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Fw: [ANSWER]: What to expect from Bush
----- Original Message -----
From: "A.N.S.W.E.R." <answer.general@action-mail.org>
To: <answer.general@action-mail.org>
Sent: Tuesday, December 17, 2002 6:44 AM
Subject: [ANSWER]: What to expect from Bush
WHAT TO EXPECT FROM BUSH
Frustrated that Iraq appears to be cooperating with the
United Nations' intrusive weapons inspections, the Bush
Administration is rushing this week to proclaim that the
so-called disarmament effort has failed: that inspections
are an empty effort and the 12,000 page Iraqi declaration
is insufficient.
It is urgent that the anti-war movement not be lulled into
a false sense of optimism because Iraq and the UN are
cooperating. Various governments are reporting that they
are hopeful that the inspections process can help avoid
war. UN General Secretary Kofi Annan went out of his way
to say that war is not inevitable.
However, the extent to which the world is voicing cautious
optimism about a peaceful solution, is also the extent to
which the Bush foreign policy team is racing to dash all
hope for such an outcome. There is now an almost perfect
inverted ratio between the worldwide clamor for restraint
and peace and the Bush Administration's eagerness to
publicly announce that war is certain.
By the end of this week, we can expect that Bush will try
to announce that Iraq has failed to come clean about its
purported weapons program. Then the war mobilization can
go onto automatic pilot and the gauntlet will be thrown
down to the vacillators: "Are you with Us or Them?" In so
doing, the White House will inadvertently reveal a truth
known to all objective observers of this conflict -- that
the disarmament of Iraq was never really the issue. The
nuclear scare was to keep Americans frightened of the
"enemy" as the Bush Hawks frantically prepared to wage
aggression against a country that possesses 10% of the
world's known oil reserves.
The administration has a real objective and a stated
objective. The real objective is to wage war against Iraq
and conquer and occupy that country. To do so requires 1)
overwhelming force and 2) the elimination of dissenting
opposition that can derail Bush's dreams of empire. The
U.S. has massive force. But it has encountered formidable
opposition from people around the world and in the United
States. So, the Bush administration shifted its claimed
objective from regime change to disarmament, a much more
palatable purported objective for public distribution and
one that can be embraced by even those who support peace.
The White House wants to get the people of the U.S. behind
this claimed objective of "disarmament." Once having done
so, the administration can insist that the mechanisms in
place for the purported disarmament have failed, or cannot
accomplish the task, and that military might is necessary.
There is only one reason that makes the war drive rapidly
escalate in the face of the apparent success of the new
inspections process: The Bush Administration has never
intended the "inspections" process to serve as anything
but a trigger for war. This is why the Iraqi cooperation
with the inspection process and disclosure has failed to
produce even the slightest slowing in the preparations for
war and, in fact, has seemed to produce an escalation in
the rhetoric from Washington, including recent policy
statements confirming Bush's plans for first-use
deployment of nuclear weapons. The Washington Post
reported that a classified version of the new Bush
Doctrine "breaks with the fifty years of
counter-proliferation efforts" by planning for the use of
nuclear weapons against countries that not only have not
attacked the US but that do not themselves possess nuclear
capability ("Preemptive Strikes are Part of U.S. Strategic
Doctrine," front page, December 11, 2002).
These signals from the White House and Pentagon provide no
basis for optimism to believe that the war has been
averted. The inspections process, whose true purpose is
solely to serve as a trigger for war, at the moment is not
providing the political cover that Washington needs to
attack Iraq and seize its oil and land.
The warmongers in the Bush Administration will need now to
manufacture other circumstances to justify an attack and
occupation of Iraq.
The Bush Administration rammed Resolution 1441 through the
Security Council for one reason: to provide the diplomatic
fig leaf for a US war. To the extent that the process
serves as a political restraint, Bush and Co. will scuttle
the process.
The Administration now needs a new trigger. It will use
the resolution 1441 to create an obvious source of
provocation. The U.S. forced language into the resolution
that would allow for the forcible removal of Iraqi
scientists, government officials, and their families and
children to be held incommunicado in other countries and
interrogated by U.N. inspectors.
The U.S. wants to abduct Iraqi officials and interrogate
them planning that by threat or bribe one will help create
the trigger that the U.S. desperately needs and the
"evidence" that the U.S. has long claimed to have but has
never put up. One need only remember the Gulf of Tonkin
resolution, the Pentagon Papers, or even the lie
manufactured about the Iraqi army throwing babies out of
incubators (put in cite) to judge the quality of results
likely produced by this effort.
In the New York Times for December 16, 2002, William
Safire urges that Iraqi scientists should be visited at
home, removed to other countries by helicopter on the
spot, and be threatened that they must provide the right
answers in order to "ameliorate sentences at war-crimes
trials." And of course, any failure of Iraq to facilitate
these abductions will itself be considered "material
breach" of the Security Council resolution.
There is really only one restraint that can block the war.
It lies within the people themselves. Neither Congress nor
the Security Council will stop Bush's dangerous war drive.
The optimism of the antiwar forces must be premised on
reality. If we can mobilize the millions - in the US and
around the world - and ignite a firestorm of activism then
the political climate can be changed, and changed
dynamically.
Public opinion is Bush's enemy. Time is also an enemy for
the warmakers. With each passing the day antiwar momentum
grows. The global desire for a peaceful outcome is
considered subversive because from that sentiment can
emerge a potent mass movement - as happened during the
Vietnam era.
With the cooperation of the Corporate-owned media, the
White House has attempted to create a false myth of
consensus about the war. False polls, false reports and
non-stop propaganda have filled the airwaves so that the
American people will be paralyzed and confused. Yet people
all over the country are talking to their neighbors,
co-workers, fellow students, and congregations and
learning that they too oppose Bush's war, that there is,
in fact, widespread, deep, and passionate opposition to
the war.
When hundreds of thousands marched on October 26th, the
same corporate media tried to whiteout the sudden
emergence of this movement. But they were confronted by
overwhelming demand for truth from people across the
country and some were forced to correct their coverage.
The peoples movement continues to grow by leaps and
bounds.
On January 18, massive protest will again fill the streets
of Washington DC and San Francisco. Thousands of cities,
towns, college campuses, high schools, religious and civil
rights organizations are mobilizing together.
The scenario for January 18th includes a brief rally on
the West side of the Capitol Building in Washington DC
starting at 11 am, followed by a massive march to the
Washington DC Navy Yard -- a massive military installation
located in a working class neighborhood in Southeast
Washington DC that parks warships on the Anacostia River.
We will demand the immediate elimination of US weapons of
mass destruction and a people's inspection team will call
for unfettered access and a full declaration of U.S.
non-conventional weapons systems.