Back to
Opinions Page
If some wishful
Americans are still hoping President Bush will acknowledge that his
imperial foreign policy has stumbled in Iraq and needs fixing or reining
in, they should put aside those reveries. He's going all the way—and
taking us with him.
The Israeli
bombing raid on Syria October 5 was an expansion of the Bush policy,
carried out by the Sharon government but with the implicit approval of
Washington. The government in Iran, said to be seeking to develop a
nuclear weapon, reportedly expects to be the next target.
If the Bush White
House is going to use its preeminent military force to subdue and
neutralize all "evildoers" and adversaries everywhere in the world, the
American public should be told now. Such an undertaking would be
virtually endless and would require the sacrifice of enormous blood and
treasure.
With no guarantee
of success. And no precedent in history for such a crusade having
lasting effect.
People close to the president say that his
conversion to evangelical Methodism, after a life of aimless carousing,
markedly informs his policies, both foreign and domestic. In the
soon-to-be-published The Faith of George W. Bush (Tarcher/Penguin),
a sympathetic account of this religious journey, author Stephen
Mansfield writes (in the advance proofs) that in the election year 2000,
Bush told Texas preacher James Robison, one of his spiritual mentors: "I feel like God wants me to run
for president. I can't explain it, but I sense my country is going to
need me. . . . I know it won't be easy on me or my family, but God wants
me to do it."
Mansfield also reports: "Aides found him face down
on the floor in prayer in the Oval Office. It became known that he
refused to eat sweets while American troops were in Iraq, a partial fast
seldom reported of an American president. And he framed America's
challenges in nearly biblical language. Saddam Hussein is an evildoer.
He has to go." The author concludes: " . . . the Bush administration
does deeply reflect its leader, and this means that
policy, even in military matters, will be
processed in terms of the personal, in terms of the moral, and in terms
of a sense of divine purpose that propels the present to meet the
challenges of its time."
Some who read this
article may choose to view it as the partisan perspective of a political
liberal. But I have experienced wars—in India and Indochina—and have
measured their results. And most of the men and women who are advocating
the Bush Doctrine have not. You will find few generals among them. They
are, instead, academics and think-tank people and born-again
missionaries. One must not entertain any illusion that they are only
opportunists in search of power, for most of them truly believe in their
vision of a world crusade under the American flag. They are serious, and
they now have power at the top.
I believe that
last week's blitz of aggressive speeches and spin by the president and
his chief counselors removed all doubt of his intentions.
"As long as George
W. Bush is president of the United States," Vice President Cheney told
the friendly Heritage Foundation, "this country will not permit
gathering threats to become certain tragedies." The president himself
must tell us now what this vow entails.
The public
relations deluge by Bush, Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell,
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, and Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld seemed to be aimed at denying any policy fumbles and insisting
that the liberal press was ignoring the positive developments in Iraq.
Mr. Cheney, the
president's usual attack dog, aimed his sharpest and most sneering words
at those who offer dissent about the administration's foreign and
economic policies. Perhaps seeking to stifle such criticism, he raised
the specter of terrorists acquiring weapons of mass destruction that
"could bring devastation to our country on a scale we have never
experienced. Instead of losing thousands of lives, we might lose tens of
thousands or even hundreds of thousands of lives in a single day of
horror." His implication was that Saddam Hussein in particular had
presented this threat—when virtually all the available intelligence
shows that Iraq's weapons programs had been crippled or drastically
diminished by UN inspections and economic sanctions imposed after the
first Gulf war in 1991.
But beyond all the
distortions and exaggerations and falsehoods the Bush people engaged in
to rally public support for the Iraq war, what I have never understood,
from the 9-11 day of tragedy onward, is why this White House has not
called on the American people to be part of the war effort, to make the
sacrifices civilians have always made when this country is at war.
There has been no
call for rationing or conservation of critical supplies, such as
gasoline. There has been no call for obligatory national service in
community aid projects or emergency services. As he sent 150,000
soldiers into battle and now asks them to remain in harm's way longer
than expected, the president never raised even the possibility of
reinstating the military draft, perhaps the most democratizing influence
in the nation's history. Instead, he has cut taxes hugely, mostly for
affluent Americans, saying this would put money into circulation and
create jobs. Since Bush began the tax cutting two and a half years ago,
2.7 million jobs have disappeared.
All this I don't
understand. If it's a crisis—and global terrorism surely is—then why
hasn't the president acted accordingly? What he did do, when he sent out
those first tax rebate checks, was to tell us to go shopping. Buy
clothes for the kids, tires for the car—this would get the economy
humming. How does that measure up as a thoughtful, farsighted fiscal
plan?
In effect, George
Bush says, believe in me and I will lead you out of darkness. But he
doesn't tell us any details. And it's in the details where the true
costs are buried—human costs and the cost to our notion of ourselves as
helpers and sharers, not slayers. No one seems to be asking themselves:
If in the end the crusade is victorious, what is it we will have won?
The White House never asked that question in Vietnam either.
For those who
would dispute the assertion that the Bush Doctrine is a global
military-based policy and is not just about liberating the Iraqi people,
it's crucial to look back to the policy's origins and examine its
founding documents.
The Bush Doctrine
did get its birth push from Iraq—specifically from the outcome of the
1991 Gulf war, when the U.S.-led military coalition forced Saddam
Hussein's troops out of Kuwait but stopped short of toppling the
dictator and his oppressive government. The president then was a
different George Bush, the father of the current president. The father
ordered the military not to move on Baghdad, saying that the UN
resolution underpinning the allied coalition did not authorize a regime
change. Dick Cheney was the first George Bush's Pentagon chief. He said
nothing critical at the time, but apparently he came to regret the
failure to get rid of the Baghdad dictator.
A few years later, in June 1997, a group of
neoconservatives formed an entity called the Project for the New
American Century (PNAC) and issued a
Statement of Principles.
"The history of the 20th Century," the statement said, "should have
taught us that it is important to shape circumstances before crises
emerge, and to meet threats before they become dire." One of its formal
principles called for a major increase in defense spending "to carry out
our global responsibilities today." Others cited the "need to strengthen
our ties to democratic allies and to challenge regimes hostile to our
interests and values" and underscored "America's unique role in
preserving and extending an international order friendly to our
security, our prosperity and our principles." This, the statement said,
constituted "a Reaganite policy of military strength and moral clarity."
Among the 25
signatories to the PNAC founding statement were Dick Cheney, I. Lewis
Libby (Cheney's chief of staff), Donald Rumsfeld (who was also defense
secretary under President Ford), and Paul Wolfowitz (Rumsfeld's No. 2 at
the Pentagon, who was head of the Pentagon policy team in the first Bush
presidency, reporting to Cheney, who was then defense secretary).
Obviously, this fraternity has been marinating together for a long time.
Other signers whose names might ring familiar were Elliot Abrams, Gary
Bauer, William J. Bennett, Jeb Bush, and Norman Podhoretz.
Three years and several aggressive position papers
later—in September 2000, just two months before George W. Bush, the son,
was elected president—the PNAC put military flesh on its statement of
principles with a detailed 81-page report, "Rebuilding
America's Defenses." The report set
several "core missions" for U.S. military forces, which included
maintaining nuclear superiority, expanding the armed forces by 200,000
active-duty personnel, and "repositioning" those forces "to respond to
21st century strategic realities."
The most startling
mission is described as follows: "Fight and decisively win multiple,
simultaneous major theater wars." The report depicts these potential
wars as "large scale" and "spread across [the] globe."
Another escalation
proposed for the military by the PNAC is to "perform the 'constabulary'
duties associated with shaping the security environment in critical
regions."
As for homeland
security, the PNAC report says: "Develop and deploy global missile
defenses to defend the American homeland and American allies, and to
provide a secure basis for U.S. power projection around the world.
Control the new 'international commons' of space and 'cyberspace,' and
pave the way for the creation of a new military service—U.S. Space
Forces—with the mission of space control."
Perhaps the
eeriest sentence in the report is found on page 51: "The process of
transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be
a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event—like a new
Pearl Harbor."
Apparently for the neoconservative civilians who
are running the Iraq campaign, 9-11 was that catalyzing event—for they
are now operating at full speed toward multiple, simultaneous wars. The
PNAC documents can be found online at
newamericancentury.org.
In the end, the
answers lie with this president—and later maybe with Congress and the
American voters. Is he so committed to this imperial policy that he is
unable to consider rethinking it? In short, is his mind closed? And if
so, how many wars will he take us into?
These are not
questions in a college debate, where the answers have no consequences.
When a president's closest advisers and military planners are patrons of
a policy that speaks matter-of-factly of fighting multiple,
simultaneous, large-scale wars across the globe, people have a right to
be told about it.
In his new book,
Winning Modern Wars, retired general Wesley Clark, a candidate
for the Democratic presidential nomination, offered a window into the
Bush serial-war planning. He writes that serious planning for the Iraq
war had already begun only two months after the 9-11 attack, and adds:
"As I went back through the Pentagon in November
2001, one of the senior military staff officers had time for a chat.
Yes, we were still on track for going against Iraq, he said. But there
was more. This was being discussed as part of a five-year campaign plan,
he said, and there were a total of seven countries,
beginning with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and
Sudan. . . . I left the Pentagon that
afternoon deeply concerned."
A five-year
military campaign. Seven countries. How far has the White House taken
this plan? And how long can the president keep the nation in the dark,
emerging from his White House cocoon only to speak to us in slogans and
the sterile language of pep rallies?