair
relationship with the Almighty, one might have assumed that
he’d have stumbled to this wisdom many moons ago. Of
course a war against terror cannot be won. Terrorism is a
weapon. How do you wage war against a weapon? Shall we next
have a war against bazookas and slingshots?
One defeats terrorism by undermining the
conditions which breed terrorists. Economic inequality,
crushing poverty, shattered educational infrastructures,
rampant violence and a total lack of hope are the soil in
which suicide bombers germinate. Until you get rid of those,
you will always have terrorism. Period.
Bush got part of the way to that conclusion
with his statement, alluding to a process that will make
terrorism “less acceptable in parts of the world.” His
statement was bereft of details on how exactly to go about
this, of course, and likewise begs the question: If we’re
going to make terrorism less acceptable in “parts” of
the world, what other “parts” will terrorism still be
acceptable in?
It is too bad that we had to grind through
three years, a catastrophic invasion of Iraq, 976 dead
American soldiers, almost 7,000 grievously wounded American
soldiers, more than 10,000 dead Iraqi civilians and God only
knows exactly how many billions of dollars before Mr. Bush
arrived at this conclusion.
It is too bad that Bush’s Iraq adventure
has created economic inequality, crushing poverty, shattered
educational infrastructures, rampant violence and a total
lack of hope among the people of that nation. If he has
suddenly come around to a new mindset on how to deal with
terrorism, he will have to start by cleaning up the
terrorist mass-production line he has activated there.
But, of course, he won’t. Soon after
Bush’s comment to Lauer, his campaign spokespeople came
boiling out of the woodwork to clarify that the President
didn’t really mean to say what he said, and that despite
his new vision on the matter of dealing with terrorism,
there will be absolutely no policy changes in the way the
Terror War is being waged. In other words, folks, ignore the
Republican candidate. He’s just flapping his lips.
Indeed. The next day, at a Tuesday address to
the American Legion, Bush decided to reverse field yet again
and declare that we will, in fact, win the War on Terror.
Presidential mouthpiece Scott McLellan said, to clarify the
previous clarification of the previous clarification,
"Not only are we winning it, but we will win it."
It is hard, while watching these guys flop
around their own words like boated marlin, to avoid thinking
about the thousands of troops deployed in Iraq today. These
men and women were told they were leaving home to fight, and
perhaps die, in the War on Terror. They left their families
with Bush’s promise of inevitable victory ringing in their
ears. Now, sitting in that scalding desert, they are being
told that they are fighting a war that cannot be won. More
than a few of them had already arrived at this obvious
conclusion some time ago, but to hear the confused gibberish
coming from their Commander-in-Chief must be like a kick
below the utility belt.
Hopefully, none of the troops over there were
able to watch the coverage of the Republican convention on
Monday night. Salted through the audience were a number of
conventioneers wearing band-aids with little purple hearts
on them. This was, of course, an extension of the gutter war
being waged against Democratic candidate John Kerry’s
Vietnam record.
Some 3,700 Purple Heart medals have been
awarded to soldiers fighting in Operation Iraqi Freedom,
with more than 3,000 still wending through the process
before they can be pinned to the breasts of soldiers missing
a chunk of their body. The message emanating from Madison
Square Garden is obvious: Not only is the President
blitheringly unclear on what is supposedly the central
mission of his administration, but his own supporters have
nothing but disdain for anyone wounded in combat.
If you think Bush and his White House have
nothing to do with that disgusting display on the convention
floor on Monday night, and have nothing to do with the Swift
Boat Veterans group that appears to have made insulting
combat veterans the new hip style among Republicans, think
again.
A GOP staffer told Newsweek reporter Elanor
Clift this past week that the Swift Boat strategy “came
straight from the West Wing,” specifically from Bush
hatchet-man Karl Rove. “Nobody,” he said, “should be
confused.” The GOP staffer called those who have done this
“political terrorists,” stating, “They know what to do
- it’s like sleeper cells that get activated.”
In other words, nauseating activities like
the Swift Boat smears and the Purple Heart Band-Aid-wearing
cretins do not bubble up from the slime of their own accord.
This is standard-issue East Texas political assassination,
and the smell of it trails all the way from 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue to the doorstep of this Republican
convention. This is leadership from the top down,
Bush-style.
Why?
When your war is a disaster, when your
economy is a mess, when your people are out of work by the
millions, when the environment is under total assault
because of your policies, and when your best pals are
pocketing billions of dollars in taxpayer money on the
sneak, you’d do well to avoid discussing the issues.
Unfortunately for Bush, the manner in which he and his
campaign are attempting to change the subject is becoming an
issue in and of itself.
William Rivers Pitt
is a New York Times and international bestselling author of
two books - 'War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You
To Know' and 'The Greatest Sedition is Silence.'
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