More
than a decade ago, after Saddam Hussein's invasion
of Kuwait, President George H. W. Bush explicitly
sought to initiate, as he put it to Congress,
a "new world order." He made that momentous declaration
on Sept. 11, 1990. Eleven years later, the suddenly
mystical date of 9/11 motivated his son to finish
what the father began. A year ago this week, Bush
the younger launched a war against the man who
tried to kill his dad, initiating the opposite
of order.
The
situation hardly needs rehearsing. In Iraq, many
thousands are dead, including 564 Americans. Civil
war threatens. Afghanistan, meanwhile, is choked
by drug-running warlords. Islamic jihadists have
been empowered. The nuclear profiteering of Pakistan
has been exposed but not necessarily stopped.
Al Qaeda's elusiveness has reinforced its mythic
malevolence. The Atlantic Alliance is in ruins.
The United States has never been more isolated.
A pattern of deception has destroyed its credibility
abroad and at home. Disorder spreads from Washington
to Israel to Haiti to Spain. Whether the concern
is subduing resistance fighters far away or making
Americans feel safer, the Pentagon's unprecedented
military dominance, the costs of which stifle
the US economy, is shown to be essentially impotent.
In
America, the new order of things is defined mainly
by the sour taste of moral hangover, how the emotional
intensity of the 9/11 trauma -- anguished but
pure -- dissolved into a feeling of being trapped
in a cage of our own making. As the carnage in
Madrid makes clear, the threats in the world are
real and dangerous to handle, but one US initiative
after another has escalated rather than diffused
such threats. Instead of replacing chaos with
new order, our nation's responses inflict new
wounds that increase the chaos. We strike at those
whom we perceive as aiming to do us harm but without
actually defending ourselves. And most unsettling
of all, in our attempt to get the bad people to
stop threatening us, we have begun to imitate
them.
The
most important revelation of the Iraq war has
been of the Bush administration's blatant contempt
for fact. Whether defined as "lying" or not, the
clear manipulation of intelligence ahead of last
year's invasion has been completely exposed. The
phrase "weapons of mass destruction" has been
transformed. Where once it evoked the grave danger
of a repeat of the 9/11 trauma, now it evokes
an apparently calculated American fear. The government
laid out explicit evidence defining a threat that
required the launching of preventive war, and
the US media trumpeted that evidence without hesitation.
The result, since there were no weapons of mass
destruction, as the government and a pliant press
had ample reason to know, was an institutionalized
deceit maintained to this day. At the United Nations,
the United States misled the world. In speech
after speech, President Bush misled Congress and
the nation. And note that the word "misled" means
both to have falsified and to have failed in leadership.
To mislead, as the tautological George Bush might
put it, is to mislead.
The
repetition of falsehoods tied to the war on terrorism
and the war against Iraq has eroded the American
capacity, if not to tell the difference between
what is true and what is a lie, then to think
the difference matters much. The administration
distorted fact ahead of the invasion, when the
American people could not refute what had not
happened yet. And the administration distorts
fact now, when the American people do not remember
clearly what we were told a year ago. That Bush
retains the confidence of a sizable proportion
of the electorate suggests that Americans don't
particularly worry anymore about truth as a guiding
principle of their government.
In
that lies the irony. The Bush dynasty has in fact
initiated a new order of things. The United States
of America has become its own opposite, a nation
of triumphant freedom that claims the right to
restrain the freedom of others; a nation of a
structured balance of power that destroys the
balance of power abroad; a nation of creative
enterprise that exports a smothering banality;
and above all, a nation of forcefully direct expression
that disrespects the truth. Whatever happens from
this week forward in Iraq, the main outcome of
the war for the United States is clear. We have
defeated ourselves.
Note
to my readers: I am taking a temporary leave from
this column to concentrate on other work, including
a television documentary based on my book "Constantine's
Sword." I will return to this page regularly beginning
the Tuesday after Labor Day. Until then, Peace.
James
Carroll's column appears regularly in the Globe.
© Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
Topplebush.com
Posted: March 22, 2004
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