America's great misleader

The refusal of the three main US television networks to give live coverage to President George Bush’s address to the nation on Iraq affords an intriguing insight into the way the American “war” debate is developing.

America’s great misleader](http://www.guardian.co.uk/elsewhere/journalist/story/0,7792,806965,00.html) - Guardian Unlimited World Despatch. Oct 8

**Bush’s arguments strain the limits of plausibility to justify war on Iraq, and this, says Simon Tisdall, means regime change is imperative - in Washington **

The refusal of the three main US television networks to give live coverage to President George Bush’s address to the nation on Iraq affords an intriguing insight into the way the American “war” debate is developing. Hardly a day now passes without Mr Bush or his officials stressing the urgency of the supposed Iraqi threat and the vital importance of confronting it now. To listen to the president, one might think that it is the only issue that matters - and that the affairs of the nation are otherwise in perfect order.

In his speech in Cincinnati, Ohio, Mr Bush employed what might in British parlance be termed the kitchen sink approach. In other words, he threw just about everything he had at the target, including domestic appliances. In his opening paragraph alone, for example, he linked the words “Iraq” and “terror” or “terrorism” on no fewer than four occasions. This despite the fact that the administration’s evidence of links between Saddam Hussein’s regime and the September 11 al-Qaida murderers is paper-thin.

In spelling out the dangers posed by terrorism, which may be defined as the use of fear and violence to attain political ends, Mr Bush used fear and the threat of violence to promote his policy. Since when has it been the proper function of an American president to scare the children? But with his claim that Iraq might use unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for biological and chemical weapons attacks “targeting the United States”, he strayed into the realms of horror-movie fantasy.

It would be useful to know what plausible evidence the administration has for suggesting that “Iraq could decide on any given day to provide a biological or chemical weapon to a terrorist group or individual terrorists … This could allow the Iraqi regime to attack America without leaving fingerprints”. As a matter of fact, rather than propaganda, the administration has no such evidence, only suppositions - for although Saddam is bad, he is not mad.

It would be helpful to understand what purpose is served by over-stating Iraq’s missile capability, and postulating the theoretical possibility of Iraqi attacks on countries such as Turkey. Mr Bush’s advisers surely know that Iraq has no motive for such attacks, that its deputy prime minister was visiting Ankara only the other day, and that Israel’s chief of military intelligence, Major General Aharon Ze’evi, (who should know), says he doubts Iraq has the capability for such actions.

Even as he threatened to wage open-ended war, Mr Bush insisted that his administration’s purpose is “to secure the peace” - apparently oblivious to the intrinsic contradiction contained in the two statements. He said the White House “did not ask for this present challenge”. But as all the world, and the American public, increasingly suspects, it is a challenge Mr Bush has deliberately chosen to dramatise and prioritise. That Saddam is a serious problem is hardly a new idea. That, suddenly, the US must without delay start a full-scale war in the Middle East to topple him most certainly is.

Mr Bush said that if Saddam did not comply with the almost impossible preconditions that the US is insisting upon in the UN security council, America would act “with allies at our side”. This is disingenuous, to say the very least. The US does not have the support of traditional allies in Europe or the former Gulf war allies in the Arab world for anything that smacks of precipitate or unilateral action, let alone “regime change”. Nor is it likely to obtain it.

Only Tony Blair’s British government is on board the Bush bandwagon - and even in Britain, polls show a majority of people are opposed to military action. Americans who worry that the US is going out on a limb in terms of democratic opinion, international law and practical military concerns are right to do so. Mr Bush even went so far as to purloin the words of John F Kennedy and suggest that what the US is now facing is akin to the Cuban missile crisis. That is a gross exaggeration of the position. It is at odds with the known facts. As such, it is misleading and unnecessarily, irresponsibly alarming to the American people. This is not leadership in the Churchillian style that Mr Bush professes to admire. It is mere demagoguery.

The television networks were plainly unimpressed. And so, too, are a growing number of Americans. The more Mr Bush presses his case, and the more the people listen to him and analyse his case, the more unconvinced they become. The latest in a raft of opinion polls, taken by the New York Times and CBS News, shows clearly that American common sense is beginning to eclipse the president’s over-excited rhetoric. Majorities of those interviewed believe that Mr Bush is spending too much time on Iraq; that the same goes for a sheepish, supine Congress; that other problems are being ignored; that the economy is heading south even as the troops head east; that a broad coalition of countries is an essential prerequisite for military action; and that a war could have unpredictable, dangerous consequences for the region and the wider world.

Most sensibly of all, Americans who rightly believe that the main, present and urgent threat to US security emanates from the al-Qaida network and its sympathisers wonder why Mr Bush is trying to shift the focus to Iraq. Al-Qaida is still out there. It is undefeated. It is probably planning more outrages. It may be found in Pakistan, in Afghanistan, in Yemen, perhaps in the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia. But not in Iraq. The bottom-line question that will not go away, and which was left unanswered in Cincinnati, is what is driving Mr Bush down this path? Is it a desire to draw attention away from his poor to chronic domestic policy record? Is it an attempted diversion from the stock market collapse, America’s rising unemployment and its corporate malfeasance scandals? Is it all about oil? Or the mid-term elections? Or his own re-election bid in 2004? Or is it a personal, Bush family vendetta against Saddam?

Any one of these explanations makes more sense than far-fetched claims that Saddam is planning attacks on the most powerful nation in the history of the world, attacks that would certainly be traced back to him and would result in his utter annihilation.

As this American debate develops, Mr Bush is starting to lose the argument. Perhaps he will listen. But perhaps he will go ahead anyway. In which case, the necessity for regime change does indeed become overwhelming. Regime change in Washington, that is.

Excellent article. Last night on CNN, they were interviewing their British corresponded Robin Oakley, who suggested that only 29% of Britons support attacking Iraq without UN authorization. 60% will not support such "unilateral, pre-emptive" strikes. As if that is not enough 49% of US residents are not convinced that Iraq is an immediate threat to US.

*The bottom-line question that will not go away, and which was left unanswered in Cincinnati, is what is driving Mr Bush down this path? Is it a desire to draw attention away from his poor to chronic domestic policy record? Is it an attempted diversion from the stock market collapse, America's rising unemployment and its corporate malfeasance scandals? Is it all about oil? Or the mid-term elections? Or his own re-election bid in 2004? Or is it a personal, Bush family vendetta against Saddam?
*

Most people in the media are asking the same questions. I am sure they also know the answer, but are not willing to go out on a limb, when this Administration is so gleeful in revoking the certificate of patriotism for anyone who dares disagrees to this war hysteria.

I guess nobody agrees with what Bush is doing. But i would say that the israeli lobby aint happy with the war as it would make it a prime target esp. with the intifada going on, it will cause more problems for it. That is why there is so much against the war among the media and other outlets.

Opposition to the Bush adminstration has gained momentum in recent days, thousands of Americans have CONDEMNED Bush's war plans. FRANCE has been HIGHLY critical of Mr.Bush, China has made strong reservations about the Iraq issue, Millions of Europeons have marched against war and Russia has strongly opposed the Bush attack plan. Almost every nation on the Earth has criticised Mr.Bush..only a hand full of countries including Isreal and Australia have publicly supported him.. so the question is what is the 'Great Misleader' planning to do now ?

I think what he did to get what he wants: was try to take over the Senate with an assassanation of one Democrat. His lies aren’t working and he is running out of money, so he is desperate. This is my oppinion…and I am not the only one.

http://www.voxnyc.com/archives/00000039.htm

The Bush Administrations foreign policies are in disarray, thanks to the ‘Great Misleaders’ personal crusade against Iraq which have shown the levels of deception his Adminstration would go to in order to justify a war.. and with the blatant hypocrisy which we have witnessed with North Korea.

Bush fumbles foreign policy](http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/101835_mcgrory30.shtml) Seattle Post Intelligencer

Dec 30, 2002 By MARY MCGRORY (Washington Post Columnist)

WASHINGTON – George W. Bush ends the year with a genuine nuclear crisis on his hands. He has been assiduously trying to foment one with Iraq, dropping bombs on the country and expletives on its leader. But North Korea, which is not just suspected of working on the bomb but of having at least two, has muscled Saddam Hussein off the front pages and made our crusade against Baghdad seem crass: We’re starting a war not just for oil or for Ariel Sharon but because we can win it.

North Korea is a different story. It has a million men under arms. It has a built-in hostage situation at hand in the presence of 37,000 U.S. soldiers who guard South Korea. Kim Jong Il, the communist leader of North Korea, almost makes Hussein look like Rotarian of the Year. While Hussein is welcoming U.N. arms inspectors, Kim is throwing them out. He has dismantled the international surveillance equipment installed by a treaty in 1994; he has announced he is going to make all the weapons-grade plutonium he wants. He is, in short, behaving like the radioactive lunatic he is.

**And what is Bush, defender of the Free World, scourge of terrorists, doing about all this? As of this moment, nothing. As far as we can see, he seems to feel that not speaking to the North Koreans is the solution. **“Isolation” and “marginalization” will bring these rogues to heel? A leader who will starve his own people to feed his military machine, whose father has invaded his neighbor, who shows no acquaintance with reality, will be cowed by a snub from Washington?

**The president has asked North Korea’s neighbors to warn Kim Jong Il of the consequences of his horrendous behavior. Up to now, the Japanese have reported themselves as scared to death. Russia and China seem to have a million other things to do. **The incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Richard Lugar, R-Ind., says we should “talk and talk and talk” to the outlaws. His is a lone voice.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld exhibited a reflex swagger response. The North Koreans better watch out. They mustn’t think for a minute we couldn’t wage war against them. Just in time for Christmas, he brought our war list up to three: the one against al-Qaida, which we seem to have forgotten, the one brewing in Iraq – and now Pyongyang.

We should perhaps remember that Bush has never liked talking to Koreans. His first overseas visitor was the estimable Kim Dae Jung, whom Bush snubbed. Bush, as he was eager to demonstrate, was not a fan. Kim’s sin? He was instituting a sunshine policy with the communist North, ending a half-century of estrangement. Bush, who looked upon North Korea as the most potent argument for his obsession to build a national missile defense, saw Kim, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, as nothing but trouble. He sent him home humiliated and empty-handed.

Kim’s successor, Roh Moo Hyun, may be even worse. He is a passionate advocate of the sunshine policy, and he seeks “a more mature relationship” with the United States – bad news for Bush. This ugly international set-to occurs just when the president has scored his most dazzling domestic political triumph. The hullabaloo over Trent Lott, the prospective leader of the Senate, was caused by the fact that he let the cat out of the bag on the subject of the Republicans’ covert Southern strategy. Lott told a birthday party for Strom Thurmond what everyone has always known: that it was based on race. Republicans were mortified.

[QUOTE]
Originally posted by Dil he Pakistani:

George W. Bush ends the year with a genuine nuclear crisis on his hands. He has been assiduously trying to foment one with Iraq, dropping bombs on the country and expletives on its leader. But North Korea, which is not just suspected of working on the bomb but of having at least two, has muscled Saddam Hussein off the front pages and made our crusade against Baghdad seem crass: We're starting a war not just for oil or for Ariel Sharon but because we can win it.

[/QUOTE]

I think that sums up Bush's stance towards Iraq, and North Korea pretty well. The US is going to kill God knows how many Iraqi people to effect a "regime change" in Iraq, not to destroy Iraq's supposed WMD. If they were really after destroying the WMD then they would go after North Korea in the same fashion. They can have an easy military "victory" in Iraq, which is not the case in North Korea, where they are clearly scared of, for fear of unleashing a nuclear holocaust in that region.

but, can someone politely tell me why would america want a regime change? how is this going to benefit america in short and long term?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Furqan: *
but, can someone politely tell me why would america want a regime change? how is this going to benefit america in short and long term?
[/QUOTE]

One point: No more food for oil. JUST OIL.

Next: Israel can even more freely operate in that region and less weapon supply for Jihad and Co.

Another: To Keep "Muslim owned" countries in check.