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Oh, What A Tangled Web Bush Weaves

by Eric Margolis Tuesday, May. 27, 2003 at 1:33 PM

But the CIA was correct in warning the White House and Pentagon that Iraq would turn into a tar-baby for the U.S. This is precisely what is now happening. Iraq is in chaos and near-anarchy. U.S. occupation forces have so far been unable to form even a puppet regime, as was done in Afghanistan.

Oh, What A Tangled Web Bush Weaves

By Eric Margolis

Contributing Foreign Editor

Toronto Sun

5-25-3



U.S. President George Bush justified his invasion of Iraq by claiming Baghdad was behind 9/11 and threatened America with weapons of mass destruction.

 

To Washington's profound embarrassment, U.S. forces in Iraq have so far failed to find any unconventional weapons or any links between Iraq and al-Qaida. Most Americans don't seem to care their government launched a war of unprovoked aggression based on fabricated evidence and untruths, or that the president and secretary of state repeatedly misinformed and misled the nation.

 

But now Democrats are accusing Bush of trumping up a war against a nasty but unthreatening Iraq, while failing to combat terrorism, evidenced by last week's bloody terror attacks in Morocco and Saudi Arabia.

 

The White House is trying to deflect rising criticism of its Iraq policy by blaming the Central Intelligence Agency for supplying erroneous information, a ploy originated by former president John F. Kennedy after his Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba. But the CIA was not wrong. The agency repeatedly warned the Bush administration, both privately, through leaks and openly, that Iraq was not a threat, did not possess significant offensive weapons systems, and was unlikely to greet American and British invaders as "liberators."

 

Where the CIA went wrong was predicting heavy urban fighting in Iraq. In fact, most pre-war military estimates were mistaken. For example, this column predicted a U.S. victory within two weeks. However, the war lasted for three weeks due to unexpected Iraqi resistance that wrong-footed the U.S. offensive.

 

Most defence analysts, this writer included, foresaw heavy urban combat. But there was only limited city fighting. What happened to Iraq's Republican Guard divisions around Baghdad remains a mystery: they simply vanished or were blown to bits. Guard commanders may have been bought off or gave up when Saddam Hussein went into hiding or was allowed to flee the country - thanks, it is rumoured, to a Saudi-brokered deal.

 

But the CIA was correct in warning the White House and Pentagon that Iraq would turn into a tar-baby for the U.S. This is precisely what is now happening. Iraq is in chaos and near-anarchy. U.S. occupation forces have so far been unable to form even a puppet regime, as was done in Afghanistan.

 

The initial American-appointed ruler of Iraq, Jay Garner, a retired general who looked more like a building contractor than an imperial viceroy, has been relieved, along with a State Department lady who was bizarrely named mayor of Baghdad. A neo-conservative diplomat has been brought in to run Iraq.

 

Meanwhile, U.S. firms, led by Texas oil giant Halliburton, VP Dick Cheney's old firm, are fighting like hungry vultures to get a slice of Iraq's petro-wealth.

 

But America now risks a colonial morass in Iraq that may cost even more than the profits it may make from "liberating" Iraq's oil.

 

Flexing political muscle

 

Most ominously, Iraq's Shia majority, long repressed by Saddam's regime, is flexing its political muscle and calling for an Iranian-style Islamic state. Mass graves of Shias executed by Saddam's regime in 1991 are now being cited by the Bush administration as an after-the-fact justification for invading Iraq.

 

But remember it was George Bush Sr., in 1991, who called on Iraq's Shias and Kurds to revolt, then sat back, watching impassively, as Saddam's forces slaughtered the rebels. Why? Because Bush pere and his advisers rightly feared that if Saddam's minority Sunni Muslim regime fell, Iraq's Shias would take over and align their country with Iran.

 

Ironically, this may now be happening.

 

Back to the CIA. Before the war, hawks and neo-conservative supporters sympathetic to Israel's hard right who heavily influence U.S. foreign policy became enraged at the CIA for failing to back their claims Iraq was a deadly threat requiring urgent military action. So they created a special intelligence unit that cherry-picked reports suiting their views, and sent the biased info to the White House and Pentagon. Protests by CIA professionals that the national intelligence function was being politicized and corrupted were ignored.

 

The special intelligence unit relied on bogus reports from Iraqi exiles and carefully crafted disinformation from Kuwait and Israeli intelligence to provide ammunition for the pro-war party. Much of the data delivered to the White House was erroneous. Unconventional weapons were not found, and Iraqis failed to welcome invading U.S. and British forces, as a well-known neo-conservative female columnist had gushingly predicted, "like French in 1944, greeting their liberators with flowers."

 

Contrary to Bush's assurances that invading Iraq would end terrorism and make the Mideast a safer, quieter, more democratic place, last week's terror attacks in Casablanca, Riyadh and Israel showed the invasion had sparked more, not less, terrorism and counter-repression, and that anti-American militant groups were gaining, not losing, strength. Palestinian bombings and Israeli intransigence left Bush's "road map" for peace looking more like a dead end.

 

Early on, Bush vowed to avoid "nation building" and avoid Mideast entanglements. But thanks to his clumsy war on terrorism, his unnecessary invasion of Iraq and his relentless belligerency toward the Muslim world, the Mideast may come to be the nemesis of his administration, just as Iran undid that of former president Jimmy Carter.

 

http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_may25.html

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Borrowing from Mark Twain

by Diogenes Tuesday, May. 27, 2003 at 1:37 PM

There are three kinds of lies. Lies, damned lies, and Bush.

If so many lives had not already been lost I would find it amusing that most of the grim warnings of thinking people beforehand have come to pass.

The blatant stupidity of the Bush Junta's policies are now coming to fruition, and it is an ugly fruit.

Unfortunately Mr. Margolis underestimates the stupidity of Bush's supporters who will blindly ignore the evidence of their own eyes in swallowing Bush's latest LIES.

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Dio, don't you ever think you've gone over the edge?

by Eric Wednesday, May. 28, 2003 at 9:59 PM

The rest of us sure do.

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Bush is a great President

by Bush Admirer Wednesday, May. 28, 2003 at 10:07 PM

Bush is an A+++ President. He's got rock-solid support and will be reelected in a landslide.

The only 'profound embarrassment in Washington' would be the limp and lame Democrats who continue to make fools of themselves on a daily basis.

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hi there, americans

by The President of the U.S.A. Wednesday, May. 28, 2003 at 11:49 PM

I know I'll always have you. God bless you, Myself Admirer.

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Dear Bush Lover:

by FQ Thursday, May. 29, 2003 at 8:27 PM

Mr. Bush Lover,

Hmmmm.... telling by the vast majority of your remarks I'd say you or someone in your family is in the military. ???

Am I right?

Sincerely,

Fuk Cue

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FQ

by daveman Thursday, May. 29, 2003 at 11:40 PM

Is there anything wrong with being in the military?

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less government?

by wavemaster Friday, May. 30, 2003 at 12:16 AM

This is a term the right always uses to mask their agenda. Less government when it comes to helping the disadvantaged, but when it comes to fat cat political lobbiest and CEO's, or the defense lobby, than thats a whole diffrent ballgame.

Can any of you Bush admirers tell me with all the states being bankrupt how do you explain spending our tax dollars to rebuild Iraq. What about your less government? This is pure hypocracy.

Dio I think America is more worried about how they are gonna feed their families than terrorist hidding under their bed. Bush is just digging him self in a big whole. And Bush Admirer your just a paid shrill

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wavemaster, lay off the crack.

by Eric Friday, May. 30, 2003 at 9:36 AM

That stuff is killing your brain cells.

Less government is good. You don't need a big government to have an extensive, well equipped and well trained military.

And yes, we need to rebuild Iraq. It's a gesture of good faith and it's our responsibility as liberators. Those people have suffered long enough. Personally, I wouldn't mind having them as allies instead of enemies.

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Simple

by Simple Simon Friday, May. 30, 2003 at 7:57 PM

Personally, I wouldn't mind taking a huge shit on your ugly face.

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(grunt)

by narrater- Friday, May. 30, 2003 at 8:32 PM

Simple Simon is obsessed with scatology. This theme keeps reoccurring. Always with huge BMs. Try more vegies and realize you dreams. Prunes and cabbage will get the results

you desire.

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Help me

by Eric Friday, Jun. 06, 2003 at 4:33 PM

I'm mentally unstable.

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?

by Eric Friday, Jun. 06, 2003 at 5:19 PM

Don't you care?

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One more time with feeling.

by One more time with feeling. Friday, Jun. 06, 2003 at 10:22 PM

Come everybody let me hear you fuckers: "One, Two, Three what are we fightin' for...."

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