Veteran: War based on greed
Delta Force founder finds Bush deaf to Iraq criticism
By Diane Wagner
Rome News-Tribune Staff Writer
03/27/06 "Rome
News-Tribune" -- -- Harsh criticism of the Bush
administration’s policy in Iraq is nothing new, but this critic
has the counter-terrorism credentials and military connections
to bolster his assertions.
Eric Haney, a retired command sergeant major and founding member
of the elite Delta Force commando unit, charged Monday that the
president’s policy is based on cultural arrogance and corporate
greed rather than sound military strategy.
“I understand the people who are doing this and where they’re
coming from,” the veteran said. “Delusional ideology is a big
factor, and there’s a huge amount of venal corporate activity.
Halliburton and other companies are making so much money that
they don’t want to see it changed.”
National Security Council spokesman Fred Jones disputed Haney’s
contentions on the war.
“I think the president has made increasingly clear why we are in
Iraq and the value he places on the military,” Jones said
Monday. “He has said decisions on troop levels will be made by
commanders on the ground.”
A 1970 graduate of Pepperell High School, Haney is now executive
producer and technical adviser for the new CBS hit drama “The
Unit,” based on his 2002 memoir titled “Inside Delta Force.”
His comments follow a round of speeches by President Bush last
week, marking the third anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Bush called Iraq “the central front in the war on terror” in an
appearance at the City Club of Cleveland in Ohio and said the
security of the United States is directly linked to the liberty
of the Iraqi people.
“By standing with them in their hour of need, we’re going to
help the Iraqis build a strong democracy that will be an
inspiration throughout the Middle East,” Bush said. “A democracy
that will be a partner in the global war on terror.”
But Haney said Bush “may well have started the third world war”
by his focus on Iraq instead of on Saudi Arabia’s role in
funding and encouraging the centuries-old culture clash between
Sunnis and Shiites in the Middle East.
“Saudi Arabia is the root source of Islamic extremism and
terrorism,” he said. “But this administration keeps the public
blinded to the fact because it makes so much money from the
monarchy.”
Haney said his concerns are military, not political, and he is
surprised more “dyed-in-the-wool” Republicans are not speaking
out.
“I don’t care if it was the pope in charge; wrongdoing does not
recognize partisanship,” he said. “I had the same problem with
(former President) Clinton and the Democrats — you should clean
up your own mess.”
The few experienced soldiers who have challenged the Bush
strategy — such as U.S. Army joint chief Gen. Eric Shinseki —
have been marginalized and forced out, Haney said.
Shinseki retired in August 2003, after testifying before
Congress that postwar Iraq would need an occupying force of
hundreds of thousands of troops.
“At every turn, in the upper levels of our administration, they
refused to listen to what they did not want to hear,” Haney
said.
He said Shinseki’s fate served as a warning to other career
soldiers considering public contradictions of Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld.
“Rumsfeld said the generals are getting all the troops they ask
for, but they’ve gotten the word not to ask,” he said. “If you
don’t play ball, you don’t get that other star or that book deal
or the chance to sit on corporate boards when you retire.”
Still, Haney said he is hearing of a few commanders ready to
buck the pressure and reject the blame for failed Iraq policies.
Despite what supporters claim, he said, criticizing Bush’s
decisions is not unpatriotic.
“The henchmen of Hitler said it. The henchmen of Pol Pot said
it. Every low-life tyrant has said it, but it is the duty of
every American citizen to stand up and say it when something is
wrong,” he said. “This administration has wrapped itself in the
troops. They’ve learned from Vietnam to say, ‘If you don’t
support me, you don’t support the troops,’ but they’re hiding
behind those kids.”