|
This article originally provided by
The Washington Post
March 30, 2006
Bush Wanted War
By Richard Cohen
It is my firm belief that if, say, a few dozen people
simultaneously did an Internet search for the words "Bush
lied," computers all over the country would crash and the
energy grid would buckle, producing a rolling blackout that
would begin somewhere around Terre Haute, Ind., and end in
Barnstable, Mass. So common is the statement "Bush lied"
that it seems sometimes that I am the only blue-state person
who does not think it is true. Then, last week, the
indomitable Helen Thomas changed all that with a single
question. She asked George Bush why he wanted "to go to war"
from the moment he "stepped into the White House," and the
president said, "You know, I didn't want war." With that,
the last blue-state skeptic folded.
I would not go so far as to say that Bush wanted war from
Day One in the White House, but there was plenty of evidence
he had Saddam on his mind and in his sights from the very
moment he got the news of the terrorist attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon. We have it from Richard
Clarke, formerly the White House's chief anti-terrorism
official, that within a day of the attacks Bush was
inquiring if Saddam might have had a hand in them. When told
no -- "But, Mr. President, al-Qaeda did this," Clarke told
him -- it became instantly clear that this was not the
answer Bush wanted. "'Look into Iraq, Saddam,' the president
said testily," Clarke writes in his book, "Against All
Enemies."
Similarly, Bob Woodward says in his book, "Plan of
Attack," that not only was Bush fixated on Iraq, but by
Thanksgiving of 2001, he already had told Don Rumsfeld to
prepare a plan for the invasion of that country. "Let's get
started on this," the president said, cautioning the defense
secretary not to tell anyone. Rumsfeld said that eventually
he would have to take CIA Director George Tenet into his
confidence. "'Fine."' Woodward quotes Bush as saying -- "but
not now."
As for myself, I was told by a European intelligence
official that after flying to Washington right after the
9/11 attacks, he was stunned to discover that talk had
already turned to Iraq. This was particularly true at the
Pentagon, where Paul Wolfowitz was obsessed with Iraq, and
that seems to have been true of the White House as well. And
now we know from various British accounts that close aides
to Prime Minister Tony Blair recognized early on that Bush
was going to go to war -- and that Blair, his poodle at
obedient heel, would follow along. More recently we learned
-- again from British sources -- that even though Bush went
back to the United Nations for yet another resolution
condemning Iraq, he was determined to make war almost no
matter what.
None of this necessarily means that Bush doctored U.S.
intelligence to make a purposely false case that Iraq was
seething with weapons of mass destruction. There is plenty
of evidence that others in the administration -- Dick
Cheney, in particular -- exaggerated such that their pants
must have caught fire, but nothing so far proved that Bush
knew he was making a false case. Indeed, foreign
intelligence sources were in agreement with Bush on Iraq's
WMD and so were Clinton administration officials who had
seen some of the same intelligence. Even within the Bush
administration, critics of the war -- and there were some --
were just as convinced that Saddam had WMD. Colin Powell,
you may recall, soiled his stellar reputation with a United
Nations speech that is now just plain sad to read. Almost
none of it is true.
There remains, though, the little matter of what was in
Bush's gut -- not his head, mind you, but that elusive place
where emotion resides. It was there, in the moments after
9/11, that Bush truly decided on war, maybe because Saddam
had once tried to kill George H.W. Bush, maybe because the
neocons had convinced him that a brief war in Iraq would
have long-term salutary consequences for the entire Middle
East, maybe because he could not abide the thought that a
monster like Saddam might die in his sleep -- and maybe
because he heard destiny calling.
Whatever Bush's specific reason or reasons, the one thing
that's so far missing from the record is proof of him
looking for a genuine way out of war instead of looking for
a way to get it started. Bush wanted war. He just didn't
want the war he got.
© 2006 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive
|