Preparing for War With Iran?
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter outlines the Bushies'
plan for military domination of the Middle East
Steve Sellery
September 29, 2005
Scott Ritter, former U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq, made a
strong case that the Bush administration is preparing to take
the war to Iran in a speech he gave at the United Church on the
Green in New Haven on Sept. 17 before an attentive crowd of
about 250.
The gathering, sponsored by Squeaky Wheel Productions, Between
the Lines Radio Newsmagazine, WPKN and the Yale Coalition for
Peace, was perfectly timed. Ritter spoke the day before the
visit of Cindy Sheehan, the mother who still wants President
George W. Bush to tell her why her son died. In his speech,
titled "Parallel Deceptions: The Bush Agenda for War in Iraq and
Iran," Ritter made it clear that her son died because of
deceptions by the Bush administration that led to the Iraq war
and that are preparing us for war in Iran. It is all laid out in
the Wolfowitz-Cheney gang's document "Project for a New American
Century" where the neocons plan for military domination of the
Middle East.
Scott Ritter is an imposing man. Big and burly, he still looks
like the Marine Corps leader who led a dozen men in combat. He
began his speech by remarking wryly that he could never have
imagined being sponsored by peace groups. He was and is a
military man, a card-carrying member of the American Legion. "I
still believe in war," he said. "It's just that this is an
illegal war and every day it takes us further from our goals of
peace."
Ritter's controlled anger at the Bush administration was
apparent. This is not the anger of a peacenik, but of a military
man who has been deceived by his leadership. "It's not the fault
of the military men on the scene in Iraq," he said. "They are
just taking orders. When you and your 12 men are face to face
against the enemy, you have to focus on staying alive and
winning your mission. The military men and women are doing what
we as a country have asked them to do."
"Iraq is a nation on fire," Ritter asserted. "And our troops are
the fuel that feeds that fire." Make no mistake about it, he
added, today is the best day that we are going to have in Iraq.
It is only going to get worse. Why not get out of Iraq on the
best day? We do not need to wait until it gets worse.
Ritter summed up the current Iraq conflict as an "illegal" war
that is the result of a decade of deception by the U.S.
government and the CIA. After Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, the
U.N. Resolution called for the removal of Iraqi forces from
Kuwait. This was done. Colin Powell, who was then Joint Chief of
Staff of the military, told the president not to take over Iraq
because we did not have a plan for managing the aftermath; and
without a plan there would be ethnic bloodshed. Bush took his
advice. The CIA told the president that with economic sanctions,
we could squeeze the Iraqis until they deposed Saddam Hussein.
The CIA thought it would take six months.
Weapons of mass destruction were used as a justification for the
economic sanctions on Iraq after Kuwait was liberated. But,
Ritter noted, the first Gulf War came close to destroying all of
Iraq's capabilities. These were only "high school-like programs"
to develop WMD, Ritter said. However, the U.S. government hyped
up the threat to make the economy collapse so that Hussein would
be thrown out. Bush signed the order to the CIA that made
getting rid of Saddam Hussein goal No. 1.
During the run up to the Iraq War, the Iraqis were letting arms
inspectors into the country, Ritter explained. The Iraqis said
they had destroyed much of their capabilities. Ritter said
inspectors had evidence of most of the destroyed capabilities,
but they could not verify the last remaining weapons. "It's
impossible to prove a negative," he said. "The CIA kept saying
that some remained and at the time we could not prove them
completely wrong. Now we know.
"The CIA said there were 140 SCUD missiles in Iraq and we proved
them wrong," he added. "The CIA reduced that number to 14
missiles and said they would not budge from that number. And
they were right about one thing--they never budged from that
number. But it was politically motivated from the beginning."
On to Iran. Ritter maintains that the Bush administration plans
to go to war with Iran over its nuclear energy program. Our
government says we can't trust the Iranians because an oil rich
nation does not need nuclear energy. But in 1976 (when Donald
Rumsfield was Secretary of Defense and Dick Cheney was the Chief
of Staff under Gerald Ford's presidency), the Shah of Iran told
the United States that he needed nuclear energy to diversify his
country's energy program for security reasons, in case the
Persian Gulf were militarily blocked or if there was massive
damage--natural or manmade--to its oil wells. The U.S.
government agreed with the Shah's logic then, but has since
changed its position, because, as Ritter noted, the neocon
strategy is for regime change throughout the Middle East,
despite the fact that the same people who once approved of
Iran's nuclear energy program, are now opposed to it.
Iran has been complying with all international laws in regards
to international inspections of its nuclear energy program.
There is no legal way to oppose it, so the Bush administration
is saying that it's a front for weapons of mass destruction,
according to Ritter. If the United States asks Iran to shut down
its nuclear energy program, and this request goes to the U.N.
Security Council, Russia and China have said that they will
oppose the request. In that scenario, Ritter said, the United
States can fall back on Bush's Sept. 17, 2002 New Security
Agreement and say that U.S. security is threatened and that the
only solution is war.
Ritter said that one reason we cannot find a way out of the Iraq
War is that so many members of Congress voted for the war and
are afraid to change their position. The only solution is for
the American people to vote out of office every elected
official--Republican or Democrat--who refuses to change his or
her position to one of immediate withdrawal. This includes
Democrats like Hillary Rodham Clinton and Joseph Biden, who are
sticking by their pro-war positions as they run for president.
Until we purge all of these people from office, they will send
us to war in Iran, Ritter predicted.
Following his speech, Ritter took questions from the audience.
One person asked about the permanent military bases in Iraq.
Ritter said that the United States started with 120 military
bases and is consolidating them to 40 with the plan to
consolidate further to 14 and then to four major bases outside
of the population zones. Iraq will become our "lily pad" in the
Middle East, he said. It will allow us to withdraw our troops
from Saudi Arabia, but still provide us with the capability to
strike in Iran, Syria, etc. However, the Iraqi people want us
out of their country completely, he said. They will not accept
these permanent American military bases.
A second person asked Ritter what he could tell his
high-school-aged children. Ritter responded, "I have two girls,
12-year-old twins. We need to make this world safe for them and
their children. When I speak at high schools around the nation,
I tell the students that my generation has failed them. Yes, we
have failed them. They should not listen to us, because we have
created a world of permanent war, and because we lie to them on
a regular basis. Do not trust your government, I tell them.
Trust yourself. Question authority. Take responsibility for the
world. Take action. Only you can save the world."
:: Article nr. 16280 sent on 30-sep-2005 02:49 ECT
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