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The
White House On Iraq: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Proof!
by Arianna Huffington
September 30, 2002
We all know who attacked us on Sept. 11, 2001, don't we?
No, not Osama bin Laden. God, that is so last year. It never turns out to be
the person you first suspect. It was Saddam Hussein. For some reason we couldn't
find him when we went after him in Afghanistan, bringing that magic elixir of
regime change along with us. But now we've got a better idea: track him down
where he actually lives, in Baghdad, and punish him right in his own backyard.
It's the only way to obtain justice for the thousands he killed on 9/11.
At least that's the way the White House is now pitching the story.
In this latest rewrite of history, Osama has suddenly lost his beard and grown
a mustache, morphing into the Butcher of Baghdad -- or one of the look-alike
stand-ins Saddam has been using for public appearances since 1998.
"You can't distinguish between Al-Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about
the war on terror," said President Bush in the Oval Office last week.
Really? He can't differentiate between a group of evil ultra-radical Islamic
fundamentalists that carried out the Sept. 11 attacks and an evil secular nationalist
who, despite the frantic efforts of the Bush administration, has not been directly
linked to 9/11? He'd better start making such distinctions -- and fast. When
every expert who knows anything about the Mideast can distinguish between the
two, is it too much to ask that a President who's ready to go to war look a
bit more closely?
People under stress often regress to earlier stages of development. It appears
that Bush is so intent on getting Saddam, so obsessively tightly gripped by
a need to succeed where his war hero dad failed, so obsessively determined to
lay the murderous 9/11 assault at Baghdad's door, that he's regressed to that
level of childhood development where fantasy, reality and wish fulfillment are
all mixed up. Except that this time, things like nuclear weapons and the safety
of the world for the next few decades are involved.
Now, I'm no psychologist, but I believe there is a clinical term for this condition:
going off the deep end.
How else to explain the president's bizarre response to a reporter's straightforward
query last week about who poses a bigger threat to America, Saddam or Al-Qaeda?
"That's an interesting question," he replied. "I'm trying to
think of something humorous to say but I can't when I think about Al-Qaeda and
Saddam Hussein."
When did the president take over the "Tonight Show?" Why would the
idea that he should make a joke about such a deadly serious subject even cross
his mind? It would be like asking Danielle van Dam's parents about the trial
of their daughter's murderer and having them apologize for not being ready with
a humorous quip.
No, Mr. President, you needn't apologize -- your inability to treat serious
subjects lightly is not one of your deficiencies. So rather than struggling
to come up with a wan witticism, why don't you just answer the question? Especially
since it appears by your actions that you've already come up with one.
Instead of bothering to give the least defense of his sudden fusion of Saddam
and Osama, Bush launched into a fantasy-fueled diatribe: "The danger is,
is that they work in concert. The danger is, is that Al-Qaeda becomes an extension
of Saddam's madness and his hatred and his capacity to extend weapons of mass
destruction around the world."
The president's regressed condition is spreading like the West Nile virus throughout
the West Wing and beyond.
Witness the symptomatic blurring of fact and fantasy exhibited by Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld. When asked at an Armed Services Committee hearing about what
is now compelling us to "take precipitous actions" against Iraq, Rumsfeld
barked: "What's different? What's different is 3,000 people were killed."
Yeah, by Mohammed Atta and company -- not Saddam Hussein. But why quibble over
details when there is a propaganda war to be won?
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice continued the assault on reality
when she vaguely yet ominously claimed: "There clearly are contacts between
Al-Qaeda and Iraq that can be documented." Well, then why not document
them? We've documented contacts between Al-Qaeda and our oil dealers in Saudi
Arabia and Al-Qaeda and our new best friends in Pakistan. But I don't see any
B-2s powering up for raids over Riyadh or Karachi.
As is the White House custom, Rice simply refused to back up her claims. So
did Rumsfeld, who memorably rebuffed a reporter late last week by saying, "That
happens to be a piece of intelligence that either we don't have or we don't
want to talk about." In other words: Proof? We don't need no stinking proof!
And just because I'm asking your sons and daughters to possibly sacrifice their
lives for it doesn't mean you deserve to know whether it even exits.
It would be nice if we could just take them all at their word and let the bombs
fall where they may. But Sen. Bob Graham, who, as chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee is privy to the inside scoop, says he's seen no evidence of any link
between Al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein
So we're left with the fevered, infantile imaginings of the president and his
pals. "We had dots before," said Anna Perez, Rice's spokeswoman. "Now
we have a higher density of dots. Have we connected those dots? No."
Perhaps the president should put down his saber-rattle, pick up his crayons
and connect them before drawing us into a bloody war.
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