Guest guest Posted July 30, 2002 Report Share Posted July 30, 2002 Actually, , I have not commented on the thread because it seems way off topic to me, so I would not want to add anything to the subject one way or another. I commented on one point that was made relative to the Frist bill, because I do care about that and I didn't want anyone to feel discouraged about writing about that specific bill. I hope the discussion can be dropped. I'm sure that there are lots of lists where it would be ON topic. best wishes, Moria > I guess I am not the only one who thinks these things are leading to Armageddon. > The signs are there fo those who want to see. Read on. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Print This Story E-mail This Story > > > Bush's Messy War is Courting Total Disaster > By Rivers Pitt > t r u t h o u t | Report > > Tuesday, 30 July, 2002 > > At the same time Americans were celebrating what is left of their freedoms on the Fourth of July, civilians in the Uruzgan Province of Afghanistan were burying women and children massacred by U.S. forces during a wedding ceremony. According to reports, 48 civilians were killed and 100 more were wounded when Air Force attack aircraft swooped down and strafed the wedding with bombs and cannon fire. > > The simple fact is bad enough. This disaster is no secret in Afghanistan and the rest of the Muslim world. The deaths of these innocents has undoubtedly birthed new would-be terrorists who will someday seek to die for the privilege of seeing Americans die. Our bombs and bullets have done marvelous recruiting work for Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda. > > A preliminary United Nations report on its investigation of that attack is said to have found evidence of an attempted coverup by American forces of the attack. Shrapnel, bullets and bloodstains were removed from the scene. Civilian women at the site are reported to have been bound at the hands by our forces while the evidence was removed and destroyed. The massacre of civilians was horrific. The fact that we tried to cover it up is monstrous. > > So it goes with Mr. Bush's war on terrorism. The fight in Afghanistan is far from over, as evidenced by recent attacks upon our troops in the Khost region. Several major media outlets reported some days ago that some of our troops were in fact killed, a claim the Pentagon vehemently denied. The UN report of American efforts to cover up the facts of the wedding massacre make such denials difficult to believe. > > While American troops and Afghan civilians continue to bleed, Bush is shopping around for a new battlefront. Momentum is building across our national political landscape for a war with Iraq. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will hold hearings beginning Wednesday, July 31st, to explore the threat to America represented by Saddam Hussein. It is unlikely that any politician will stand up and ask the central questions - Where is the evidence that Hussein poses a threat? If he has weapons of mass destruction and we know it, why didn't we go to war against him months ago? Thanks to this cowardice, the Committee hearings will be little more than a rubber stamp for conflict. It seems all too likely that our forces will soon be engaged in Iraq. > > The fallout from this conflict will be enormous. American troops will die, unless we engage in antiseptic aerial bombardment that will utterly fail to dislodge Hussein or his purported weapons. Tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians will die no matter how we decide to wage the war. If America decides, in pure Bush unilateralist action, to wage war without the blessings of the international community or a United Nations mandate, our prestige on the world stage will be annihilated. > > Worse, war in Iraq will drive the Middle East into a state of utter chaos. Reports from the British Foreign Affairs office paint a picture of a teetering Saudi Arabia on the brink of collapse. Infighting between the ruling Prince Abdullah and pro-Al Qaeda members of his royal family, fueled by Abdullah's pro-Western stance, has led observers to wonder how long this American ally within the House of Saud can stay on the throne. Popular uprisings against Abdullah have added fuel to this fire. > > An American attack upon Iraq could very easily be the spark that ignites a terrible conflagration. If Prince Abdullah falls to an uprising exacerbated by our conflict in the region, the Saudi oil fields will come under the control of fanatics loyal to Al Qaeda's cause. This is precisely what Osama bin Laden wanted - the oil. Were this to happen, it is certain that Bush would commit our forces to defeating the insurgents. American war in the land of Mecca and Medina would precipitate a global crisis that would make the events of September 11th seem tame by comparison. > > With the fight in Afghanistan still unfinished, with no evidence on the table to make the case that Saddam Hussein poses a threat to America, and with the terrifying implications of chaos in the Mideast if we do go to war there, why on earth would Bush and his people want to push towards battle? > > In all likelihood, the answer lies within the geometry of the voting booth and the American marketplace. The Congressional midterm elections will be taking place in 99 days. Instability in the stock market, combined with reports of massive corporate fraud and mounting evidence that Bush and Cheney behaved like Lay and Fastow, augmented by a war on terror that does not seem to be getting anything done, has stripped the GOP of anything to run on in their respective races. By most reports, Republicans are facing an electoral wipeout to rival the Gingrich Revolution of 1994. A splendid little war, combined with the inevitable demands for patriotism, would serve to create Bush coattails where none currently exist. > > Beyond that lies a motivation that is chilling in its inception. Larry Kudlow, a market analyst for CNBC, put forth the proposition in a column published on July 28th that war in Iraq is necessary to save the stock market. The article is entitled, 'Taking Back the Market - By Force.' > > " The shock therapy of decisive war, " opined Kudlow, " will elevate the stock market by a couple thousand points. We will know that our businesses will stay open, that our families will be safe and that our future will be unlimited. The world will be righted in this life-and-death struggle to preserve our values and our civilization. " > > If thinking such as this is mirrored within the Bush administration, and all indicators point to the sad fact that this is indeed the case, there will be little left of our civilization. The world will burn, the markets will crumble, and many more innocents will die. This war, already a mess on so many levels, flirts with Armageddon. > > Print This Story E-mail This Story > > > © : t r u t h o u t 2002 > > | t r u t h o u t | forum | issues | editorial | letters | donate | contact | > | voting rights | environment | budget | children | politics | indigenous survival | energy | > | defense | health | economy | human rights | labor | trade | women | reform | global | > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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