The US Needs Its Own Chilcot Report
Tony Blair wasn’t the principal
architect of this catastrophic war. The
US should investigate George W Bush for
his decision to invade Iraq
By Trevor Timm
July 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Guardian"-
As
the UK parliament
released its long-awaited Chilcot report
on the country’s role in the Iraq war on
Wednesday, there have been renewed calls
all over Britain to try former prime
minister Tony Blair for war crimes. This
brings up another question: what about
George W Bush?
The former US president
most responsible for the foreign policy
catastrophe has led a peaceful
existence since he left office. Not only
has he avoided any post-administration
inquiries into his conduct, he has
inexplicably seen his
approval ratings rise (despite the
carnage left in his wake only getting
worse). He is an in-demand fundraiser
for Republicans not named Donald Trump,
and he gets paid hundreds of thousands
of dollars to speak at corporate events.
The chances of him ever saying in
public, “I express more sorrow, regret
and apology than you can ever believe,”
as
Blair did on Wednesday, are
virtually non-existent.
The only thing close to the Chilcot
report in the US was the Senate
intelligence committee’s long-delayed
investigation on intelligence failures
in the lead-up to Iraq, released in
2008. The Democratic-led committee
faulted the CIA for massive intelligence
failures and the
Bush administration for purposefully
manipulating intelligence for public
consumption. It led to a couple days of
headlines, denunciations from the Bush
White House (still in office at the
time) and that was it.
After that, the Senate intelligence
committee continued to lavish the CIA
with praise, increase its budgets and
provide only a modicum of oversight,
despite the many scandals that preceded
and succeeded the report. When the same
intelligence committee later
investigated illegal CIA torture – also
directed by the highest levels of the
Bush administration – they didn’t even
bother mentioning the top officials who
designed and sanctioned the program,
only the anonymous (read: redacted)
underlings who carried it out.
Bush himself suffered no consequences
and, by that time, was claiming that the
“Iraq surge had worked”, a misleading
drumbeat meant to obscure his calamitous
original decision. Barack Obama took
prosecuting Bush officials for anything
related its “war on terror” off the
table before his administration ever
took office, and his administration’s
stance on torture turned a blatant war
crime into a policy dispute. And that
was that.
House Republicans’ investigations into
Benghazi has lasted far longer than
any sort of investigation into Iraq,
despite there being little doubt that
the Iraq war was the biggest foreign
policy disaster of the last quarter
century. Not only did it lead to the
deaths of well over a million people,
but the US has spent trillions of
dollars fighting it, and its chaotic
ripple effects throughout the Middle
East continue to dominate US foreign
policy. Most notably, the war spawned
the terrorist group Isis, which the US
will likely spend the next generation
fighting.
Coincidentally,
a scathing new biography of Bush was
published Tuesday by renowned historian
Jean Edward Smith, and it sounds like
it’s closer to an indictment than
anything an official governing body has
come close to producing. Smith, who
devotes a substantial portion of his
book to the lead-up and aftermath of the
Iraq war, concludes: “Whether George W
Bush was the worst president in American
history will be long debated, but his
decision to invade Iraq is easily the
worst foreign policy decision ever made
by an American president.”
Beyond Bush, the political elite in the
US has faced almost no punishment for
supporting the invasion of
Iraq. Dick Cheney and company are
also living comfortably in retirement,
and both political parties have
nominated people who supported the
invasion in 2003.
It’s unlikely that anything will ever
actually happen to Tony Blair or any of
the other war architects in the UK
despite the report’s damning
conclusions. And he’ll continue to
spend much of his time doing PR work
for some of the world’s worst dictators,
helping them avoid the same fate that he
will almost certainly miss himself.