February 6, 2003
Notice what Colin Powell didn�t say.
Addressing the United Nations Security Council, the meticulous secretary of
state � the Bush administration�s most credible spokesman � didn�t say that
Saddam Hussein had anything whatever to do with the events of 9/11.
That was
supposed to be the whole point of the �war on terrorism�: to avenge and punish
the destruction of the World Trade Center and part of the Pentagon, and to
prevent a recurrence of that horror. It�s hard to see how war on Iraq will
achieve either purpose. What do Iraq�s hidden �weapons of mass destruction,�
however terrible, have to do with a score of terrorists armed only with
box-cutters? Nothing.
Nor did Powell say
that conquering Iraq would amount to a victory. Or that it would defeat or
diminish terrorism. Or that Americans would be safer from terrorists if the
United States launches war on Iraq.
Have Americans
already forgotten that the �war on terrorism� is supposed to be about �
terrorism?
The rest of the
world seems to remember. It wonders what the real purpose of this war is, when
North Korea is both far more evil and far more menacing.
![[Breaker quote: How one war morphed into another]](gif00139.gif) Powell did
allege nebulous �links� between Iraq and al-Qaeda, but he gave no evidence of
any operational conspiracy in the events of 9/11. He didn�t even try. He knew
better. Instead he offered horrifying descriptions of the weapons in question �
particularly chemical weapons � and made a plausible-sounding case that Iraq has
them and has deceived the UN inspectors. But his claims were so technical that
few of us can assess them, and we had to take his word even for what the
satellite photos showed.
In short, there was
no �smoking gun� � or, more to the point, smoking box-cutter. All this had
nothing to do with 9/11. Powell, like the rest of the administration for the
last year or so, was talking about an entirely different subject and hoping we
wouldn�t notice.
Al-Qaeda�s modus
operandi is totally different from Hussein�s. If he had wanted (and been
invited) to help it stage the 9/11 attacks, he could have supplied the 20
terrorists with flight training, lodgings, money, and chemical weapons. They
obviously didn�t rely on him at all. If they even asked him for support, they
may well have been refused. But more likely they are entirely separate from him.
In his eyes they would be fanatics and loose cannons. He likes to be in control,
and it�s hard to imagine him sharing his precious weapons with them to do what
they please with them. For their part, they saw him as one of the many �traitors
to Islam� who rule the Arab world.
So why does the
Bush administration want this war so badly? What�s it all about? Oil? Israel?
There are plenty of rabid Zionists in the administration, and they do want war
with Iraq (for starters), but they aren�t in command. The oil men are. Not that
they need access to Middle Eastern oil; the free market could take care of that
well enough.
But whoever
controls the Arab world controls everyone�s access to oil. If the United States
conquers Iraq, then Iran, it will gain enormous leverage over the whole
industrialized world � including a little country that has been largely ignored
during the recent discussions: China. No wonder China has been resisting the
American war plans.
Not too long ago,
the United States had virtual control of the region through compliant rulers in
Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait. But Iran overthrew the shah, Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait are also vulnerable to Islamic revolution, and Iraq acquired its own
ambitions. So if the United States wants global hegemony, it must step in and
take the reins in its own hands.
The purpose of the
1991 Gulf War was to restore the status quo when Iraq seized Kuwait. Gulf War II
has no such pretext. The American people aren�t in the mood for yet another war.
So the trick was to convert the shock of 9/11 into war fever, then to redirect
it at Iraq by �linking� Saddam Hussein to �terrorism.� This required some
slippery semantics and a lot of propaganda � which is mostly sheer repetition of
nonsense until resistance is worn down, and logic surrenders.
That�s
about where we are now. Osama bin Laden may have started one war, but Saddam
Hussein is about to lose the other one it has morphed into.
Joseph Sobran
The Mulindwas
communication group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
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