“Liberating” Iran,
Enslaving the USA
The
price of “regime change” in Iran might be the loss
of what remains of our constitutional republic.
By James Bovard, Contributing Writer
The Bush administration is reportedly considering the use of
tactical nuclear weapons against suspected Iranian nuclear facilities.
Many people have commented on how the U.S. military is already
overstretched and cannot afford another major war. But little
attention has been focused on how the American political system
is also at the breaking point.
If
the U.S. attacks Iran, experts predict that Hezbollah and other
terrorist groups will launch counterattacks
against American
targets here and abroad. Hezbollah is widely perceived as being
far better organized than was Al Qaeda in 2001. Hezbollah’s
attacks drove the U.S. military out of Beirut in the early 1980s
and helped drive the Israeli Defense Force out of Lebanon in
2000 and again in 2006. Can the federal government defend Americans against a competent,
determined terrorist opponent? Unfortunately, numerous reports
by the Government Accountability Office and other federal auditors
reveal that U.S. antiterrorism defenses continue to be little
more than bureaucratic papier mache:
*In
late 2005, undercover federal investigators smuggled enough
radioactive material through U.S. checkpoints
on the Canadian
and Mexican borders to build two “dirty” bombs.
* Transportation Security Administration airport screeners are
as incompetent at detecting weapons and other threat objects
as were the private screeners on the job in 2001, according to
an Inspector General report last year.
*The
Homeland Security Department is one of the worst managed conglomerations
in the history of modern Washington.
The department’s
response to Hurricane Katrina mixed equal parts farce and fraud.
And a major terrorist attack will not be show up on radar screens
and lumber along at 35 miles per hour for days prior to impact.
Attacking Iran will put American civilians in the terrorist
crosshairs, with little or no federal Kevlar to protect them.
The key question is not whether terrorists will attack but how
the American people will likely respond and how politicians could
exploit the situation.
There
is no reason to expect the American people to be less docile
than they were after 9/11. The percentage
of Americans
who trusted the government to do the right thing most of the
time doubled in the week after 9/11. It became fashionable to
accuse critics of Bush administration policies of being traitors
or terrorist sympathizers. Each time the feds issued a new warning
of a terrorist threat after 9/11, the president’s approval
rating rose by an average of almost 3 percent, according to a
Cornell University study. The craving for a protector dropped
an Iron Curtain around many people’s minds, preventing
them from accepting evidence that would shred his political security
blanket.
The
Bush administration has a record of exploiting terrorist attacks
to seize nearly boundless power. After the
9/11 attacks,
the Bush administration effectively temporarily suspended habeas
corpus, railroaded the Patriot Act through Congress, authorized
warrantless domestic wiretaps, and nullified restrictions on
torture by the CIA and U.S. Military. The Bush administration
now claims that the Authorization to Use Military Force resolution
passed by Congress in September 2001 raised the president’s
power above the Bill of Rights.
If there are new terror attacks at home, how much more latent
presidential power will administration lawyers claim to discover
within the penumbra of the Constitution? How broad would the
roundup of suspects be? How many years would it be until Americans
learned of how much power the government had seized? Is there
any reason to expect that a series of attacks would not quickly
result in attempts to proclaim de facto martial law?
While the Bush administration is seeking to create a sense of
urgency regarding the Iranian nuclear program, a U.S. National
Intelligence Estimate estimated that Iran is 10 years away from
manufacturing a nuclear bomb. But Bush is seeking to stir up
a crisis regardless.
If Bush does bomb Iran, the chain reaction could wreck American
democracy. The Bush administration shows no signs of developing
either an allergy to power or an addiction to truth. The American
republic cannot afford to permit a president to remain above
the law and the Constitution indefinitely. Anything that raises
the odds of a terror attack reduces the odds of reining in the
government.
James Bovard is the author of Attention Deficit Democracy and
8 other books.
(Copyright James Bovard 2007)
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