The next US president and the Iraq war

Author: Jonathan Power

As long as Jeb Bush stays in the race to be the next president of the US the issue of the Iraq war will not go away. The fact that Iraq is descending into further chaos and that he is the brother of ex-president George W Bush, whose willful invasion of Iraq catalysed Iraq’s implosion, will see to that. And so it should.
When Bush junior was asked recently if he thought his brother’s policy in Iraq had been the right one he muffed his answer. He is going to be asked this question again and again. So far he has not been pinned down publically on whether he supported his brother’s policy of using torture, including waterboarding. But he will be. It is beyond understanding that Jeb has announced that his brother will be his principal advisor on the Middle East. His foreign policy team includes a number of people who were complicit in the decision to go to war. There is no evidence that they have changed their minds.
US politics have now reached a rough consensus about the Iraq war: it was a mistake. People in the US belatedly realise that President Bush pulled the wool over their eyes. The reaction may not be as strong as in the UK where ex-prime minister Tony Blair, who walked in lockstep with Bush, is now treated as a pariah by a large majority of the population, but it is there. Over time, more and more Republican politicians have admitted that the absence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, which Bush and Blair said were definitely there, undermined their rationale for the invasion in 2003.
Hilary Clinton, now the front-runner in the next election, voted in the Senate for the war. In 2003, when campaigning against Barack Obama, she did not have the courage to disavow her vote and this probably cost her the nomination. Today, she is openly admitting her mistake. In her book, she wrote, “I got it wrong. Plain and simple.” But it took her a decade to get to that point, not a good sign of an honest, open, searching character.
Jeb Bush, explaining his reluctance to clarify his position on the war, said, “Going back in time and talking about hypotheticals, the would-haves and the should-haves, does a disservice to the families of soldiers who gave their lives.” But is it not true that their lives could have been saved if President Bush had not lied about the evidence he had and the war had never begun? Blair’s ambassador to Washington has written that the White House’s decision to topple Saddam Hussein was made before much evidence came in. The evidence was made to conform to the decision, he wrote. And what about the civilians? According to UNICEF, 30,000 children died for lack of nourishment and medical attention even before the invasion because of the economic embargo. During the war the figure mushroomed. Does Jeb Bush include these facts in his explanation of how lives could have been saved? Clearly not.
The Republican senator, Rand Paul, who is also running for president, was blunt a couple of weekends ago when he told the employees of a tech company: “Every time we topple a secular strongman, we have gotten chaos and more radical Islam, and we are all less safe because of that.” Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, the chief of staff of Colin Powell, the secretary of state under Bush, told his local paper that it was a “fair assessment” to say Iraq was better off under Saddam. Of course, he does not argue that Saddam was not an evil man, which he clearly was. But he knows that at least Iraq’s people were well fed, housed and had reasonable healthcare. It is probable that in time Saddam might have been pushed aside by rivals. Even if not, he had had his wings badly clipped by the first Iraq war, which left him with no air force or navy and an army with aging equipment.
All this record should be grist for the media’s mill. But, despite the movement in public opinion, most of the media seems intent on drawing a line under the subject. Nor do they probe why Bush wanted the war. Was it, he had convinced himself, that it would enhance US influence and respect around the world? Was it a pilot project, testing out how to engineer regime change?
President Barack Obama has done the US — and the world — a great service by denouncing both the war and torture. It will be near impossible for the next president to reverse this about-turn. Added to that, the US has made its peace with Cuba and is well on its way to do so with Iran. That, too, a future president will be unable to change. However, cleaning up the mess created by the invasion of Iraq may take decades.

The writer has been a foreign affairs columnist for the International Herald Tribune for 20 years and author of the much acclaimed new book, Conundrums of Humanity — the Big Foreign Policy Questions of Our Age. He may be contacted at jonathanpower95@gmail.com

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