Getting
Fooled on Iraq, Libya, Now Russia
After the
British report exposing falsehoods to justify
invading Iraq in 2003, a new U.K. inquiry found
similar misconduct in the 2011 attack on Libya, but
no lessons are learned for the West’s new propaganda
about Russia, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert
Parry
September
15, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
-A British parliamentary inquiry into the Libyan
fiasco has reported what should have been apparent
from the start in 2011 –
and was to some of us – that the West’s military
intervention to “protect” civilians in Benghazi was
a cover for what became another disastrous “regime
change” operation.
The report
from the U.K.’s Foreign Affairs Committee confirms
that the U.S. and other Western governments
exaggerated the human rights threat posed by Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi and then quickly morphed the
“humanitarian” mission into a military invasion that
overthrew and killed Gaddafi, leaving behind
political and social chaos.
The
report’s significance is that it shows how little
was learned from the Iraq War fiasco in which George
W. Bush’s administration hyped and falsified
intelligence to justify invading Iraq and killing
its leader, Saddam Hussein. In both cases, U.K.
leaders tagged along and the West’s mainstream news
media mostly served as unprofessional propaganda
conduits, not as diligent watchdogs for the public.
Today, we
are seeing an even more dangerous repetition of this
pattern: demonizing Russian President Vladimir Putin,
destabilizing the Russian economy and pressing for
“regime change” in Moscow. Amid the latest
propaganda orgy against Putin, virtually no one in
the mainstream is exercising any restraint or
finding any cautionary lessons from the Iraqi and
Libyan examples.
Yet, with
Russia, the risks are orders of magnitude greater
than even the cases of Iraq and Libya – and one
might toss in the messy “regime change” projects in
Ukraine and Syria. The prospect of political chaos
in Moscow – with extremists battling for power and
control of the nuclear codes – should finally inject
some sense of responsibility in the West’s
politicians and media, but doesn’t.
When it
comes to Putin and Russia, it’s the same ole
hyperbole and falsehood that so disinformed the
public regarding the “threats” from Saddam Hussein
and Muammar Gaddafi. Just as President George W.
Bush deceptively painted Hussein’s supposed WMD as a
danger to Americans and Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton dishonestly portrayed Gaddafi as
“genocidal,” U.S. officials and pundits are
depicting Putin as some cartoonish villain or some
new Hitler.
And, just
as The New York Times, Washington Post and other
mainstream media outlets amplified the Iraq and
Libyan propaganda to the American people – rather
than questioning and challenging it – these
supposedly journalistic entities are performing the
same function regarding Russia. The chief difference
is that now we’re talking about the potential for
nuclear annihilation. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Existential Madness of Putin-Bashing.“]
According
to the new U.K. report on Libya, Britain’s military
intervention – alongside the U.S. and France – was
based on “erroneous assumptions and an incomplete
understanding” of the reality inside Libya, which
included a lack of appreciation about the role of
Islamic extremists in spearheading the opposition to
Gaddafi.
In other
words, Gaddafi was telling the truth when he accused
the rebels around Benghazi of being penetrated by
Islamic terrorists. The West, including the U.S.
news media, took Gaddafi’s vow to wipe out this
element and distorted it into a claim that he
intended to slaughter the region’s civilians, thus
stampeding the United Nations Security Council into
approving an operation to protect them.
That
mandate was then twisted into an excuse to decimate
Libya’s army and clear the way for anti-Gaddafi
rebels to seize the capital of Tripoli and
eventually hunt down, torture and murder Gaddafi.
Ignored Terror Evidence
Yet, there
was evidence before this “regime change” occurred
regarding the extremist nature of the anti-Gaddafi
rebels as well as those seeking to overthrow Bashar
al-Assad in Syria. As analysts Joseph Felter and
Brian Fishman wrote in a pre-Libya-war report for
West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center, “the Syrian
and Libyan governments share the United States’
concerns about violent salafist/jihadi ideology and
the violence perpetrated by its adherents.”
In the
report entitled “Al-Qaeda’s
Foreign Fighters in Iraq,” Felter and Fishman
also analyzed Al Qaeda’s documents captured in 2007
showing personnel records of militants who flocked
to Iraq for the war. The documents revealed that
eastern Libya (the base of the anti-Gaddafi
rebellion) was a hotbed for suicide bombers
traveling to Iraq to kill American troops.
Felter and
Fishman wrote that these so-called Sinjar Records
disclosed that while Saudis comprised the largest
number of foreign fighters in Iraq, Libyans
represented the largest per-capita contingent by
far. Those Libyans came overwhelmingly from towns
and cities in the east.
“The vast
majority of Libyan fighters that included their
hometown in the Sinjar Records resided in the
country’s Northeast, particularly the coastal cities
of Darnah 60.2% (53) and Benghazi 23.9% (21),”
Felter and Fishman wrote, adding:
“Both
Darnah and Benghazi have long been associated with
Islamic militancy in Libya, in particular for an
uprising by Islamist organizations in the mid?1990s.
… One group — the Libyan Fighting Group … — claimed
to have Afghan veterans in its ranks,” a reference
to mujahedeen who took part in the CIA-backed
anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, as did
Al Qaeda founder, Osama bin Laden, a Saudi.
“The Libyan
uprisings [in the 1990s] became extraordinarily
violent,” Felter and Fishman wrote. “Qadhafi used
helicopter gunships in Benghazi, cut telephone,
electricity, and water supplies to Darnah and
famously claimed that the militants ‘deserve to die
without trial, like dogs,’”
Some
important Al Qaeda leaders operating in Pakistan’s
tribal regions also were believed to have come from
Libya. For instance, “Atiyah,” who was guiding the
anti-U.S. war strategy in Iraq, was identified as a
Libyan named Atiyah Abd al-Rahman.
It was
Atiyah who urged a strategy of creating a quagmire
for U.S. forces in Iraq, buying time for Al Qaeda’s
headquarters to rebuild its strength in Pakistan.
“Prolonging the war [in Iraq] is in our interest,”
Atiyah said in a letter that upbraided Jordanian
terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi for his hasty and
reckless actions in Iraq.
The Atiyah
letter was discovered by the U.S. military after
Zarqawi was killed by an airstrike in June 2006. [To
view the “prolonging the war” excerpt in a
translation published by the Combating Terrorism
Center at West Point,
click here. To read the entire letter,
click here.]
Hidden Motives
This
reality was known by U.S. officials prior to the
West’s military intervention in Libya in 2011, yet
opportunistic politicians, including Secretary of
State Clinton, saw Libya as a stage to play out
their desires to create muscular foreign policy
legacies or achieve other aims.
Some of
Clinton’s now-public emails show that France’s
President Nicolas Sarkozy appeared to be more
interested in protecting France’s financial
dominance of its former African colonies as well as
getting a bigger stake in Libya’s oil wealth than in
the well-being of the Libyan people.
An April 2,
2011
email from Clinton’s personal adviser Sidney
Blumenthal explained that Gaddafi had plans to use
his stockpile of gold “to establish a pan-African
currency” and thus “to provide the Francophone
African Countries with an alternative to the French
franc.”
Blumenthal
added, “French intelligence officers discovered this
plan shortly after the current rebellion began, and
this was one of the factors that influenced
President Nicolas Sarkozy’s decision to commit
France to the attack on Libya.” Another key factor,
according to the email, was Sarkozy’s “desire to
gain a greater share of Libya oil production.”
For
Clinton, a prime motive for pushing the Libyan
“regime change” was to demonstrate her mastery of
what she and her advisers called “smart power,”
i.e., the use of U.S. aerial bombing and other
coercive means, such as economic and legal
sanctions, to impose U.S. dictates on other nations.
Her State
Department
email exchanges revealed that her aides saw the
Libyan war as a chance to pronounce a “Clinton
doctrine,” but that plan fell through when President
Obama seized the spotlight after Gaddafi’s
government fell in August 2011.
But Clinton
didn’t miss a second chance to take credit on Oct.
20, 2011, after militants captured Gaddafi,
sodomized him with a knife and then murdered him.
Appearing on a TV interview, Clinton
celebrated Gaddafi’s demise with the quip, “we
came; we saw; he died.”
Clinton’s
euphoria was not long-lasting, however, as chaos
enveloped Libya. With Gaddafi and his largely
secular regime out of the way, Islamic militants
expanded their power over the country. Some were
terrorists, just as Gaddafi and the West Point
analysts had warned.
One Islamic
terror group attacked the U.S. consulate in Benghazi
on Sept. 11, 2012, killing U.S. Ambassador
Christopher Stevens and three other American
personnel, an incident that Clinton called the worst
moment of her four-year tenure as Secretary of
State.
As the
violence spread, the United States and other Western
countries abandoned their embassies in Tripoli. Once
prosperous with many social services, Libya
descended into the category of failed state with
rival militias battling over oil and territory while
the Islamic State took advantage of the power vacuum
to establish a foothold around Sirte.
Though
Clinton prefers to describe Libya as a “work in
progress,” rather than another “regime change
failure,” U.S. and U.N. efforts to impose a new
“unity government” on Libya have met with staunch
resistance from many Libyan factions. Since April,
the so-called Government of National Accord has
maintained only a fragile presence in Tripoli, in
Libya’s west, and has been rejected by Libya’s House
of Representatives (HOR), which functions from the
eastern city of Tobruk.
Over the
past few days, military forces loyal to Gen. Khalifa
Hafter, who is associated with HOR in the east,
seized control of several oil facilities despite
angry protests from Western nations, including the
U.S., U.K., and France. But Western nations have
little credibility left inside Libya, which not only
faced colonization in the past but has watched as
the U.S.-U.K.-French military intervention in 2011
has led to widespread poverty, suffering and death.
Inept Intervention
The U.K.
report only underscores how deceptive and inept that
intervention was. As
described by the U.K. Guardian newspaper,
then-Prime Minister “David Cameron’s intervention in
Libya was carried out with no proper intelligence
analysis, drifted into an unannounced goal of regime
change and shirked its moral responsibility to help
reconstruct the country following the fall of
Muammar Gaddafi, according to a scathing report by
the foreign affairs select committee.
“The
failures led to the country becoming a failed state
on the verge of all-out civil war, the report adds.
The report, the product of a parliamentary
equivalent of the Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq war,
closely echoes the criticisms widely made of
[then-Prime Minister] Tony Blair’s intervention in
Iraq, and may yet come to be as damaging to
Cameron’s foreign policy legacy.”
Earlier
this year, Cameron stepped down as prime minister
following the approval of the “Brexit” referendum
calling on the U.K. to leave the European Union, a
position that Cameron opposed. This week, Cameron
also resigned his seat in Parliament.
Though
Blair and Cameron have at least faced personal
disgrace over their roles in these two failed
“regime change” invasions, there has been less
accountability in the United States, where there
were no comprehensive examinations of the policy
failures that led to the wars in Iraq and Libya
(although studies were undertaken regarding Bush’s
false claims about Iraq’s WMD and the Obama
administration’s failure to adequately protect the
U.S. consulate in Benghazi).
There has
been even less accountability in the mainstream U.S.
news media, where, for instance, The Washington
Post’s editorial page editor Fred Hiatt, who
repeatedly reported Iraq’s non-existent WMD as flat
fact remains in the same job today pushing similar
over-the-top propaganda regarding Russia.
A
New Cold War
As with the
fiascos in Iraq and Libya, U.S. policymakers
continue to ignore or sideline American intelligence
analysts who possess information that would cast
doubt on the escalation of hostilities with Russia.
Even as the
Obama administration has charted this new Cold War
with Russia over the past two years – a prospect
that could cost U.S. taxpayers trillions of dollars
and carries the risk of thermonuclear war – there
has been no National Intelligence Estimate getting a
consensus judgment from America’s 16 intelligence
agencies about how real the Russian threat is,
according to intelligence sources.
One source
said a key reason why an NIE had not been done was
that U.S. policymakers wanted a more alarmist report
than the intelligence analysts were willing to
produce. “They call [the alarm about Russia]
political, not factual,” the source said. “They
weren’t going to do one, period. They can’t lie.”
The source
added that the analysts would have to acknowledge
how helpful Putin has been in a number of sensitive
and strategic areas, such as securing Syria’s
agreement to surrender its chemical weapons and
convincing Iran to accept tight limits on its
nuclear program.
“Israel has
nuclear weapons and a crazy leader,” the source said
about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “If
not for Putin, the guy may have used it [a nuclear
bomb] in Iran. He [Putin] calmed things down in
Syria. They [CIA analysts] aren’t that stupid. To
tell the truth, you have to say he [Putin] saved the
Middle East a lot of trouble.”
U.S.
intelligence analysts also might have had to
incorporate their assessments regarding whether
Syrian rebels – not Assad’s military – deployed
sarin gas outside Damascus on Aug. 21, 2013, and
whether an element of the Ukrainian military – not
ethnic Russian rebels – shot down Malaysia Airlines
Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014.
Those two
propaganda themes blaming Syria and Russia,
respectively, were promoted heavily by mainstream
Western media and various Internet-based information
warriors. The two themes have been central to the
Western-backed “regime change” project in Syria and
to the new Cold War with Russia. If U.S.
intelligence analysts knocked down those themes in
an NIE, valuable propaganda assets would be exposed
and discredited.
Also, in
the wake of the two British government reports
undermining the propaganda that was used to justify
“regime change” in Iraq and Libya, the blow to
Western “credibility” if there were similar
admissions about falsehoods regarding Syria and
Russia could be devastating.
Instead,
the hope of Official Washington is that the American
public won’t catch on to the pattern of deception
and that the people will continue to ignore the
famous warning that President George W. Bush
infamously garbled: “fool me once, shame on … shame
on you; fool me – you can’t get fooled again.”
Investigative reporter Robert Parry
broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The
Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can
buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an e-book (from Amazon and barnesandnoble.com). |