Bush Knows the Jig Is Up: So Let's Hurry on to Baghdad
One can almost sense a palpable shifting of momentum, from an unrestricted Bush war-juggernaut rolling to its bloody
unfolding to an administration caught between Iraq and a hard place, condemned if it unleashes the dogs of war (imperial
warmonger), condemned if it pulls back and bides its time (wimp).
In a sense, what's transpiring reminds one of the delicious secret of "The Wizard of Oz": more and more people are
beginning to sense, and sometimes even see, that the "all-powerful" governmental leader behind the curtain is just a
flawed little man broadcasting to an overly-awed (and/or frightened) polity. Or, to shift fairytales: "The Emperor's New
Clothes," where the leader, who has been nude all this while for all to see, suddenly finds that his subjects,
heretofore willing to swallow the illusion of the emperor's new garments, realize that he's not wearing any.
In short, Bush is just another leader -- not even an elected one at that -- who, to disguise his incompetency and true
motives, has lived on propaganda and falsification, and now the jig is up. His citizens are beginning to see through the
charade -- even many who once supported him, including a good many ordinary, moderate Republicans, appalled at the
powers assumed by Big Government and its willingness to eviserate the Constitution in its push toward more and more
authoritarian control.
Certainly those outside the United States have seen through America's ostensible leader, and they, being more familiar
with imperial arrogance, have not liked what they've seen. No, not at all. Even though they know they might pay a high
price for telling the emperor to his face that he's full of bullbleep and that they refuse to have blood on their hands
just because he says it's time to go to war, they have stood up. (Sad to say, there are some signs of wavering these
days.)
What's about to come down over the next several weeks doesn't look hopeful. Bush are pulling out all the stops -- threatening, bribing, cajoling, arm-twisting, bullying -- in an effort to smooth the
path to war, to give fig-leaf cover to their rush to military onslaught devoid of overt evidence to justify the haste.
There IS going to be a war, you know. Bush will not have it any other way. The Bush domestic and global agenda requires it. How can you get your extremist domestic agenda passed unless a frightened
Congress and populace rallies around the flag being unfurled in a Mideast desert? How can the U.S. exercise its
"benevolent hegemony" of the globe (and totally by coincidence, have effective control of the world's natural resources)
unless would-be upstarts get bombed to smithereens, to demonstrate to others that they'd better not make the same
mistake of getting in our way? So, it's full speed to Baghdad.
Doesn't matter if the allies are opposed, doesn't matter if thousands of Iraqi citizens get slaughtered as the missiles
rain down (no wonder "Guernica" was covered up when Powell arrived at the U.N.), doesn't matter if North Korea insanely
is threatening nuclear war against the U.S., doesn't matter if the American citizenry doesn't want a pre-emptive war on
its conscience, doesn't matter if America is torn apart by dissension and economic disaster, doesn't matter if millions
are demonstrating in the streets of America even before bombing has begun -- none of that matters. (Reminiscent of what
Bush once told an ordinary citizen when that man deigned to criticize him at some public event: "What do I care what you
think?")
But, let's clear up something right away. Iraq War #2 already has begun. U.S. special forces are currently operating in
northern Iraq, moving to protect the oilfields from Saddam's orders to destroy them. U.S./British bombing of military
targets is happening on a more frequent basis. Propaganda leaflets are already being released from U.S. planes over
Iraq, warning soldiers not to follow the orders of their superiors to use biological or chemical armaments or risk "war
crime" trials later.
So the war is on. All that's missing is "Shock & Awe" -- the U.S. plan for the first several days of missile attacks (hundreds and hundreds of them) aimed at Baghdad
and Basra and elsewhere -- this to break the back and morale of Iraq's defense forces and to keep civilians from wanting
to fight when the U.S./British troops arrive in downtown Baghdad.
There is little doubt that the U.S. onslaught will defeat the Iraqi forces -- ignoring for a moment what might happen if
and when Saddam uncorks his biochem agents and aims them at the invaders. But, per usual when it comes to Bush
foreign/military policy, little thought has been given to the consequences of what happens when the dogs of war are
loosed on the world scene, especially on that ready-to-explode part of the world. (But this is in keeping with Bush's we'll-deal-with-the-consequences-later domestic agenda -- for example, pushing for more tax cuts for the wealthy and
corporate sectors in the face of an economy that already is in shambles because of earlier take-the-money-and-run
policies.)
So, here we are -- we liberals and progressives and radicals and moderates -- congratulating ourselves on our marvelous
work of the past few months, building a stop-the-war coaliton here and abroad that culminated in those fantastically
impressive marches and rallies and demonstrations around the world and throughout the U.S. last weekend (perhaps as many
as 11 million! peacefully protesting). True, those demonstrations were effective morale boosters and put the fear of
electoral defeat in the rulers of a number of countries as they saw millions of their normally passive, ordinary
citizens marching in the streets.
But Bush will have their war. So, what we in the opposition need to do now is to start reckoning with an overt, shooting-war
situation: How can we throw sand into our government's war machine? How can we mobilize for peace candidates? How can we
help the Democrats become a true party of opposition? How can we best help educate more of our fellow citizens -- the
ordinary, somewhat-troubled middle-class ones sitting on the sidelines for now -- about the duplicity of our rulers and
the dangerous policies being carried out in our names? How can we move toward impeachment for this incompetent,
dangerous-to-American-interests Administration?
In short, how can we use the energies displayed on the streets in the past few months to build a dynamic, unstoppable
Movement for peace and justice and economic recovery?
Those of us who were active in the civil rights/anti-Vietnam War Movement of the '60s and '70s know how much work is
involved in building to critical mass. it took years and years of hard, slogging work to eduate and agitate and begin to
change the way the great American muddle class saw the world and their political leaders devoid of illusion.
That transition can be accomplished much faster in 2003 -- especially given the speed with which news and information
and communications can be disseminated these days, via the Internet and television and cell phones.
Don't get me wrong. It's not going to be easy. And it's going to come at a heavy price for many -- who will be
persecuted, arrested, beaten, perhaps killed, censored, etc. -- as the forces of reaction fight tooth and nail to hang
onto their greed-and-power agenda.
But none of us doubts that the battle needs to be waged -- in as creative and life-affirming way as possible. Let's
continue to try to stop the war from happening, but, if -- as seems likely -- we can't, let's get our nascent Movement
in gear and revved-up for the fight ahead. If you love your country, and your Constitution, and the world, and your
kids, we can do no less. Onward!
*************
Bernard Weiner, Ph.D., has taught government & international relations at various universities, worked as an activist journalist during "The Sixties," was with the
San Francisco Chronicle for nearly 20 years, and is co-editor of The Crisis Papers ( http://www.crisispapers.org).