January 21, 2007
Everyone knows that Bush’s
Iraq 'surge' will not work. Even the authors of the plan, neoconservatives
Frederick Kagan and Jack Keane, have emphasized
that the
plan cannot work with any less than an addition of 50,000 US troops
committed to another three years of combat. Bush is only adding 40% of that
number of troops, and Defense Secretary Gates speaks of the operation being
over by summer’s end.
On January 18 a panel of
retired generals testifying on Capitol Hill slammed Bush’s surge plan as "a
fool’s errand." Even the easily bamboozled American public knows
the plan will not work. Newsweek’s latest poll released
January 20 shows that only 23% of the public support sending more troops to
Iraq and that twice as many Americans trust the Democrats in Congress than
trust Bush.
A majority of Americans
(54%) believe Bush to be neither honest nor ethical, and 57% believe that Bush
lacks 'strong leadership qualities.'
Nevertheless, Bush defended
his surge plan, telling a group of TV stations last week, "I believe it will
work."
Bush is correct that it will
work--indeed, the surge is working. We have to be clear about how the plan
works. It does not mean that 21,500 more US troops will bring order and
stability to Iraq. The surge is working, because it is deflecting attention
from the Bush Regime’s real game plan.
The real game plan is to
orchestrate a war with Iran and to initiate wider conflict in the Middle East
before public and military pressure forces the Bush Regime to withdraw US
troops from Iraq.
Two US carrier attack groups
have been deployed to the Persian Gulf. US missile systems are being sent to
oil producing countries to counter any incoming missiles from Iran should any
survive the US attack. Israeli pilots have been training for an attack on Iran.
US war doctrine has been changed to permit pre-emptive nuclear attack on
non-nuclear countries. US attack aircraft have been deployed at bases in
Turkey. A neocon admiral who attends AIPAC events has been made commander in
chief of US forces in the Middle East. Obviously, the ground war in Iraq and
Afghanistan are not the focus of the Bush Regime’s new military deployments.
The Bush Regime is focused on attacking Iran.
In CounterPunch (January 16)
Col. Sam Gardiner reports
that the Bush Regime has put into operation a group led by National Security
Council staff whose mission is to create and foment outrage against Iran. Col.
Gardiner details various signs of the Bush Regime’s escalation and indicates
some of the final deployments that will signal an imminent strike on Iran, such
as "USAF tankers moved to unusual places, like Bulgaria"
in order to position them for refueling B-2 bombers on their way to Iran.
Both Michel
Chossudovsky (ICH Jan. 17) and Jorge Hirsch (Antiwar.com, Jan. 20) have recently
documented evidence that the Bush Regime is orchestrating a crisis with Iran
that can lead to the use of nuclear weapons to attack Iran.
Civil libertarians who have
observed the Bush Regime’s concentration of dictatorial powers in the
presidency expect that war with Iran, especially if fearful nuclear weapons are
used, will be accompanied by Bush’s declaration of a state of emergency. The
Bush Regime will use the state of emergency to grab more arbitrary and
dictatorial powers in the name of protecting 'national security interests' and
American citizens from 'terrorism.'
As the Regime’s crimes
against the US Constitution and humanity will be monstrous, dissent will be
throttled in ways that will make Americans afraid to speak, or even to think,
the truth. By stifling dissent, the Bush Regime will escape accountability for
launching wars on the basis of blatant lies. It will complete its destruction
of the civil liberties that protect free speech, dissent, and Americans from
arbitrary arrest and indefinite detention without charges or access to
attorneys.
Congress is wasting precious
time with non-binding resolutions and debates over cutting off war funding. The
Bush Regime is rushing the country into a war and a domestic police state.
Writing in Slate, Dahlia Lithwick reports
that one of the main goals of the so-called "war on terror"
(essentially a propagandistic hoax) is to achieve a massive expansion in
unaccountable executive power. This is a long- time goal of VP Cheney and his
chief of staff, David Addington. It is also the main goal of the "conservative"
Federalist Society, an organization of Republican lawyers from whose membership
Republican judicial nominees are drawn.
American public opinion is
being manipulated. In the name of protecting "American freedom and
democracy," the Bush regime rides roughshod over both as it ignores both
the public and Congress and proceeds with a catastrophic policy supported by no
one but the Bush Regime and a cabal of power-mad neoconservatives..
Nothing can stop the Regime
except the immediate impeachment of Bush and Cheney. This is America’s last
chance.
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