by Alice Salles
Months before President George W. Bush’s speech on September 11, 2002, the
New York Times reported at the time, White House officials confirmed the Bush administration
had already been “[planning its Iraq strategy] long before President Bush’s vacation in Texas” in August of that same year.
The strategy was to persuade the public and Congress that the United States and its allies should confront the “threat from Saddam Hussein.”
The now infamous
9/11 anniversary speech — and the
speech before the United Nations following the anniversary remarks — both stressed the importance of
“[ridding] the world of terror.” But before speaking to the United Nations, Bush made the clearest case for war.
Claiming “our principles and our security are challenged today by outlaw groups and regimes that accept no law of morality and have no limit to their violent ambitions,”Bush presented his case against Iraq, claiming Hussein had only
“contempt for the United Nations … [claiming] it had no biological weapons. ”
Making the case that Iraq had a clandestine
“weapons program … producing tens of thousands of litres of anthrax and other deadly biological agents for use with Scud warheads, aerial bombs and aircraft spray tanks,” Bush and his administration sold the invasion of Iraq with
lies.
How the Bush Administration and the Media Sold the Iraq War
In 2003, Bush’s secretary of state, Colin Powell,
laid out Bush’s rationale for war in Iraq, saying Iraq had been given several chances to “comply” with U.N. resolutions regarding the country’s possession of weapons of mass destruction.
He added that America had “proof” the Hussein regime had “evacuated” — not destroyed — its weapons, adding that the U.S. government had
“satellite photos that indicate[d] that banned materials [had] recently been moved from a number of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction facilities.” But what the media then failed to dig into was how the evidence presented by Powell had been introduced in a way that helped the administration make the case for war, even as Powell himself
knew— or at least
seemed to know — that there was a possibility they were putting
“half a million troops in Iraq and march[ing] from one end of the country to the other [to] find nothing.”
On the day Powell delivered his speech, then-CIA operations officer Valerie Plame Wilson
noticed his claims
“simply did not match the intelligence which she had worked on daily for months.”
Making use of claims made by a discredited Iraqi defector code-named “Curveball,” Powell ignored the fact the CIA had
deemed the source a “fabricator” and used the source’s shaky evidence to convince the media, as well as other global powers, they should all go along with the U.S. plan.
At the time, the
New York Times, which had previously
openly reported that the Bush administration had been planning on “selling” the Iraq war using the best marketing strategies at hand, published a number of opinion pieces
reinforcing the idea that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. After reports proved Bush’s rationale for war had been debunked, the prestigious publication
had to retract.
The late Michael Ratner, an attorney who served as the president emeritus of the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York,
once accused the “liberal media,” along with the government, of selling the Iraq war not by simply claiming Hussein had WMDs, but also
“by claiming that there was a relationship between Saddam Hussein, who led Iraq at the time, and al-Qaeda.”
Then-Vice President Dick Cheney and other members of the Bush administration
had pressured the CIA to find a way to connect Iraq and al-Qaeda, an effort that ultimately helped boost the case for war before the international community.
What the White House wanted finally materialized when officials tortured al-Libi.
The man who was waterboarded into providing phony info on the al-Qaeda link to Iraq later
died in a Libyan prison of an apparent suicide.
Like Iraq, the Media Now Sells the Political Class’ Lies on Russia, Syria
When Bush was trying to sell the Iraq war to Congress, Hillary Clinton, then a New York senator, voted in favor of authorizing his administration to go into Iraq,
basing her decision “as much on advice from her husband’s advisers as from Bush administration officials.”
While she now claims her vote was a mistake, she proved herself to be
consistently pro-intervention as secretary of state under President Barack Obama and as a presidential candidate, having gone so far as to
suggest that going against Russia in Syria by enacting a no-fly zone could
“save lives and hasten the end of the conflict.”Privately, however, she gave a speech to Goldman Sachs in which she acknowledged establishing a no-fly zone is Syria would kill “a lot” of Syrian civilians.
While Russia’s role in Syria
isn’t as humanitarian as its officials would like us to believe, its proximity to Syria plays an important role in its own affairs, making its involvement in the conflict more logical than America’s.
Luckily, Americans aren’t
as gullible in 2016 as they were in 2003, as many now keep up with the news by seeking more independent channels.
But will the next administration bother to ask us our opinion before launching into another war?
River to Sea
Uprooted Palestinian 
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