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James Zogby

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Without Accountability, No Lessons Learned

Posted: 11/26/11 10:37 AM ET

With the date for U.S. forces to be fully withdrawn from Iraq fast approaching, it is important to remind ourselves how we got into that long and deadly war in the first place, to recognize that this conflict is far from over, and to hold accountable those who are responsible for the horrors they created during the past eight years.

In a word, the road to Baghdad was paved with "lies". I don't just mean the fictions of "weapons of mass destruction" or of "Saddam's connection with al Qaeda" that were used by the Bush Administration to justify their case for war. In both instances, the White House and its minions throughout the government worked overtime, relying on embellishment, distortion, and outright fabrication to make their arguments for war. What they did in manufacturing and marketing these lies was wrong, both morally and legally.

More insidious still, were the subtle and seductive lies that were used along the way to war. These were the lies that led too many Americans, including much of the mainstream media, to conclude, in the words of one Bush apologist, that the war would be "a cakewalk".

When pressed by Congress or the public for answers, Administration officials and their supporters would argue that the war would last but a week; that it would require less than 100,000 U.S. troops who would only need to stay in Iraq for six months; that the entire effort would only cost the U.S. Treasury about two billion dollars; that Americans would be greeted in Baghdad as liberators with flowers in the street; and that with the dictator gone, Iraq would become a "beacon of democracy" lighting up the entire Middle East.

Moved by the exaggerated "threat", and lured by the supposed "relative ease" of the war and its expected apocalyptic outcome, America went marching off to Iraq. Those who attempted to remind then-Secretary of State, Colin Powell, of his "Powell Doctrine", or who questioned the wisdom of going to war in a country about whose history and culture and people we knew too little, were silenced. No one in government, back then, wanted to hear of "unintended consequences" or projections of anything less than a positive outcome.

Eight years later, we leave Iraq with: thousands of Americans dead; hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives lost; millions driven into exile; and a trillion dollars spent. The politics of Iraq can be described as fragile, at best, with the country remaining a sectarian/ethnic tinderbox that can explode in an instant, with the added danger of dragging the neighborhood into a broader conflict. And to all of this must be added the damage done to America's standing in the region and the world resulting from the recklessness of the war, and its excesses and abuses. U.S. troops will leave, but the scars of this conflict and its still open wounds will remain.

This must be recalled because these "sins of the past" have neither been acknowledged nor have those who committed them been held accountable for their actions. Equally important are lessons we should have learned from the fabrications created and the disasters that have resulted from ignoring reality.

Listening to the current overheated rhetoric in vogue today in U.S. political discussions about what should be done to confront Iran and Syria, it appears that lessons have not been learned. Those who cavalierly argue for a U.S. military response in either country all too often ignore the consequences of such actions.

With the same crowd who lied and seduced us into our eight year disaster in Iraq now spread out amongst the GOP candidates for President, serving as their foreign policy or national security advisers, their dangerous arguments can be heard once again. When they chide the president for not being more aggressive in taking the lead against the brutal regime in Syria, proposing military action, or when they flippantly suggest that the U.S. should support an Israeli military strike against Iran (or that we should do it ourselves) it is as if nothing has been learned from the tragic disaster of the immediate past.

One main reason for this sorry state of affairs is our lack of accountability. Because we have not, and, it appears, will not, "call on the carpet" those who justified torture, fabricated the case for war in Iraq, and sent hundreds of thousands of young men and women into a country we did not know in order to engage in a conflict with no good end in sight, this same cast of characters are still polluting the policy debate. From their lofty perches at universities, "think tanks" and as advisers to candidates for higher office, they are recognized as "experts" calling for more wars that will only make a bigger mess, while the mess they created has still not been cleaned up.

It makes sense to us when we hear Arab Spring protesters in Tunisia and Egypt demanding that those who were complicit in the crimes of the past governments in which they served should be called to account for their misdeeds or, at the very least, should be excluded from future leadership roles. It makes sense that we apply the same measure of accountability here at home. This is not, as some will suggest, anti-democratic or an effort to "weed out" and exclude those with differing points of view. It is rather a call for us to apply the profoundly democratic principles of transparency and accountability to our politics. Those who abused the public's trust and who lied us into a war that took so many lives and cost us all so dearly should be called to account for what they have done. To let them "off the hook" is both wrong and dangerous.

Dr. James J. Zogby is the author of Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us, and Why it Matters (Palgrave Macmillan, October 2010) and the founder and president of the Arab American Institute (AAI), a Washington, D.C.-based organization which serves as the political and policy research arm of the Arab American-community.

 

Follow James Zogby on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AAIUSA

With the date for U.S. forces to be fully withdrawn from Iraq fast approaching, it is important to remind ourselves how we got into that long and deadly war in the first place, to recognize that this ...
With the date for U.S. forces to be fully withdrawn from Iraq fast approaching, it is important to remind ourselves how we got into that long and deadly war in the first place, to recognize that this ...
 
 
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09:02 PM on 11/28/2011
We can't even get our banks to account for their behaviour. Accountability applies only to the weak.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
librldem
Snarking for Merika n jebus! Glory!
10:32 AM on 11/28/2011
People get thrown off this site for pointing out those liars and traitors. I wonder why they posted this piece and then zenzer it to beyond relevance?
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bernikitty
single mom of 3, nursing student
08:22 AM on 11/28/2011
it is important to remind ourselves how we got into that long and deadly war in the first place, to recognize that this conflict is far from over, and to hold accountable those who are responsible for the horrors they created during the past eight years.....

.....but instead they are given book deals and lecture tours where they shamelessly brag about the destruction death and suffering they caused.
08:48 AM on 11/28/2011
Talltale sign of the corruptiness of our institutions and our deserved decline
09:51 AM on 11/28/2011
f & f bernikitty . . ditto
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kokobell616
Your micro-bio is pending approval
07:45 AM on 11/28/2011
The United States of America has a long history of freedom. Our current system of government of the right by the right for the right is at it again. If in this country you do not agree with the foreign policy of the leader of the right you are not patriotic. You are being treasonous.You just dont love America and should leave it. The actions of the prior administration and to a degree this administration the act of forced diplomacy is evident. We were able to force our will on nations with currency or depriving them of it. Now we bomb them into submission attempt to prop up a government of our choosing go merrily on our way. The creation of 'miny mes' around the globe is and always has been a huge mistake. Elected officials drunk with political power require the rest of us to police them of deeds conducted in our name. We need to hold ourselves to a higher standard. After all this is done in the name of The United States of America of which most of us here are citizens.
07:09 AM on 11/28/2011
Great article Dr Zogby . . . America is not accepting any responsibility for the invasion of Iraq . . . all those involved in this heinous act must be brought to justice . . ."sweeping it under the carpet" and allowing the perpetrators . . bush, cheney, bliar, rumsfeld, et al . . . must be prosecuted . . . and sadly it does look as though America is set to do it again . . .waste more lives and money for no reason other than to keep the 1% MIC in profits . . . .at the expense of the entire world . . . where there is no accountability their is no responsibility . . .
08:52 AM on 11/28/2011
Sorry to say that accountability has to start with our elected leaders particularly the one sworn to uphold the constitution. From a historical standpoint, Obama's biggest failure will be seen in this area. To not protect the constitution and enforce the law. He chose political expediency. When we repeat the exact same mistakes in the next Republican administration, the blood will be on Obama.
THis required no congressional approval. Simply turning the Justice Department lose would have been sufficient.
09:39 AM on 11/28/2011
f & f Spokey . . ditto . . . I have never forgiven Pelosi for taking impeachment off the agenda . . . that also was a very craven or politicially expeditious act . . .
12:16 PM on 11/28/2011
I know and I don't understand why he did nothing . . .
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MUDPUPPY
05:34 AM on 11/28/2011
O, yeah, Clinton cooked up a lot of proof that Saddam had connections with al Quaida when he blew up that aspirin factory.
08:54 AM on 11/28/2011
Not even close in comparison or on th same scale. An individual strike of a target believed to be military. Much different then committing entire ground operations on the scale we did for an invasion. You better have your facts right.
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MUDPUPPY
05:31 AM on 11/28/2011
In 1998, Clinton and many leading Democrats claimed that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction with nuke potential. Clinton even went as far as to say, "----- and if given enough time they will use them against our allies and us." One even said that Iraq was an imminent threat." No, it wasn't Bush that said that. The New York Times lied and said that Bush said it. Most of our intel and that of Eng;and and other nations agreed that Iraq had WMD and only a couple people questioned it. I had rather Bush erred on the side of caution. Remember how Wilson and FDR erred on the side of wishful thinking and where that got us???
08:56 AM on 11/28/2011
This is true. But there was also substantial evidence that was flimsy and embellished and ignored and this has come out. Administrations in the Bush cabinent had decided to go to war with Saddem to settle unfinished business from the first gulf war. And the evidence of war crimes committed during this war have gone unanswered.
09:49 AM on 11/28/2011
Neither Clinton, nor anyone in his administration, ever made any such claim that "...Saddam had weapons of mass destructio­n with nuke potential." No such claim of "nuke potential" exists anywhere... it is pure deceitful fabrication. Discussion of Iraqi WMD by the Clinton Administration was strictly limited to chemical and biological, and explicitly excluded nuclear. But the nuclear threat is specifically what BushCo used to terrify the nation into supporting the invasion, even though the advance intelligence reporting showed deep skepticism at the very least... skepticism which Cheney deliberately suppressed.
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
03:21 AM on 11/28/2011
Seems like the attitude towards Iran is exactly what transpired in Iraq. So another war is on the cards and that will cost the US another trillion it can ill afford. And what happens when they find that Iran has no weapons of mass destruction - no nuclear weapons - is it another oops - well we have liberated the people from an oppressive regime? Seems that if the US had not supported the Shah, as they also supported Saddam, we would not have this mess right now.
07:10 AM on 11/28/2011
f & f vapula . . .
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
12:05 AM on 11/28/2011
Maybe one lesson has been learned.

The warmongering machine cannot be stopped by voting for any of two existing parties.

The warmongering machine should be stopped by occupying the streets.

When Americans take back the control of their wealth and use it to provide free quality education and health care, there will be no money left for warmongers.

Occupy, occupy, occupy.
07:10 AM on 11/28/2011
x2 karim
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June25
05:42 PM on 11/27/2011
It is easier to say that Bush lied about WMDs then to just admit that for years or inteligence capability was based on looking at pictures of rooftops.All through the 90s people felt Saddam Hussein still had WMDs,and Saddam himself pushed this myth to deter Iranian attacks.To offen it is easier to drop into conspiracy mode then to just study history because then we can blame someone else.
06:24 PM on 11/27/2011
June25 - - CIA knew 1995 Iraq had destroyed its WMD.
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Vlady
Better Late
08:35 PM on 11/27/2011
also CIA knew in 1995 that Obama will win in 2008
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
03:24 AM on 11/28/2011
100,000's of people were killed because of these so called 'errors'. Would the US allow that number of its' people to be killed and say well it was all a big mistake? Bush didn't lie? And the Pope isn't Catholic.
04:53 PM on 11/27/2011
You are way to polite. The truth is that Americans are warmongers, bullies and so in love with themselves that any other group of people are looked down upon and certainly are of lesser value than even one "AMERICAN". Look at the three students returning from Egypt, they are now what "Celebrities", I do not think that they were arrested for no reason. But be that as it may Americans truly believe they are semi-gods.
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JudgeCCrater
From under a NJ boardwalk thanks to free Wi-Fi!
10:42 PM on 11/27/2011
Typo. You meant 'Republicans' when you typed 'Americans.'
12:39 AM on 11/28/2011
you are so right. I have and old computer with a "screwed up" keyboard
10:01 AM on 11/28/2011
A lot of people in both parties are bought and paid for by those that profit from war, one way or another.
04:27 PM on 11/27/2011
How could Zogby completely overlook the outrageous propagandizing for war conducted by the mainstream media in the run up to this disaster? Where was the fourth estate when serious questions needed to be asked? The media has plenty of time to ridicule those people who DID ask serious questions before the war, like Kucinich and Paul, but what did they ask George Bush?

"How does your faith guide you in a crisis like this?"

Seriously! That's a direct quote!
04:56 PM on 11/27/2011
I do not think he overlooked it. The Media too is or rather should be accountable. But how do you zero in on Individuals, in the Media or in the political arena. the Chinese have a saying: when you steal a treasure chest you will go to jail, when you steal a country they make you (and in this case all the cohorts) King.
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SocratesSiddhartha
"Poverty is the worst form of violence." Gandhi
06:44 PM on 11/27/2011
Of course you could always try reading the entire article, instead of just the headline...and you would've seen this:

"These were the lies that led too many Americans, including much of the mainstream media"

nevermind probably too much effort.
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blutopie
maui ono
04:19 PM on 11/27/2011
Naomi Klein's 'Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism' is a must read to understand the Neocons who lied us into this war for Israel, and why they did it

Not holding these Neocons for account for their crimes lying us into Iraq, we now have them lying us into Iran.
04:57 PM on 11/27/2011
The one word answer is: EDUCATION
04:11 PM on 11/27/2011
Mr. Zogby, I agree with You. And "The same Crowd that Lied & took part in this Farce presented to the American People 10 Years ago, Are on the Republican Ticket, today, suggesting They should be the President ". Problem is....Their Terms do Not last for 10 years, So They were Voted Back into Office. Then, the Fault lies with the American Voter and Their Poor choice of Leaders. "If you re-hire a child rapist at the Day Care center----Well, you can figure out the rest ? My simpathy goes out to the American people for being so,,,,,Gullible ?
04:58 PM on 11/27/2011
I second that!
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dim
one in a can
02:32 PM on 11/28/2011
I think it's worse than just gullible. I've had many conversations on these very boards with posters who still defend GWB's deer in the headlights response to 911. One would think that a staunch rightie would be aghast at his/her leader reading about pet goats, while the country is under attack, but apparently they hate the other side more.
05:54 PM on 11/28/2011
I'm Hoping it's a case of "Plain old Ignorance". Hate is such a Strong Feeling. But it seems like the People who Vote for "T's" & Pubs. Do have a hatred towards the rest. Dim,,,I've been to S. Carolina,,Georgia, Florida, Arkansas, of course Tennesse, Wisconsin---I did find the people in Texas to be a bit strange, Maryland & Delaware, Co. and NV & N.M., Kansas and Mo.---And I've found the people I've met to be Kind, considerate & Caring. So, Where is this Hatred coming from ? Are they being Told to and Just doing it out of Ignorance ? It's kind of scary to see a large sector of a country act like that, with No Justification. "If They are ignorant enough to Do What they are told and Not Think for Themselves,,,That's even more Scary.
02:13 PM on 11/27/2011
The lies sown and the profiteers, government, corporate, and individual, are also good cause for weeping. Let us mourn for the tortured and dead, the willingly-led media and the missing public discourse. The seeds of evil (yes evil) sown in the last 10 years may in fact be the downfall of our civilization, of our self-respect and pride, and therefore of our peace of mind.
We all know this, and yet we are nations of cheerleaders. I agree that we must be accountable to create change, and yet without a manifesto of individual freedom and justice, it is wasted energy. Who is to hold to account Arab complicity? Who is to make Jewish people feel safe because adherence to principal is sacrosanct? Who is to point the way to where we may settle these problems and advance our civilization? We need only 100 world leaders with principal, who hold human life sacred and understand history. The Libyan freedom was ultimately an ugly truth; there is no hiding the final act that won it, and that's where we are today. Justice is not always obvious, but without surrender to it's mechanisms and a higher court of truth, all of us are victims of war or spectators of wasted opportunity.
03:14 PM on 11/27/2011
Evil is as old as the history of the world. What evil is, and how it is recognized, are the main lessons of many religions. Religion is also the basis for LAW and JUSTICE. In the West that basis is the socalled Old Testament, and the laws regulations and court cases, discussions flowing from that. The ten precepts (commandments) apply as much to Judaism, as to Christianity and Islam. Matters go wrong when it is determined that for. some there are *exceptions*, and these *some* are arbitrarily *determined*. Such as, we do not approve of their race, ethnicity, religion, status, they are not as rich or as important as we are, we are in charge, and we will *make them*. ALL human and other life is sacred. ALL is the Deity's creation.Nations set standards. The U.S. has a Constitution. There are Republics and Democracies, and people have the right to vote. In the ME and the Magreb people do not have a vote, or a voice. Even worse, others determine what one can and can not believe, what religion one is allowed or not allowed, and they impose their will even across borders. They go even further than that, they MURDER to achieve imposing their will on others. They glorify death and murder. That is clearly EVIL.
03:38 PM on 11/27/2011
Yes.