August 31, 2010 4:49 PM

The Iraq Speech Obama Should Make (But Won't)

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Juan Cole is a professor of history at the University of Michigan. He also blogs at Informed Comment,, where this piece originally appeared. His most recent work is Engaging the Muslim World

Here is the speech that I wish President Obama would give about the Iraq War, but which neither he nor any other president ever will.

Fellow Americans, and Iraqis who are watching this speech, I have come here this evening not to declare a victory or to mourn a defeat on the battlefield, but to apologize from the bottom of my heart for a series of illegal actions and grossly incompetent policies pursued by the government of the United States of America, in defiance of domestic US law, international treaty obligations, and both American and Iraqi public opinion.

The United Nations was established in 1945 in the wake of a series of aggressive wars of conquest and the response to them, in which over 60 million people perished. Its purpose was to forbid such unjustified attacks, and its charter specified that in future wars could only be launched on two grounds. One is clear self-defense, when a country has been attacked. The other is with the authorization of the United Nations Security Council.

It was because the French, British and Israeli attack on Egypt in 1956 contravened these provisions of the United Nations Charter that President Dwight D. Eisenhower condemned that war and forced the belligerents to withdraw. When Israel looked as though it might try to hang on to its ill-gotten spoils, the Sinai Peninsula, President Eisenhower went on television on February 21, 1957 and addressed the nation. These words have largely been suppressed and forgotten in the United States of today, but they should ring through the decades and centuries:

"If the United Nations once admits that international dispute can be settled by using force, then we will have destroyed the very foundation of the organization, and our best hope of establishing a real world order. That would be a disaster for us all . . . "

[Referring to Israeli demands that certain conditions be met before it relinquished the Sinai, the president said that he] "would be untrue to the standards of the high office to which you have chosen me if I were to lend the influence of the United States to the proposition that a nation which invades another should be permitted to exact conditions for withdrawal . . ."

"If it [the United Nations Security Council] does nothing, if it accepts the ignoring of its repeated resolutions calling for the withdrawal of the invading forces, then it will have admitted failure. That failure would be a blow to the authority and influence of the United Nations in the world and to the hopes which humanity has placed in the United Nations as the means of achieving peace with justice."

In March of 2003, it was the United States government itself that contravened the charter of the United Nations, aggressively invading a country that had not attacked it and against the will of the UN Security Council. The war was preceded by a summit in the Azores of the US, Britain, Spain and Portugal, for all the world as though it were the sixteenth century and a confusion between empire and piracy still prevailed.

No one denies that the government of Saddam Hussein was brutal. The one good thing that came out of this sad affair, and an achievement of which individual American servicemen and women may be justly proud, is the ending of a murderous tyranny. The American military fought valiantly and as it was ordered to by civilian politicians, most of whom had fled military service themselves. The military does not make policy and my critique of the war is not directed at it. To say all this is simply to acknowledge a complex reality, not to justify an illegal action. Nothing extraordinary had happened in Iraq in 2002 or 2003 to provoke an Anglo-American invasion. We learn in kindergarten that two wrongs do not make a right, and that the ends do not justify the means. Above all, international order is fragile and threats to that order increasingly menacing, and to toss away the achievement of the United Nations charter in favor of a war that was if not unilateral, certainly unilaterally decided upon, was a severe blow to the peace, prosperity and security of us all.

Tallying the Cost

The cost of this unprovoked and foolhardy adventure to the United States has been profound. A country known for its efficiency and prowess was made to look like a band of bumbling fools. The world's best armed forces were mired in a quagmire that sapped its strength and attention, and permitted challenges to the US to go unanswered in the rest of the world. Iran was transformed from a minor annoyance- blocked by the Iraqi Republican Guards from a significant role in the Middle East- into a regional superpower with powerful influence in Baghdad, Beirut, Manama, Kuwait City, and Damascus. There is no doubt that more benefit accrued to Iran from the Iraq War than to the United States.

Over 35,000 Americans have been killed or wounded in the Iraq War from hostile causes, and some 40,000 were killed or hurt in incidents classified as "non-hostile," though likely many of these injuries actually occurred because of attacks. A generation of Americans will suffer brain damage, post-traumatic stress disorder, or physical disabilities because of this violent war, in which roadside bombs were deployed in the thousands against poorly armored vehicles that the Bush administration could not be bothered to replace with sturdier ones. The cost of the war so far, approaching a trillion dollars, is dwarfed by the cost of caring for the damaged veterans, and will likely mount to $5 trillion or more in coming decades. That sum is nearly half the entire current national debt.

The constitution, laws and traditions of the American Republic were also wounded by this war. High officials explicitly authorized torture. The United States government became among the chief purveyors in the world of sado-masochistic pornography, coming out of Abu Ghraib. The White House, shamefully, became a center of concerted propaganda so divorced from reality that its own press spokesmen privately and sometimes publicly admitted the dishonesty of their own discourse. The so-called PATRIOT Act contains provisions that clearly contravene the Bill of Rights and yet they have become so ingrained in the practices of the law enforcement community and so beloved by the enormous national security sector that even I have not dared touch them.

The damage to the United States and to international order and law is deep and our nation and our allies will not soon heal from its wounds. That damage is dwarfed, however, by the world-historical catastrophe that our invasion unleashed upon Iraq. The overthrow of the government with no plan for what might replace it; the dissolution of the Iraqi army; the willful neglect and destruction of the Iraqi public sector; and the animus against the Sunni Arab population mandated by the United States destroyed the foundations of order and economic activity in Iraq. The refusal of then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to properly garrison Iraq after its conquest left it without sufficient US troops to guarantee security. Instead of seeking reconciliation and an equitable new order, the Bush administration installed partisan conspirators in power and allowed them to adopt punitive policies toward the former ruling group. These policies were largely responsible for provoking a Sunni Arab insurgency of enormous proportions, which continues to fight and to seek the destabilization of the new Iraq even today.



Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
by tsigili September 2, 2010 4:21 PM EDT
Anyone who thinks the UN accomplishes anything, is a fool.
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by Commonsense411 September 1, 2010 10:58 PM EDT
luadda22

Amusing that you would take the time to read the entire column (assuming you read it at all of course) and all you can come up with is..

"another doofus"

Very intelligent, really stunning commentary. Why bother commenting at all if your intent was simply to belittle others. Your brand of intellect would be better served by getting involved in one of the columns about say...the dangers of high fructose corn syrup...
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by inketolstoy September 1, 2010 1:41 PM EDT
The meaning of "unvarnished truth" must be different for Juan than for me. Tell me progressive; in liberalees, does unvarnished mean the same thing as not in standard English?
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by maistir September 1, 2010 9:36 AM EDT
I'm so happy my taxes in MI help to pay for Cole's salary as a professor at Ann Arbor. History is too often comprised of the dull research into evidence and reasonable arguments about the evidence. Raving lunatics often make history, why shouldn't they be represented among the professors of history? Gives the field a certain piquancy.
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by louiville35 September 1, 2010 8:26 AM EDT
Yawn, nice diatribe what was missing was the song "Age of Aquarius" playing softly in the background. In this fictional authors world, criminals are merely told to get into police cars and they will comply, murderers must simply be told to stop murdering and they will stop and be allowed to enter the general public and we can feel safe knowing they will never repeat. So simple is his world that how in ten's of thousands of years of strife haven't we seen this simple answer before.

Ah kindergarten remember how simple and straight forward life was?

Oh and for a clue Chamberlain tried that in 1938.
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by endurorob_5 September 1, 2010 6:25 AM EDT
This guy belongs on MSNBC. CBS, why would you publish this?
Reply to this comment
by starving1968-3 September 1, 2010 12:17 PM EDT
Because it's 100% accurate.
by zoopster1 September 1, 2010 1:24 AM EDT
Good God, please tell me that nutjobs like this columnist are in the minority.
Reply to this comment
by tiredofthebs September 1, 2010 7:20 PM EDT
They are (though I'm not GOD). What's sad is that you don't recognize that THAT in itself is a problem.
by Commonsense411 September 1, 2010 11:05 PM EDT
Nutjob? Well if that's what we call rational folks who take the time to research facts, take the time to make a rational statement based on facts...then lets just hope we have a whole nation of nutjobs. Because if the folks who created this mess are considered Sanejobs, then we're really in serious trouble.
by jlynjohn August 31, 2010 11:32 PM EDT
You are joking, right? Please tell me you are not a voting American. Very scary that there are actually people out there who think like this. Wake up America!
Reply to this comment
by Commonsense411 September 1, 2010 11:07 PM EDT
Wake up to what? What exactly do you think we should wake up to?
by infoworker September 2, 2010 9:51 AM EDT
What part of Juan Cole's article did you find factually inaccurate ? Perhaps the fact that he left out that we needed to virtually ignore our real enemies in Afghanistan since the majority of our resources were mirred in Iraq. Perhaps that he should have been a bit more direct about the Project for a New American Century criminal conspirators (look it up... it's public information and make sure you check the date and signators).
Then try to reconcile your voting preference with the doctrine of any law abiding country or any religion.
by babooph August 31, 2010 7:56 PM EDT
IKE was the greatest-his 90% tax on the rich,end of hostility in Korea,taking military demanded funds & building interstate hwys;coming out very ill ,in retirement & aiding JFK over Cuba-new party would now say he did not go to West Point,was not born a US citizen in Kansas,real father was Trotski& was Islamic ,educated by some Ayatolla...
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by ky1946 September 9, 2010 12:15 PM EDT
Come to think of it, I don't remember cuba or korea invading us.
You can't pick your wars. The big 'O' seems to have a problem with those advancing afgans.
by mikelpond August 31, 2010 5:44 PM EDT
After which you'd write a scathing column savaging him for it right, Juan?
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