Ground Zero
by Scott McConnell
Antiwar.com
February 5, 2002
We don't know whether Osama bin Laden was able to hear President Bush's State of the Union speech last week, but if he did he surely would have been delighted.
For
after his terrorist forces suffered a humiliation in Afghanistan, and after
all the world could see that the bin Ladenist regime which shielded Al Qaeda
was bankrupt morally and politically and militarily, George W. Bush has breathed
new life into his anti-American vision.
When
it chased bin Laden from his lair in Afghanistan, the United States had
essential backing from Pakistan and Iran, Russia and China, the Muslim
states of the former Soviet Union, considerable
support from most Arab governments, and the unanimous support from Europe.
Bin
Laden's notion that his terrorism would inspire the Muslim world, divide the
West, and destabilize the United States proved an idle fantasy.
But
in the victory's aftermath, Bush's menacing speech about the
"axis of evil" (comprising North Korea, Iran and Iraq) has set off alarm
bells in virtually every foreign ministry in the world.
(The phrase, I heard in Washington last week, came from the glib pen
of speechwriter David Frum, the former Weekly Standard editor.)
The
Bush speech appeared to signal that the President has endorsed the plans of
that small coterie of journalists and think tank intellectuals who, in the aftermath
of the 9-11 attacks, began pushing relentlessly for war against Iraq and Iran,
while demanding American attacks on other Muslim and Arab regimes.
Though they failed to find evidence tying Iraq to the 9/11 attack, they
made no secret of the fact they wanted an American war on Saddam Hussein regardless
of Iraqi culpability. Within days of 9/11 they circulated a letter asserting
that failure to remove Saddam would constitute a craven "surrender"
in the war against terror. North Korea was thrown in the way the odd Italian
grandmother is pulled out of an airport line and searched – to show the United
States wasn't targeting Muslim states alone.
It is not always simple to discern the reasons behind advocacy, where real motivations are usually mixed and often muted. Some weeks ago, John McCain blurted out that the reason the United States should attack Iraq is that Iraq poses a potential threat to Israel. When interviewer Chris Matthews tried to pursue the issue further, McCain became confused. Adding Iran to the list – a country now in the midst of a dramatic democratization process, which had been surprisingly cooperative with the United States during the Afghan campaign, raises the bid considerably. Chronicles foreign editor Srdja Trifkovic summed up the matter succinctly:
"[T]he
inclusion of Iran in the 'axis' is unexpected and represents. . .a major and
extremely dangerous victory for the neoconconservative cabal that thinks if
Osama bin Laden did not exist he should be invented. Dangerous because a simultaneous
campaign against Iraq AND Iran can be desired only by those who want to turn
America's current 'passionate attachment' in the Middle East into a permanent
and irrevocable alliance that must not be subjected to critical scrutiny.
They want America to initiate an all-out war with all the enemies of
its 'only reliable ally in the region' whether they be real, potential, or imagined,
regardless of whether this is in the interest of the United States to do so.
. . [A] massive confrontation with a regional power par excellence -- Iran --
as well as a huge chunk of the Arab world, a confrontation that probably cannot
stop short of nuclear exchanges and ultimately, of terrorist attacks on America
that would make September 11 look like Bull Run [compared] to Antietam.
Of
this there should be no doubt: if America benefited from the good wishes of
most of the world after 9/11, global response to a new campaign against Iraq
and Iran would be sullen and hostile. The early indicators are clear: Iran's
reformist parliament, the spearhead of what may be the first transformation
of a fundamentalist Islamist state into
a real democracy minced no words in denouncing Bush. "We will not tolerate any
aggression" read a statement issued by the parliament. "Bush's recent
positions ... constitute a threat to world peace."
America's closest allies were more circumspect – British foreign minister
Jack Straw tried to excuse Bush's words by claiming they were meant to influence
forthcoming congressional elections (a full nine months away!). By contrast,
applause for the speech came from the well entrenched neocon clique, with William
Safire, Charles Krauthammer, and William Kristol hailing Bush's "leadership"
from editorial perches in the New York Times and Washington Post.
The brain dead Democrats tried to change the subject to Enron.
One
problem with Bush is that one can never be sure how well he understands the
implications of the words he is given to read in his speeches. After he was
drubbed in the 2000 New Hampshire primary, reporters wrote of encountering vocally
expressed doubts in the Bush camp about whether trying to elevate the likeable
and easygoing governor to the presidency was an idea that had been sufficiently
thought through. But the Republican faithful rallied to him, the Christian Right
carried him to victory in South Carolina, and for the remainder of the campaign,
he issued relatively measured and temperate statements on foreign policy. Still,
the thought that he could be manipulated is never far from the surface: he is
after all a man whose SAT scores would not – in today's college admissions environment
– secure him admission to a competitive state university unless he could play
wide receiver. Has the President ever contemplated the way wars have sometimes
spun out of control of those who planned and started them? Has he read even
a popular history of the origins of World War I? There is no reason to think
so.
If
the United States is fortunate, Bush's State of the Union bombast about the
"axis of evil" will go down simply as a mistake a threat that wasn't
followed through on (as were many of Bill Clinton's threats), and which will
be forgotten as the administration pursues the liquidation of the Al Qaeda networks. But if Bush follows through and starts wars
against Iraq and Iran, the United States will find itself without real allies,
encountering massive anti-American demonstrations in Europe and throughout the
world, and a significant reduction in the quality of anti-terrorist police and
intelligence cooperation it now receives from other nations. Much of the world
will perceive the war not as legitimate self-defense against a terrorist enemy,
but as an act of destabilizing anti-Islamic aggression America is pursuing for
its own twisted reasons.
Could Osama bin Laden ask for anything more?
A contribution of $50 or more will get you a copy of Ronald Radosh's out-of-print classic study of the Old Right conservatives, Prophets on the Right: Profiles of Conservative Critics of American Globalism. Send contributions to
Antiwar.com
520 S. Murphy Avenue, #202
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
or
Contribute Via our Secure Server
Credit Card Donation Form