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By FinalCall.com News Editorial
Job losses, home losses, stock market losses, retirement losses, health care
losses and the loss of a general sense of security are prevalent across
America. But while the economic crisis and its painful results may have the
attention of the public, the war in Iraq should not and must not be
forgotten.
A war fueled by lies, a desire to remake the Middle East and protect Israel
has cost the country precious resources and much of the respect enjoyed
around the world. American military personnel have died and Iraqis have
perished. Six years is enough. It is enough time for America to admit the
Bush administration’s adventure was a major blunder and it is time to end
the fiasco, save lives, save precious tax dollars and repent for a war that
should have never been fought.
Prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq and during the pursuit of an
ill-conceived American military and political mission, the Honorable
Minister Louis Farrakhan offered guidance to avoid and resolve this crisis.
In letters to former President George W. Bush and in his recent Saviours’
Day address, Min. Farrakhan has warned that America should not use military
might in an unjust manner. The Minister has advised the world’s only
superpower to be careful how she acts in the world—reflecting the biblical
injunction to do justice and walk humbly.
Min. Farrakhan has also warned America cannot win another war. The Minister
has also explained that America sits in a precarious place and like her
predecessor empires, notably Babylon, is under the judgment of God Himself.
“Ancient Babylon was a city that caused all who traded with her to wax
strong, but, at a certain point, the neighboring nations turned against
Babylon and she was destroyed and left as a sign. The Book of Revelation
speaks of a mystery Babylon that ancient Babylon was a sign of. The
Honorable Elijah Muhammad, my teacher and guide, said that America is the
fulfillment of that mystery Babylon,” wrote Min. Farrakhan in a letter to
President Bush in October 2002.
The election of President Barack Obama has inspired a remarkable level of
hope around the world. But for that hope to become a reality, U.S. policy
must reflect the change that the world hungers for. Min. Farrakhan’s divine
warnings to the previous administration should be studied by the new team in
the White House. His wisdom and guidance could help America extricate
herself from the trap of war in Iraq, Afghanistan and avert potential war
with Iran.
President Obama’s plan to end the war expects to have most U.S. troops out
of Iraq by August 2010. A force of 35,000 to 50,000 troops would stay to
help Iraqi forces, protect Americans and combat terrorism. All U.S. troops
would be out of the country by the end 2011. An immediate withdrawal would
be best.
“Six years later, as many as one million Iraqis have been killed under this
occupation, and another five million have lost their homes, according to
credible estimates. More than 4,000 U.S. troops have been killed, and other
hundreds of thousands have come back with physical and mental injuries,”
noted the anti-war American Friends Service Committee, in an assessment of
the Iraq debacle. “We believe that the occupation of Iraq has been
counter-productive and wrong. It has harmed both the U.S. and Iraqi people,
and it has made our world more violent and unsafe.
“The complete withdrawal of troops is an important first step to improving
the lives of all Iraqis. Next steps for the U.S. should include continued
and creative international diplomacy and substantial long-term funding for
humanitarian relief and Iraqi-led reconstruction efforts. These steps
strengthen the prospects for national reconciliation and reconstruction by
fulfilling Iraqis’ needs and hopes. Even after U.S. and Coalition forces
leave the country, the U.S. has a continuing moral responsibility to all
Iraqis,” the group said.
The alternative to exiting quickly and trying to help rebuild Iraq is
harrowing—though few seem to want to admit it.
“President George W. Bush’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003 ultimately may
come to be seen as one of the most profligate actions in the history of
American foreign policy,” warns Thomas Ricks, author of “Fiasco,” a book
that traces the failures of the U.S. war in Iraq. Mr. Ricks is a writer for
the Washington Post and his 2006 book has been widely recognized as
well-sourced and researched. Mr. Ricks, who covers the Pentagon, has warned
that the worst is yet to come. “The consequences of his choice won’t be
clear for decades, but it already is abundantly apparent in mid-2006 that
the U.S. government went to war in Iraq with scant solid international
support and on the basis of incorrect information—about weapons of mass
destruction and a supposed nexus between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda’s
terrorism—and then occupied the country negligently. Thousands of U.S.
troops and an untold number of Iraqis have died. Hundreds of billions of
dollars have been spent, many of them squandered. Democracy may yet come to
Iraq and the region, but so too may civil war or a regional conflagration,
which in turn could lead to spiraling oil prices and a global economic
shock,” notes a portion of the book quoted in a New York Times review.
According to Mr. Ricks, a Pulitzer Prize winning writer, all of the talk
about the success of “the surge,” or intensified U.S. military action in
Iraq, isn’t real talk. His latest book, “The Gamble,” warns the war isn’t
nearly over. “I think we may just be half way through this war,” Mr. Ricks
told National Public Radio. “I know President Obama thinks he’s going to get
all troops out by 2011—I don’t know anybody in Baghdad who thinks that’s
going to happen. I think Iraq is going to change Obama more than Obama
changes Iraq.”
“The point is as long as you have American troops in Iraq, no matter what
you call them, they are going to be fighting and dying,” Mr. Ricks observed.
“The surge worked tactically—it improved security enormously. But it didn’t
succeed strategically, politically. And that was its larger goal.”
He believes Iraq is likely to face violence and fracture, likely to be an
enemy of the United States and an ally of Iran ruled by a Saddam
Hussein-like strongman—in the best case scenario. The worst case scenario
could be a civil war and genocide against the Sunni population. So much for
U.S. democracy, liberating the Iraqi people and former Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld’s delusional prediction that U.S. forces would be welcomed
as liberators.
Mr. Ricks states the Iraq war “was the biggest mistake in the history of
American foreign policy.”
“We don’t yet understand how big a mistake this is,” he adds. “Everything
that flows from it is the fruit of the poison tree.”
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