Incompetent Design
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday 27 March
2006
Last week, George
W. Bush got up before a gaggle of reporters and washed his hands of the mess
in Iraq. The question of how long an American presence will remain in that
country "will be decided by future presidents and future governments of
Iraq," said Bush. To be fair, he isn't the only one. The entire
administration appears to have become bored with the whole process.
Take Daniel
Speckhard, for example. Speckhard is Director of the US Iraq Reconstruction
Management Office, which is in charge of rebuilding Iraqi infrastructure
ravaged by war and depredation lo these last three years. Speckhard is
quoted in a report in last week's USA Today: "The Iraqi government can no
longer count on U.S. funds and must rely on its own revenues and other
foreign aid, particularly from Persian Gulf nations. 'The Iraqi government
needs to build up its capability to do its own capital budget investment,'
said Speckhard."
Really. They have
no police or military to speak of, the hospitals are trashed, the lights
won't stay on, the flow of potable water is screwed, roads and bridges are
bombed out, hundreds of buildings are wrecked, the so-called "elected"
government is totally powerless to contain or control the chaos within the
country, headless bodies are popping up left and right, a dozen people die
every day from bombings and executions, the entire country is careening
towards civil war ... and somewhere in all this, Bush and his people expect
the Iraqi government to "do its own capital budget investment."
I am going to find
a china shop somewhere in the city and walk in with a free-swinging baseball
bat. My goal, which will be clearly stated, will be to improve upon the
place. I will spend the next three years meticulously destroying everything
I see inside, from the cash registers to the display cases to the nice Royal
Albert tea sets in the corner. Along the way, I will batter the brains out
of any poor sod unfortunate enough to get in my way. When I am done, I will
claim with as much self-righteousness as I can muster that none of the mess
is my responsibility. I will then, of course, refuse to leave.
Hey, if the
president can do it, it must be legal, right? Unfortunately, the difference
between my china shop analogy and what the Bush administration is doing in
Iraq is that I won't get anything out of it except an arrest record and a
chance to enjoy my state's municipal accommodations. Bush and crew are
reaping far better benefits from the mayhem they have caused.
Here's the deal,
in case anyone is wondering: none of this, not one bit of it, can be or
should be chalked up to "incompetence" on the part of Bush or anyone else
within his administration. This was not a mishandled situation. Bush and the
boys have gotten exactly, precisely what they wanted out of Iraq, and are
now looking forward to fobbing it off on the next poor dupe who staggers
into the Oval Office. They got what they came for, and have quit.
Consider the
facts. For two elections in a row, 2002 and 2004, the GOP was able to
successfully demagogue the rafters off the roof about supporting the troops
and being patriotic, placing anyone who questioned the merits of the
invasion squarely into the category of "traitor." Meanwhile, military
contractors with umbilical ties to the administration have cashed in to the
tune of hundreds of billions of dollars.
The same goes for
the petroleum industries; did you know there are gas lines today in oil-rich
Iraq? It's true. The oil infrastructure is fine; indeed, it is the most
well-guarded point of pressure in Iraq. There are gas lines because
companies like Halliburton are not pumping the oil. They are sitting on it,
keeping it as a nice little nest egg.
One would think
this administration would be worried about the violence and chaos in Iraq.
They aren't, because the violence has become the justification for "staying
the course." Bush will mouth platitudes about bringing democracy to the
region, but that is merely the billboard. What he and his friends from the
Project for the New American Century wanted in the first place, and what
they have now, is a permanent military presence over there. There was never
any consideration of a timetable for withdrawal, because there was never any
intention to withdraw. The violence today is a self-perpetuating
justification, a perfect circle lubricated by blood, oil and currency.
Keeping our
attention on Iraq has allowed this administration to do what it came to do
under cover of darkness. They have managed to eviscerate dozens of federal
regulations designed to make sure our children aren't born with gills or
seventeen eyes thanks to the pollution in the air, water and food. The Clean
Air Act is pretty much gone now, as are requirements for food safety
labeling. GOP "pension reform" means growing old in America amounts to
growing poor, just like in the good old days of the Depression. Millions of
elderly people have been fed to the wolves by way of the new Medicare Plan D
calamity. There are now tens of millions more poor people in America, the
middle class is evaporating, but top incomes are up 497% according to the
Federal Reserve.
The administration
has also used Iraq to accomplish a goal the GOP has been pining for since
1934. Since the advent of FDR and the creation of federally-funded safety
nets for the neediest Americans, the Goldwater wing of the Republican party
has been lusting after an opportunity to savage the government's ability to
serve its citizens in this fashion. Their argument has been that it cost too
much to do this, required too much taxation, and was harmful to business
interests.
This fight raged
until the very end of the 20th century. When Bill Clinton stood up during
his 1998 State of the Union speech and said "Save Social Security first!" he
was actually firing a directed salvo at this wing of the GOP. Look, Clinton
was saying, we have trillions of dollars in the bank and the economy is
going great guns. We can provide for the neediest among us without
bankrupting the government or killing business. In short, he was rendering
fiscal conservatives obsolete. He won the argument. Remember this, by the
way, the next time someone asks you why he was attacked so viciously.
The Grover
Norquist drown-the-government-in-the-bathtub crew, however, had no interest
in going gently into that good night. One busted election gave them the
chance to do exactly what they have done with Iraq. They have rendered it
almost completely impossible for the federal government to pay for programs
designed to care for the poor, the sick, the elderly and the needy. The war,
the war, we have to pay for the war, to the tune of what will be one to two
trillion dollars before all is said and done. Oh, and tax cuts that go to
families making more than $200,000 a year, of course.
Bush has also, in
the process, managed to put himself even farther above the rule of law. Not
long ago, he signed the reauthorization of the Patriot Act. Getting the
document to his desk had been a laborious process for Congress; arguments
and debates raged across the ideological spectrum as to exactly what kind of
firewalls against executive abuse should be put into the bill to protect
civil liberties.
Among these
additions were a number of oversight provisions to keep the FBI from abusing
their power to search homes and seize papers without notifying the resident
or presenting a warrant. Other provisions required that officials within the
Justice Department maintain tight scrutiny over where, when and how the FBI
put these powers to use. One new part of the bill required the
administration brief Congress now and again on these specific matters.
Congress finally came to an agreement, and on March 9th, Bush signed the
Patriot Act reauthorization into law with much fanfare.
After all the
worthies had left the room, however, and after all the cameras had gone,
Bush quietly put his signature to a "signing statement" that, basically,
says anything in the aforementioned law which applies to the president shall
be considered null and void. The Boston Globe reported on March 24 that, "In
the statement, Bush said that he did not consider himself bound to tell
Congress how the Patriot Act powers were being used. Bush wrote: 'The
executive branch shall construe the provisions ... that call for furnishing
information to entities outside the executive branch ... in a manner
consistent with the president's constitutional authority to supervise the
unitary executive branch and to withhold information.'"
This was the third
time Bush dropped a "signing statement" into an issue of signal importance.
When it was revealed that the administration had bypassed the FISA laws in
order to conduct surveillance on American citizens, Bush claimed his
"wartime powers" gave him the ability to ignore the laws of the land. When
Congress passed a law forbidding the torture of any detainee in US custody,
Bush issued a signing statement stating that he could bypass the law at his
pleasure and torture anyone he damned well pleased.
So, to recap, the
"incompetence" thing is nonsense. The Bush boys got paid, got an issue to
run on in two elections, put themselves completely and totally above the law
on picayune issues like torture and the unauthorized surveillance of
American citizens, obliterated the central function of the federal
government, and ripped up any and all regulations that would keep their
corporate friends from dumping mercury into the river so as to save a few
precious pennies on the dollar.
Can anyone still
think this was all by accident?
The poll numbers
say that nearly 70% of the country believes we are heading in the wrong
direction in Iraq and here at home. This is edifying, to say the least. It
means that people like me can stop trying to point out all the things that
have gone wrong, because at long last a huge majority of the country has
come to see things for how they actually are. But it also means that we as a
nation are required now to move past what is actually happening, and ask why
it is happening.
Batting down the
"incompetence" argument is easy; all one has to do is see what this
administration and its friends have gained in the last five years. The rest
of the answer is more difficult, because it has to do with us, with we the
people, and the staggering degree to which we take our rights and freedoms
for granted.
When we hear about
our government spying on American citizens without warrants or due process
of law, when we hear the president say he does not have to tell Congress
anything if he doesn't want to, when we hear the president claim the right
to torture, all too often the response is, "Well, I'm not doing anything
wrong, so I don't have to worry about it."
But we do have to
worry about it. Patriots from Lexington to Gettysburg to Bastogne lie cold
in their graves because they died to defend the freedoms we would so
casually cast aside. Could we stand before the endless ranks of the fallen
and say the rights they died to protect have no bearing on us, because we
are "not doing anything wrong?" Is that not the most selfish, conceited,
lazy answer we could possibly offer in the face of their sacrifice?
George W. Bush
quit on us last week. He quit because he has accomplished everything he came
to do. He will get away with it because, for the most part, the American
people have also quit. We take what we have for granted, and assume the
difficult tasks will be handled by someone else. Rest assured, they will be.
They will be handled by other craven opportunists like Bush, by corporations
looking to turn a profit off our indifference, by those among us who
couldn't care less about you and yours.
The American
people have come to see that things have gone wrong. Imagine what would
happen if we decided to do something about it.

William
Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author
of two books:
War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know and
The Greatest Sedition Is Silence.