Views > October 25, 2002
Bush Apologistas
By Joel Bleifuss
In the past couple of months, as the Bush administration flogs its plans for war against Saddam Hussein, a flurry of commentators, most notably Christopher Hitchens of Vanity Fair and David Brooks of The Weekly Standard, have taken the left to task for its opposition to the war.
Hitchens smothers “peaceniks,” “peace-mongers” and “Ramadanistas” with rhetorical meringue, sweet but insubstantial blather about how the war’s opponents are plagued by either “a masochistic refusal to admit that our own civil society has any merit” or “a nostalgia for Stalinism.”
Brooks, letting Stalin lie, accuses “peaceniks” of repeating “the hatreds they cultivated in the 1960s, and during the Reagan years, and during the Florida imbroglio.”
Brooks has a point. Doubts about the nobility of the current administration’s intentions are based on the history of past performance.
In 1975, Henry Kissinger, in congressional testimony, dismissed the abrupt cutoff in U.S. aid to Kurdish rebels who were fighting Saddam’s regime with the words, “Covert action should not be confused with missionary work.” No one has ever mistaken the Bush team for missionaries.
Except perhaps Brooks and Hitchens, who would have us accept that Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Richard “Prince of Darkness” Perle have suddenly reached the moral high ground after the mire of the ’80s when they, variably, aided and abetted Central American death squads or armed and protected Saddam Hussein’s war machine in his war against Iran.
After all, it was Rumsfeld who, as Reagan’s Middle East envoy, was in Iraq shoring up U.S. relations with Saddam on March 24, 1984, the very day U.N. weapons experts had charged Iraq with using “mustard gas laced with a nerve agent” against Iranian soldiers, further corroborating a State Department finding two weeks earlier that “available evidence indicates that Iraq has used lethal chemical weapons.” No matter, on March 29, the New York Times reported that unnamed American diplomats “pronounced themselves satisfied with relations between Iraq and the United States and suggest that normal diplomatic ties have been restored in all but name.”
Brooks accuses “peaceniks” of filling “the air with evasions, distractions and gestures, a miasma of insults and verbiage that distract from the core issue” that Hussein is “a fundamental problem for the world.”
Brooks and Hitchens’ evident strategy is to dismiss the opponents of war in the crudest of caricatures and sweep aside the objections to Bush’s war plans—as a midterm election diversion, as a way to ignite an already volatile Middle East, as an adventure that could cost untold thousands of Iraqi lives, as a recruiting bonanza for al-Qaeda—in favor of the unproven supposition that President Bush is right, and Saddam poses a dire threat to the world.
Does it? On this question, opposition to the war has little to do with left and right and everything to do with what is a sane, sensible policy given the facts on the ground. So far the Bush administration has provided no proof that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction or that it is actively engaged in acquiring them. For this reason, leaders in the rest of the world, with one or two exceptions, are very nervous about Bush’s plans for “regime change.”
Intelligence operatives are likewise nonplussed. Vincent Cannistraro, the former head of counterintelligence at the CIA and “peacenik,” put it this way: “Basically, cooked information is working its way into high-level pronouncements, and there’s a lot of unhappiness about it in intelligence, especially among analysts at the CIA.”
Nor are top generals gung ho for this war. Anthony Zinni, the former Marine Corps general who was Bush’s special envoy to the Middle East, claims that retired generals Colin Powell, Brent Scowcroft and Norman Schwarzkopf are, like him, opposed to a war against Iraq. “It’s pretty interesting that all the generals see it the same way,” he said, “and all the others who have never fired a shot and are hot to go to war see it another way.”
More information about Joel Bleifuss
-
subscribe to print magazine
-
email this article to a friend
-
Reader Comments
There are no comments on this article yet. Start the discussion below.
-
register a new account »Posting Security
Member Login
Also by Joel Bleifuss
- United We Fail
- Keep the Heat on Obama
- EPA on Trial
- Bush’s Selective Mourning
- Piling it High
The sewage sludge industry meets the light of day - Political Vice Squad
Popular Discussions
- 20 Million Arrests, and Counting
53 posts since Sep 25 08 - Feeding the Beast
In order to weaken federal agencies, the Bush administration has expanded them to the point of collapse
47 posts since Aug 18 08 - McCains Feminist Mistake
28 posts since Sep 7 08 - Why Soldiers Rape
Culture of misogyny, illegal occupation, fuel sexual violence in military
28 posts since Aug 13 08 - Back for the Future
Progressives at the Democratic National Convention look to FDR as a model for an Obama presidency
11 posts since Sep 15 08









