Statements>
John McCarthy
Professor of German
Our semi-elected president has recast the White House
as a monolithic institution: no openness, no dissent from stated policy
is tolerated within its hallowed halls. Members of the Cabinet are expected
to toe the line; if anyone shows signs of independent thought, he or she
is quickly set to "the right." Control is the operative word.
Only the insiders are privy to all the information available. Those on
the outside cannot be trusted. Yet the Bush Administration asks us to
trust it unquestioningly.
This same insistence upon the closing of the ranks and trust is reflected
in the infamous dictum to the American people and the world: "either
you are with us, or you are against us." Believe us because we are
all powerful. War at all costs. No room for middle ground in George W.
Bush's black-and-white universe. As a consequence, dissenters from Bushs
fanatic insistence upon aggression are vilified as unpatriotic, old and
loyal allies who urge cautious diplomacy are belittled as debilitated
"old Europe," the venerable institution of wise democratic process,
the United Nation, is disrespectfully cast as a do-nothing body of word
mongers, its authority accosted by a "rogue state." In its rush
to war, the Bush Administration is on its own jihad. Instead of seeking
compromise and cooperation, the Administration seeks to manipulate through
prejudice and fear, invoking the threat of imminent terrorist attack to
influence public opinion. It would have us believe that Saddam Hussein
is behind everything bad that might happen to the US.
If the logic of connecting Saddam to international terrorism is specious,
it is at least in line with other illogical actions taken by the Bush
Administration. The UN did not assign to the Bush Administration the role
of Enforcer of UN resolution 1441. And who asked the US to be policeman
of the world? How can we justify our aggressive acts as being committed
in the name of democracy and peace, when we act secretly, disregard democratic
due process, suspend citizen's rights, and advocate pre-emptive strikes
to thwart imagined future threats? And what of the illogic of the double
standard toward Iraq and North Korea? The greater threat to world peace
is North Korea. Yet, the Administration directs its venom at Iraq which
is already contained.
Why act this way? In the wake of 9/11 the Bush Administration learned
that the President's poll numbers can be enhanced if the country is made
to feel that it is at war. Traditionally, Americans rally behind the president
in times of war regardless of party affiliation. If the Administration
could achieve a permanent war status, then it could line up the populace
like it did its White-House functionaries. A jaundiced view of White House
tactics? In light of the White House's established modus operandi, the
theory is not outlandish. When it failed to make the promised progress
on its war on terror, missing Osama Bin Laden who was wanted "dead
or alive," the Bush people sought a new target to maintain the sense
of war urgency. Enter Saddam. Initially, the tactic worked. Leaders of
the opposition party and independent thinkers within its own ranks were
intimidated into silence if not compliance by being labeled "unpatriotic"
and soft on terrorism. Then unconfirmed, secret informants prompt the
Administration to cause a panic rush to hardware stores. The public has
no way of judging how reliable the sources of information are because
everything is kept under wraps. In fact, some alarming information proved
to be false.
Secrecy is, of course, a trademark of the Bush Administration. But the
ploy is wearing thin. The resistance to Bush's jihad against Saddam is
growing more public. But it may be too late. Bush will have his war. He
has offended too many allies. He has weakened the Transatlantic Alliance
and undermined the credibility of the UN through his repeated questioning
of its resolve. He has provided too much fiery rhetoric to inspire America's
fanatic enemies by reinforcing the image of the Ugly American. He has
boxed himself in so tightly that he has no room to maneuver, backdown,
and save face. Through a preemptive strike, moreover, he will lose not
only moral authority but also control of the situation. While George W.
Bush will win his war in Iraq, he will have weakened America's standing
in the world and shaken the democratic principles of which we had been
so proud. America will appear as the bully aggressor in most parts of
the world, and this will open a Pandora's Box. Good will toward America
will have been misspent, even as it was squandered by the Bush Administration
after 9/11. All that does not demonstrate strong and wise leadership.
Finally, by not realistically calculating the economic cost of the war
and its aftermath, the Administration does a great disservice to the American
people. The economy has steadily declined since George W. Bush took office.
War talk sends jitters throughout the system. Every proposal to cut taxes
while spending more worsens the situation. No wise leadership on that
front either. The moral, political, and economic costs of Bush's "leadership"
are much too high. The last time the chosen listened to a bush, they wandered
in the desert for forty years. What will our fate be?
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