Revelations of war crimes and moralizing idealism
By Charles Bogle
10 September 2008

Several months before invading Iraq, President Bush dismissed
irrefutable evidence that Iraq did not possess weapons of mass
destruction.

By the close of 2003, with no weapons of mass destruction found and
the American public beginning to question the rationale for the war,
the White House fabricated a letter that “proved” the purported links
between Iraq and al Qaeda as well as Colin Powell’s claim before the
United Nations that Niger had shipped uranium to Iraq.

So reports the Wall Street Journal’s former senior national affairs
writer Ron Suskind in The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope
in an Age of Extremism.

Suskind argues that these impeachable offenses are manifestations of
America’s loss of its core values and hope for a better future; and
that extremism, both in the US and the Mideast had undermined the
inability “to walk in the shoes of the ‘other.’”

This idealism, coupled with a selective historical memory, seriously
flaws an otherwise readable and important book.

Suskind’s evidence for his claims is compelling. A highly placed
American intelligence official, who is “always right,” told the author
that a few months before the invasion of Iraq, top British
intelligence official Michael Shipster had a secret meeting with the
Iraq intelligence chief, Tahir Jalil Habbush. During this meeting,
Habbush told Shipster “there were no weapons.” “This guy,” related the
American, “was the real McCoy. He knew all there was to know.” Yet,
when this information was presented to Bush, the American intelligence
official reports that the President said, “Fuck it. We’re going in [to
Iraq].”

Habbush was also involved with the fabricated letter, though in an
indirect manner. The White House produced a handwritten letter,
backdated to July 1, 2001, from Tahir Jalil Habbush to Saddam with the
former’s forged signature. A CIA agent then hand-carried the letter to
Baghdad for public dissemination.

The forged letter falsely affirmed that Mohammed Atta, the alleged
mastermind of the September 11 terrorist attacks, had visited Iraq and
was prepared to carry out attacks on its behalf. It likewise mentioned
“a shipment from Niger,” thereby providing apparent substantiation for
Bush’s lying claim in his January 2003 State of the Union address that
Iraq had sought to obtain uranium in Africa in order to develop
nuclear weapons.

The British and American mainstream media were quick to trumpet this
CIA forgery. London’s Daily Telegraph published an article with
extensive quotes from the letter and statements supporting its
authenticity. Over the next few days, the American media, visual and
written, performed the same duty with even greater enthusiasm.

Former CIA Director George Tenet and former Tenet deputy Robert Richer
(Suskind’s main source for the Habbush letter story) have rebutted
Suskind’s claims about the Habbush letter. Suskind has responded with
a transcript of a taped conversation (available at www.ronsuskind.com)
with Richer in which the former CIA deputy states that the Habbush
letter was in fact written on White House stationary.

Suskind takes us on a walk in others’ shoes by creating an omnipotent
narrator who is privy to the thoughts of real and fictional
characters. Bush and Cheney, as well as Muslim fundamentalists,
represent the extremists refusing to walk in the shoes of the other;
while characters such as a young Pakistani Muslim working in
Washington, D.C., an American mother, Ann Patrila, who takes in an
Afghan college student, a US bureaucrat trying to stop nuclear
proliferation, and the late Benazir Bhutto—represent a willingness to
“revive hope” and “the beating heart of moral energy.”

Not surprisingly, to walk in Bush’s shoes is, according to Suskind, to
walk in a “bullying presence” whose decisions are based on his “gut”
instead of analysis. A prime example of this “presence” is an anecdote
concerning the sadistic pleasure Bush experiences as he bicycles
alongside his aides’ as they participate in “The President’s 100-
Degree Club” (running 3 miles in triple-digit Crawford, Texas, heat)
while tauntingly calling out “losers” to those who can’t finish.

Bush’s bullying, sadistic personality may explain his obscene
dismissal of the news that Iraq did not possess WMD, but it explains
neither why the US declared a preemptive, brutal war on Iraq nor the
larger, objective conditions underlying this decision.

Certainly, Suskind is correct that many Americans have lost hope in
the future, and if by a loss of America’s core values he means the
principles of the Enlightenment that informed America’s founding
documents, he’s also correct. But these losses long predate the Bush
Administration and have far deeper roots than the incumbent
President’s personality. The connection between the decision to invade
Iraq and America’s declining economic power (and the rise of competing
national economies) dating back to the 1960s, receives no attention.
Nor does the fact that America has been at war, either directly or
indirectly, with a number of countries throughout this period.

Instead, Suskind offers whitewashed, simplistic descriptions of
American foreign policy. Wendy Chamberlain, a fictional character who
heads the Washington D.C. Middle East institute and is among the
characters whom the author depicts as representing hope and America’s
core values, thinks the Marshall Plan was implemented because it was
“the right thing to do, and when you do the right thing, you don’t ask
for anything in return.”

That America enacted the Marshall Plan as a strategic decision aimed
at insuring markets for its commodities and avoiding the kind of
crisis that followed WWI is not considered.

The author himself writes that because the seventeenth century’s
Enlightenment didn’t visit the Muslim countries, the belief that
“nothing is as it appears” informs their often duplicitous foreign
policy decisions. But because America did experience this
Enlightenment, “[t]his sort of brutal gamesmanship has been America’s
strong suit” until “[i]ts latest generation of political managers and
war-on-terror strategists.”

Suskind’s assertion begs several questions. Has the author forgotten
or chosen to ignore American imperialism’s history of duplicitous
actions, e.g., its claims of promoting democracy while effectively
creating military-ruled vassalages in much of South America, or the
near-genocidal efforts to bring “democracy” to Vietnam? Is he not also
aware of America’s history of direct or indirect role in hindering the
efforts of Middle East countries to achieve a more enlightened,
democratic form of government?

Suskind’s solution to the current crisis facing mankind amounts to an
appeal to global idealism. “The world works” when “everyone moves
forward, in a kind of modest (italics added) unison,” he affirms. But
how does everyone go about moving forward? And “modestly,” at that?

To posit, as Suskind finally does, that this movement is possible only
by returning to the “American story,” which is “not about the
privileged defending what they have with mighty armies or earnest self-
regard” (a story Suskind ascribes to the extremist Muslim world) but
about “common people” taking control of their lives and “discovering
their truest potential,” flies in the face of history.

The twentieth century lays strewn with the corpses of millions
(including those of “common” Americans), who died defending the
possessions of the privileged. History also proves that no fundamental
social change has occurred “modestly,” as the American, French, and
Russian revolutions attest. It is the kind of idealistic
interpretation of history presented by Suskind that the privileged
promote and depend upon as an ideological prop for their rule.

Ron Suskind has provided a valuable service in unearthing the lies
underlying the criminal invasion of Iraq and consequent tragic loss of
lives. But that this service is undermined by an idealistic
interpretation of history has necessarily resulted in an equally
idealistic, non-tenable solution.
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