The Neocons Have Blown It
Paul Craig Roberts
Friday, Sept. 5, 2003
Do you remember the ridicule neocons heaped on critics who
predicted a quagmire in Iraq? Now neocons William Kristol and Robert Kagen
are calling for more troops and more money – two more Army divisions and
another $60 billion, to be exact. "Next spring, if disaster looms," they
write, "it may be too late."
John McCain – who experienced, but has forgotten, the Vietnam
quagmire – has taken the bait and is urging Bush to send more troops. But
there are no troops to send. The Pentagon doesn't know where it is going to
get the troops to carry on the occupation of Iraq at the present level of
troop strength. The Associated Press reports that our combat troops are
going to be saddled with back-to-back assignments to overseas hotspots.
Army officials are concerned that they are going to begin losing
many sergeants and junior officers. Officers in infantry divisions are
scrambling to find other military jobs that are not subject to overseas
deployment.
Meanwhile, the handful of neocons who got our country into this
growing mess are still talking about the United States invading other Middle
Eastern countries as part of their program to deracinate Islam. On top of it
all, neocons want to take on North Korea, whose army outnumbers ours two to
one.
Bush is trying to get other countries to send their soldiers to
occupy Iraq. So far, success has eluded him. Other countries don't like to
tell us "no" repeatedly. They say they have to have the cover of the United
Nations, which the neocons intended to keep out. The U.N. would likely get
in the way of the neocons' plan to use Iraq as a staging ground for invading
Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia.
Bush, however, is getting desperate. As our soldiers are pushed
off the streets of Iraq and congregate behind hopefully impenetrable
barricades, Bush might have to let the United Nations rescue him on its own
terms.
The U.N. should not do so, however, without a firm understanding
that it is not freeing up U.S. troops for an attack on another Middle
Eastern country.
If you think about it, you will realize that the neocons' war
plans are taking us back to the draft. There's no way around it. Lacking
sufficient military forces to occupy Iraq, with its small population of 25
million, what would we do once neocons get us mired down in Iran or Egypt,
with their large populations?
Somebody needs to call a halt to this. It will not be the neocon
press or Fox News that does it. These folks hide behind superpatriotism, but
their real motive is to make the Middle East safe for Israel. The alliance
of neocons with white Southern evangelicals is not enough to control U.S.
foreign policy. Sooner or later, even the brain-dead are going to realize
that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, was not a threat to us (until
neocons got us mired down there) and had nothing to do with the events of
Sept. 11.
We spent a fortune attacking a country that had done us no harm,
killing tens of thousands of its people and giving the United States a black
eye as an aggressor that starts wars on the basis of lies and
disinformation. In the process, we also wrecked the political standing of
our best ally, British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Two-thirds of the British
people now believe that Blair intentionally made a false case for invading
Iraq.
When the public tires of flag-waving and war propaganda, how
will the Bush administration carry on with its pretense that we have made
the world safe from terrorists by overthrowing Saddam Hussein? Voters will
begin to wonder why Bush doesn't sack the neocons who have brought him such
deep embarrassment. The longer Bush waits before sacking the neocons, the
more voters will wonder why they voted for Bush.
Our situation in Iraq is already bad. It will become untenable
if the Shiite majority decides to join in the effort to drive us out. It
doesn't appear we will be able to buy off our adversaries with our money.
Will we as a proud nation respond to Iraqi resistance by conscripting our
sons and grandsons as targets for terrorists and guerrillas? While we are
bogged down, what happens if something hits the fan in another part of the
world? Will we be forced to resort to nuclear weapons?
Many people much smarter than neocons gave these warnings in
response to the neocons' promise of a "cakewalk." It is time Bush replaced his
delusional neocon advisers with wise people of integrity.
Dr. Roberts' latest book, "The Tyranny of Good Intentions," has been published by Prima Publishers.
Copyright 2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
George W. Bush
Saddam Hussein/Iraq
Editor's note:
The Iraqi "Deck of Death" playing cards – Get yours today!