The Crack-Up

And what a sickening spectacle: Bush and Blair piously kneeling in prayer on Easter Sunday.

By Chris Floyd

As the red wheel of Operation Iraqi FUBAR continues to roll, spewing hundreds of corpses in its wake, it becomes clearer by the hour that there is only one way for America to end this stomach-churning nightmare it has created: Get out.

That's it. The occupying armies -- including the 15,000 corporate mercenaries -- should leave now. They should never have been sent in the first place on this ghoul's errand, this war of aggression, this mission of murder and plunder -- the perversion of every enlightened value of the civilization that the coalition's "Christian leaders" purport to defend.

And what a sickening spectacle these "leaders" presented last weekend: George W. Bush and Tony Blair piously kneeling in prayer on Easter Sunday, pledging their fealty to Jesus Christ and His teachings of mercy and lovingkindness -- while ordering missile strikes on crowded cities, while filling hospitals with the mutilated bodies of young children, while shoveling fat war profits to their cronies and contributors. Only the most craven, bootlicking sycophant could fail to be revolted at the hypocrisy of these murderous cynics. They're a perfect match in moral idiocy for their crack-brained brother-in-arms, Osama bin Laden.

Their chest-beating pronouncements about "staying the course" and "seeing it through" are just so much rag-chewing nonsense. The way to rectify a crime is not to keep doing it -- or in John Kerry's ludicrous formulations, to keep doing it in some different, "better" way -- but simply to stop doing it. The illegal invasion was a crime, the occupation is a crime, and if you would not be a criminal, you must stop committing crimes.

The reprisal in Fallujah is a perfect example. Late last month, a four-day U.S. military incursion there -- totally ignored in the "coalition" press -- left 18 Iraqis dead. Days later, four American mercenaries were killed and their bodies desecrated -- a savage act by a small, angry crowd. Now, in retaliation for those four deaths, U.S. forces have killed more than 600 people, including many women and children. This isn't justice, this is collective punishment -- disproportionate, indiscriminate, just as the Nazis practiced it during their "liberation" of Europe.

With each new reprisal, each act of repression, each killing of an innocent person -- intentional or not -- Bush is recruiting vast cadres of new fighters, and an even larger pool of passive support, for the armies of Islamic extremism. America -- and the world -- will be reaping this whirlwind for generations.

The only solution that might -- just might -- offer some slim hope would be the immediate withdrawal of coalition forces and their replacement with a much larger United Nations force -- made up of troops from countries acceptable to the Iraqis -- to provide security and stability while the Iraqis themselves reconstruct their society, hold elections, etc. The United States and its war allies would have nothing to do with this stabilization force, beyond helping to fund and supply it.

The departing Americans should then give the $18 billion slush fund now earmarked for Bush's "reconstruction" bagmen to the Iraqi people, as reparations for the coalition's war crime. Iraq's foreign loans, procured by Saddam Hussein from sugar daddies like George Bush I, should be written off -- and all of Little Bush's imperial edicts opening Iraq's economy for despoliation by his cronies should be rescinded. The United States and Britain should also be prepared to take in the vast horde of refugees who will flee the hard-line Islamic regime that will doubtless be created in the ruins Bush has made of the once-secular state.

As for the "leaders" who committed this crime, there is only one thing left for them to do now, only one way for them to serve the people they have betrayed so vilely and stupidly. All of them -- Bush, Blair, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld, Condi Rice, Paul Wolfowitz, Geoff Hoon, Richard Perle, the whole sick crew -- should pick up a rifle and go to the front lines in Fallujah and Baghdad. Let them take the places of the young men and young women who signed up as soldiers to defend their country or make a better life for themselves -- not to become pawns and killers for the Hitlerite ambitions of the blood-soaked fools who threw them into this quagmire.

Yes, Hitlerite ambitions: dreams of global dominance, fetishes of militarism, fantasies of superiority, and the willingness to impose your self-serving vision of "universal truth" -- in this case, the rapacious crony capitalism that Bush has officially named "the single sustainable model of national success" -- at the barrel of a gun. That's what lies behind this madness.

As we've noted so often here before, the conquest of Iraq has nothing to do with terrorism or liberation or WMD or national security or Arab democracy or Bush family revenge. It has been planned for years by Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld and other Bush retainers, planned openly, and for one reason only: to give the United States direct military control of the Middle East in order to dominate global economic and political life for "the New American Century." This need was so great, said the group -- openly, in September 2000 -- that it "transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein." It wouldn't have mattered if Saddam had found Jesus, or freed his people, or set himself on fire in Madison Square Garden: The Bushists were always going to invade and occupy Iraq -- always, no matter what.

So they'll never embrace any sensible solution for getting out. The red wheel will just keep rolling on, spewing thousands more unnecessary deaths -- until those rabid Easter Bunnies, Bush and Blair, finally FUBAR themselves into the inevitable, ignominious retreat.

Annotations



Rebellion Driven by National Pride

The Guardian, April 2, 2004

Shells and Rockets Were Falling Like Rain

The Guardian, April 12, 2004

Rebuilding America's Defenses

Project for a New Century, September 2000

Sunni and Shia Unite Against Common Enemy

The Guardian, April 10, 2004

Bush Sees Terror War as Religious

Worldnet Daily, March 22, 2004

Bush: On Bended Knee, I Thank the Lord

CNN, April 12, 2004

Defiant US Say Falluja Dead Were Rebels

The Guardian, April 12, 2004

Do We Look Like Fighters? ask Fallujah Families With Their Disabled, Their Old and Their Children

The Independent, April 13, 2004

John F. Kerry: A Strategy for Iraq

Washington Post, April 12, 2004

T.E. Lawrence: A Report on Mesopotamia

Sunday Times, August 2, 1920

This Vietnam Generation of Americans has not Learned the Lessons of History

Daily Telegraph, April 10, 2004

More Limits Sought for Private Security Teams

Washington Post, April 13, 2004

Fallujah Gains Mythic Air

Washington Post, April 13, 2004

President Bush Issues Easter Message

Newsday, April 9, 2004

British Commanders Condemn US Military Tactics

The Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2004

War Lords to Their Critics: Just Shut Up

CounterPunch, April 10, 2004

How GI Bullies are Making Enemies of Their Iraqi Friends

Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2004

Is This the Hearts and Minds Part of the Campaign?

Baghdad Burning, April 11, 2004

Ambush, Murder and Kidnap: Another Day in 'Post-War' Iraq

CounterPunch, April 10, 2004

When Puppets Pull the Strings [Ahmad Chalabi]

Salon.com, April 13, 2004

Muslim Rivals Unite in Baghdad Uprising

Washington Post, April 7, 2004

Bush Planned Iraq 'Regime Change' Before Becoming President

Glasgow Sunday Herald, Sept. 15, 2002

Statement of Principles

Project for a New American Century, June 3, 1997

Iraqgate

Columbia Journalism Review, May/June 1993

When the U.S. Aided Insurgents, Did It Create Future Terrorists?

New York Times, April 10, 2004