Bush
zero; Iraq, still counting
What
was George W. Bush's real motivation for attacking Iraq last week?
Was he really concerned about the safety of allied planes patrolling
the no-fly zone? Perhaps he was actually concerned with something
more to cast himself in a favorable light in the eyes of military
supporters. Maybe he wanted to try and ride the coattails of his father's
legacy.
First and foremost, we have to consider the old adage: like father
like son. Sure, George W. is his own person. He's not controlled at
all by his father's influence or that of conservative politics. As
analysts on CNN are fond of saying about candidates and public officials,
there are no politics involved here.
Dubya's father started the war against Iraq after Saddam Hussein invaded
Kuwait. That was a decade ago. Today, the Iraqi leader has outlasted
not only George Bush the senior, but also Bill Clinton. Two whole
U.S. leaders later, and we still have the same problems we did 10
years ago.
But what good would it serve Dubya to go clean up the mess his father
left after Operation Desert Storm? Certainly, a strength of Dubya's
father was foreign policy. Despite an inability to run his own country
successfully, George Bush was a player on the international scene.
Perhaps little George is trying to establish credibility in his foreign
policy by reviving a method that worked for his father: bomb Iraq.
Yet, times have changed, and instead of a positive reaction to this
move, critics at home and abroad point out the futility in kicking
dust on Saddam's well-entrenched shoes. If anything, the recent bombings
are likely to cause another terrorist act against a U.S. Embassy or
perhaps even against a target here in the states.
Today, Iraq is not the focus of as much international animosity as
the last time we had a Bush in office. Sympathies have also changed,
and bombing Iraq vilifies America in the eyes of many, especially
those much-needed Arab allies who help keep many tenuous situations
balanced in the Middle East.
The most dangerous consequence of attacking Iraq is not what the world
will think of Americans, it is what Saddam Hussein, his allies and
his compatriots will do in retaliation. George W. has endangered not
only Americans, but also the British, by his random decision to bomb
Iraq.
Yet for Bush and his cohorts, possible terrorist action is a consequence
worth disregarding when it comes to better approval ratings. Maybe
he just wants oil. Maybe, somewhere in that cocaine-addled brain,
George W. thinks that by stirring up the snake-pit that is Iraq, he
will be able to cause enough commotion to validate a military insertion
into the country, allowing for an occupation and by virtue of occupation,
control of the country's natural resources.
Once Iraqi oil falls into U.S. hands, Dubya could easily sell it back
to the oil company that formerly employed his vice president, strengthening
not only the U.S. economy, but also providing kick-backs to the companies
that bankrolled the highly inefficient Bush campaign.
Then again, that does seem like a bit of a stretch, and despite the
obvious policy genius that resides in our current president, I doubt
anyone would take him for that much of a fool. Is he? Only time will
tell.
Chip Hosken is a senior in LAS. His column appears on alternate
Fridays. He can be reached at opinions@dailyillini.com
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