Before the invasion began I said
this:
To the refutation of their reasons for going to war, Mr. Bush and his associates have responded with bluster and propaganda. They continue to repeat what has been refuted. We are given an audio tape in which Osama bin Laden expresses his support for the Iraqi people and told by administration spokesmen that this proves a connection between Saddam and al-Qaida. It does nothing of the kind. We are also told that the burden of proof is not on those who charge Saddam with possessing weapons of mass destruction, but on Saddam to prove that he is not in possession of banned weapons. In short, the demand is being placed on Saddam to prove a negative, something that is logically impossible.
Mr. Bush may think less of this tactic if one were to demand that he prove that he stopped drinking many years ago as he claims. However Mr. Bush and his allies wish to spin it, the burden of proof is on them to prove their case against Saddam. They have not.
Indeed, the time has come to stop giving Mr. Bush and other members of his administration the benefit of the doubt. By continually recycling charges that have been shown to be absurd, they show only that they are determined to say anything in order to get their war and don't care if its justified or not. They are liars.
I don't have to eat a lot of those words. We are still waiting for some of the Democrats and even more Republicans who supported Bush's war and gave credence to his lies to eat theirs.
I got my information form going beyond the corporate-owned mainstream media and looking at the liberal/left alternative media, from which I knew of Scott Ritter's analysis of Saddam's military capabilities, and the British press, from which I learned of the politicization of intelligence in the OSP months before Seymour Hersh reported it in greater detail in the
New Yorker. I also learned from the BBC that reports of a meeting between September 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta and an Iraqi intelligence that supposedly took place in Prague in fact never took place at all.
There were good reasons to doubt the junta's case for war beforehand. I felt I marched against the war in February 2003 as an informed citizen, not a knee-jerk pacifist. In spite of the fact anybody who relied on
The New York Times and CNN for their information on the impending war was just as misinformed as someone watching FoxNews 24/7, the information was available. If it was available to me, then it was available to Senator Clinton, Senator Kerry, Senator Lieberman, Senator Edwards and Congressman Gephardt, all of who voted in favor of the IWR. They don't have an excuse.
A year later, I said this:
One year (after mass demonstrations against the war), we have every right to hold our heads high. We of the Left were right.
The left was right on all counts. As it turns out, Saddam was a paper tiger; there was no imminent threat. Insofar as he was a threat, Saddam was contained; for twelve years since being expelled from Kuwait, all his saber rattling was nothing but bluster. Saddam had no ties to al Qaida, let alone any part in the September 11 attacks. What Islamic fundamentalist terror organization operated in Iraq operated in Kurdish regions beyond Saddam's control. The left said there was no justification for the war, and there was none. The left was right.
The left said talk of the Iraqi people welcoming the invaders with open arms and roses was nonsense. The Iraqi people know the difference between liberation and colonial occupation. They are resisting occupation. Also decried as nonsense was talk of going into Iraq to democratize the Middle East. Bush loses an election and seizes power, tramples on the Bill of Rights and human rights treaties, operates what should be an open government in secret and sends troops into combat after giving false justifications for the act. The idea that such a man would be interested in bringing democracy and the rule of law to Iraq is ludicrous. The colonial regime represses freedom of the press, the right to assemble and the right to petition for redress of grievances. The Iraqi Governing Council is a group of quislings handpicked by the US colonial viceroy, not a body representative of or responsible to the Iraqi people. The invasion has not brought democracy to Iraq. The left was right.
The left said that Bush's cronies would profit from the invasion. Halliburton and Bechtel received contracts to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure without having to bid competitively. The left was right.
The left said the occupation following the invasion would become a quagmire. Since the invasion, Islamists have come to Iraq to fight Americans. They weren't there before, but they are now. Half of the US army's combat divisions are in Iraq on occupation duty. They are not protecting Americans from terrorists; they are protecting Halliburton. Once again, the left was right.
It is Bush who threatens to use nuclear weapons as a first strike. It is Bush who threatens to launch "pre-emptive" (actually preventive) attacks on other nations. It is Bush who arrogantly casts aside any treaty, convention or agreement that stands between him and his loot. Bush, like Saddam, is a tyrant. As dangerous as was Saddam at his worst, Bush is far and away the most dangerous man on earth.
That still stands.