Bush's leaps of illogic don't answer people's questions about war
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2002
Fort Worth Star-Telegram, October 13, 2002. Also posted at ZNet, Counterpunch, Alternet and Common Dreams web site, October 8, 2002. More extensive information available from Institute for Public Accuracy.
by
Robert Jensen
George
Bush got one thing right in his speech Monday night -- that “many
Americans have raised legitimate questions” about his mad rush to war with
Iraq.
But
he continues to misunderstand what the American people and the rest of the world
want in this debate over war -- credible evidence, not speculation and lies;
defensible claims, not leaps of illogic; and a response to the growing
skepticism about his administration’s motivations.
Take
Bush’s assertion that if Iraq could “produce, buy, or steal an amount of
highly enriched uranium a little larger than a single softball, it could have a
nuclear weapon in less than a year.” Yes, that’s likely true, but it is the
equivalent of saying, “If Iraq had a nuclear weapon, it would have a nuclear
weapon.” Creating the other components of a nuclear bomb would be relatively
easy; it is the fissile material that is the issue.
Or
consider Bush’s claim that “Iraq could decide on any given day to provide a
biological or chemical weapon to a terrorist group or individual terrorists.”
Yes, he could. But if for the sake of argument we accept the claim that Hussein
has stocks of usable weapons, would he give them away? Bush reminded us that
Saddam Hussein is a power-hungry dictator who seeks total control. Is it likely
such a fellow is going to turn over powerful weapons to an outside group that he
can’t control? Especially given that Saddam is a secular nationalist and the
outside group is rooted in a fanatical theology? Is that how someone trying to
hold onto power is likely to act?
Bush
at least acknowledged that we know little about Saddam’s nuclear capability,
but he lied about why. Bush claimed that Iraq barred the inspectors of the
International Atomic Energy Agency in 1998. In fact, the inspectors, along with
those from the U.N. Special Commission, were withdrawn by their agencies -- not
expelled by Iraq -- in December 1998 when it became clear the Clinton
administration was going to bomb Iraq (as it did) and the safety of the
inspectors couldn’t be guaranteed.
When
Bush needed to answer people’s legitimate questions, he sidestepped them with
cynical attempts to manipulate emotion. To explain why a war is necessary now,
he cited the horror of 9/11. “We have seen that those who hate America are
willing to crash airplanes into buildings full of innocent people. Our enemies
would be no less willing -- in fact, they would be eager -- to use biological or
chemical, or a nuclear weapon.”
Yes,
but the people who committed the atrocities of 9/11 were not agents of Saddam
Hussein. The fact that one U.S. enemy used such terrorism does not mean that
eveyone who dislikes the United States and its policies is going to do it. In
fact, the only two times Hussein has dared to use chemical weapons -- in the war
with Iran and against Iraqi Kurds -- occurred in the 1980s when he was an ally
of the United States and had our implicit support.
Bush’s
argument reduces to this: No one can prove that Saddam Hussein is not planning
to attack us. And if he had a nuclear weapon, no one can prove he wouldn’t use
it. And if he used it, it is possible he could destroy us. So, to stop this
unknown, unproven, unquantifiable, logic-defying “threat gathering against
us,” we must go to war or risk seeing a mushroom cloud rise over the United
States.
For
this, Bush is willing to risk massive civilian casualties, the complete
destruction of a people already devastated and impoverished by one war and
nearly a dozen years of economic embargo, and a dangerously chaotic postwar
world. I cannot prove those events would come to pass, but given the brutal way
in which the United States fights wars -- with high-altitude bombing and
indiscriminate weapons, the direct targeting of civilian infrastructure, and a
consistent lack of concern for civilian deaths -- those results are far more
plausible than any of Bush’s fearmongering claims.
Bush’s
tactics won’t stop people from raising the obvious: It seems clear that the
war plans are not about protecting people, but about projecting power. The
transparent goal of a Bush war is to extend and deepen U.S. control over the
strategically crucial oil resources of the Middle East. A compliant puppet
government in Baghdad will solidify U.S. power in the region, through influence
over the flow of oil and the establishment of what would almost certainly become
a permanent U.S. base and staging area for other military actions in the area.
Although
the TV pundits and political sycophants were quick to gush over Bush’s alleged
statesmanlike demeanor and careful arguments, the legitimate questions remain.
People continue to ask them. And Bush and his administration continue to try to
paper over them with emotion, not evidence, and rhetoric, not reason.
Bush
has over the past months made clear his contempt for the United Nations and the
rest of the world. Monday night he made crystal clear his contempt for the
intelligence of the American people as well.
---------------
Robert Jensen is an associate professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, a member of the Nowar Collective, and author of the book Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream and the pamphlet “Citizens of the Empire.” He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
BACK TO ROBERT W. JENSEN'S HOME PAGE