20 years later, Iraq war apologists still dominate

In Warsaw in February, US President Joe Biden condemned the lawless Russian invasion of Ukraine: “The idea that over 100,000 forces would invade another country – since World War II, nothing like that has happened.” One month later marked the 20th anniversary of the greatest US foreign-policy debacle since Vietnam: America’s “war of choice” against Iraq, with 130,000 US soldiers invading the country to overthrow its government. Given the scope of the folly, it is understandable that Biden would want to bury it in a memory hole. Although not as Orwellian as Biden, much of the commentary around the 20th anniversary similarly sought to explain or justify or diminish the calamity. This isn’t surprising, since few of the perpetrators, propagandists and cheerleaders who drove us Americans into the war suffered any consequence. Their reputations were re-burnished; their stature in America’s foreign-policy establishment was retained. Bizarrely, those who led us into the disaster continue to dominate America’s major media platforms, while those who warned against it are largely pushed to the margins. Putting a blush on the Iraq war is not an easy task. The George W Bush administration touted its “preventive war” doctrine, scorned the need for America, at the height of its unipolar moment, to seek authority from the United Nations, approval from NATO allies, or adherence to international law. Iraq had been a target for neoconservatives long before the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, as the propagandists at the Project for the New American Century made clear. The push for the war began hours after those attacks, despite the fact that Saddam Hussein was an avowed enemy of al-Qaeda. Sales campaign The Bush administration campaigned to sell the threat, making it – as secretary of state Dean Acheson had written at the beginning of the Cold War – “clearer than the truth.” For message advice, the administration hired professional PR gurus such as Charlotte Beers, the Queen of Madison Avenue, straight from award-winning campaigns hawking Uncle Ben’s Rice and Head & Shoulders shampoo. From the president on down, they sought to associate Saddam Hussein with 9/11, although they had no evidence of a connection that did not exist. Then they focused on the threat posed by Saddam’s alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD). To overcome skeptical Central Intelligence Agency analysts, vice-president Dick Cheney formed his own intelligence group, while über-lobbyist John Rendon invented an Iraqi National Congress headed by the nefarious financier Ahmed Chalabi, who provided “intelligence” on demand. Despite the fear-mongering, the Bush administration faced the largest demonstrations ever organized against a war before it began – what The New York Times termed “a new superpower.” Germany, France and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization refused support; the UN denied sanction. But reporters and editorialists for the mainstream media echoed the administration’s claims; liberal pundits rushed to show their patriotic fervor. With few exceptions, liberal politicians signed on to preserve their “credibility.” The daily barrage of distortions and deceptions worked: On the eve of the war, two-thirds of Americans thought Saddam Hussein was behind 9/11, and nearly four-fifths thought he was on the verge of having nuclear weapons. And so the catastrophe. The war cost the United States 4,600 dead, and more than 30,000 wounded. Estimates of Iraqi casualties top 400,000, with a staggering 7 million refugees and millions more internally displaced. Sectarian conflict savaged Iraq. A new generation of jihadists arose and spread. Iran gained influence in the region. America’s reputation has not recovered to this day. Most of the world has stayed out of the Russian-Ukraine conflict, dismissing US hectoring about the “rules-based international order” as hypocrisy. China’s influence spread as the United States floundered in the endless wars in the Middle East. Americans are tired of wars without victory. The press squandered its credibility. And the arrogance and irresponsibility of foreign-policy establishment was exposed, all contributing to Donald Trump’s victory in the 2016 presidential election. Justifying tragedy Twenty years after the start of the Iraq war, its advocates and apologists struggle to justify their calamitous course, or to mollify judgments and achieve, in the words of Richard Haass, former president of the Foreign Policy Association, “an elusive consensus about the war’s legacy.” One frequent excuse is that the war was a mistake or a tragedy, not a crime. The Bush administration, it’s argued, really did believe that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. It was, Hal Brands writes in Foreign Affairs, “an understandable tragedy, born of honorable motive and genuine concerns.” Despite the lack of evidence, a “critical mass of senior officials … talked o

20 years later, Iraq war apologists still dominate

In Warsaw in February, US President Joe Biden condemned the lawless Russian invasion of Ukraine: “The idea that over 100,000 forces would invade another country – since World War II, nothing like that has happened.”

One month later marked the 20th anniversary of the greatest US foreign-policy debacle since Vietnam: America’s “war of choice” against Iraq, with 130,000 US soldiers invading the country to overthrow its government.

Given the scope of the folly, it is understandable that Biden would want to bury it in a memory hole. Although not as Orwellian as Biden, much of the commentary around the 20th anniversary similarly sought to explain or justify or diminish the calamity.

This isn’t surprising, since few of the perpetrators, propagandists and cheerleaders who drove us Americans into the war suffered any consequence. Their reputations were re-burnished; their stature in America’s foreign-policy establishment was retained.

Bizarrely, those who led us into the disaster continue to dominate America’s major media platforms, while those who warned against it are largely pushed to the margins.

Putting a blush on the Iraq war is not an easy task. The George W Bush administration touted its “preventive war” doctrine, scorned the need for America, at the height of its unipolar moment, to seek authority from the United Nations, approval from NATO allies, or adherence to international law.

Iraq had been a target for neoconservatives long before the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, as the propagandists at the Project for the New American Century made clear. The push for the war began hours after those attacks, despite the fact that Saddam Hussein was an avowed enemy of al-Qaeda.

Sales campaign

The Bush administration campaigned to sell the threat, making it – as secretary of state Dean Acheson had written at the beginning of the Cold War – “clearer than the truth.” For message advice, the administration hired professional PR gurus such as Charlotte Beers, the Queen of Madison Avenue, straight from award-winning campaigns hawking Uncle Ben’s Rice and Head & Shoulders shampoo.

From the president on down, they sought to associate Saddam Hussein with 9/11, although they had no evidence of a connection that did not exist. Then they focused on the threat posed by Saddam’s alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD).

To overcome skeptical Central Intelligence Agency analysts, vice-president Dick Cheney formed his own intelligence group, while über-lobbyist John Rendon invented an Iraqi National Congress headed by the nefarious financier Ahmed Chalabi, who provided “intelligence” on demand.

Despite the fear-mongering, the Bush administration faced the largest demonstrations ever organized against a war before it began – what The New York Times termed “a new superpower.”

Germany, France and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization refused support; the UN denied sanction. But reporters and editorialists for the mainstream media echoed the administration’s claims; liberal pundits rushed to show their patriotic fervor.

With few exceptions, liberal politicians signed on to preserve their “credibility.” The daily barrage of distortions and deceptions worked: On the eve of the war, two-thirds of Americans thought Saddam Hussein was behind 9/11, and nearly four-fifths thought he was on the verge of having nuclear weapons.

And so the catastrophe. The war cost the United States 4,600 dead, and more than 30,000 wounded. Estimates of Iraqi casualties top 400,000, with a staggering 7 million refugees and millions more internally displaced. Sectarian conflict savaged Iraq. A new generation of jihadists arose and spread. Iran gained influence in the region.

America’s reputation has not recovered to this day. Most of the world has stayed out of the Russian-Ukraine conflict, dismissing US hectoring about the “rules-based international order” as hypocrisy. China’s influence spread as the United States floundered in the endless wars in the Middle East.

Americans are tired of wars without victory. The press squandered its credibility. And the arrogance and irresponsibility of foreign-policy establishment was exposed, all contributing to Donald Trump’s victory in the 2016 presidential election.

Justifying tragedy

Twenty years after the start of the Iraq war, its advocates and apologists struggle to justify their calamitous course, or to mollify judgments and achieve, in the words of Richard Haass, former president of the Foreign Policy Association, “an elusive consensus about the war’s legacy.”

One frequent excuse is that the war was a mistake or a tragedy, not a crime. The Bush administration, it’s argued, really did believe that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. It was, Hal Brands writes in Foreign Affairs, “an understandable tragedy, born of honorable motive and genuine concerns.”

Despite the lack of evidence, a “critical mass of senior officials … talked one another into believing the most readily available justification,” concluded Max Fisher in the New York Times.

In fact, the “war of choice” was the product of hubris, at a time when the United States was at the height of its power, driven by zealots who scorned law, evidence, and the “rules-based order.” Or as the late secretary of state Colin Powell put it, reviewing the material provided for his UN speech, “This is bullshit.”

Others, risibly, suggest that Iraq is better off today as a result of the invasion. Saddam Hussein was a bad man, “the one indisputably real WMD in Iraq,” Times columnist Bret Stephens writes, justifying his support of the war. Getting rid of him is a boon for the Iraqis, Stephens argues, with “Iraq, the Middle East and the world better off for having gotten rid of a dangerous tyrant.”

This breathtaking conclusion can only be made by ignoring the devastation wrought on the country, the region and America’s credibility. It is the same arrogance that led to regime change in Libya, with the result once more a bloody civil war.

Some, like David Frum, the Bush speechwriter said to have coined the term “Axis of Evil” (the preposterous grouping of Iraq and Iran – two fervid enemies – with a North Korean regime that neither had any connection to), suggest the Iraqis bear much of the blame. We “offered Iraq a better future,” Frum tweeted. “Whatever West’s mistakes; the sectarian war was a choice Iraqis made for themselves.”

The price for failing to hold the perpetrators of this debacle accountable is that their worldview still dominates America’s national-security establishment.

Biden came into office pledging to create a foreign policy for the middle class, but he has proceeded to reaffirm America’s imperial delusion – that we have the resources, wisdom, and charter to police the world, to counter Russia and China in their own neighborhoods, while chasing terrorists, dropping bombs from drones in seven countries, and dispatching forces to more than 100 countries across the world.

We sensibly condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a violation of international law. Yet Richard Haass, a charter member of our foreign-policy establishment, can write – apparently without irony – that the lesson to be drawn from Iraq is not opposition to aggressive war but that “wars of choice should be undertaken only with extreme care and consideration of the likely costs and benefits.”

Surely, one of the enduring horrors of Iraq is that despite the calamity, America’s foreign-policy establishment remains unshaken, and its worldview remains unchanged.

This article is distributed by Globetrotter in partnership with The Nation.