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This column can be posted for free on any appropriate web
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N. 47, March 2004
Open letter to Colin Powell
Dear Mr. Powell,
Like most Americans of either political persuasion, I think you are a fundamentally decent person, principled, and honest. Heck, I would have liked to see you as the first American Vice President with a Democratic ticket (this country apparently isn’t ready for a black or a woman
President, though many other democracies have jumped through at least
the latter hoop on the long road to civilization).
It is therefore with sincere hope that I ask you to formally resign
from the Bush administration before the upcoming elections. That, of
course, would help the American people put in perspective a President
who ran a campaign as a “compassionate conservative,” only to clearly
demonstrate that he is neither (he is not treating gays or Haitians
with compassion, and the ballooning deficit that he created makes it
clear that he sure ain’t fiscally conservative).
More importantly, your resignations would help the rest of the world
avoid four more years of an administration bent on destroyng the
environment for economic gain, on demolishing nations to score cheap
political points, and on risking the destabilization of international
finances just so that a crooked minority of rich people can get just a
tinsy bitsy more rich than they already are.
However, the fundamental reason for you to resign is because you are a
decent man, and resignation at this point is the only decent thing to
do. Mr. Powell, most Americans believed you when you went to the United
Nations, sticking your neck way out in order to substantiate Bush’s
case that Iraq was a clear and present danger to the US, that Saddam
Hussein was building an arsenal of nuclear and biological weapons (you
know, nothing compared to what the US already has, but that’s another
matter...), and that he was also somehow connected with Osama Bin
Laden’s Al Qaeda operations.
A year after the beginning of the war we know beyond reasonable doubt
that Iraq was not a direct threat to the United States, for the simple
fact that there are no detectable amounts of weapons of mass
destruction on Iraqui territory. Moreover, it is true that Al Qaeda is
now connected to Iraq, but it is the American invasion and the fall of
Hussein that has created that connection, in yet another example of
alleged good intentions gone bad in American international policy
(other examples include the funding and political backing of both Osama
and Saddam, when it was convenient to do so against the Soviet and
Iranian threats respectively -- I particularly like that photo of Don
Rumsfeld shaking hands with Hussein, back in 1983).
Of course, intelligent observers did have serious doubts about your
show at the United Nations to begin with. I mean, simply pointing to
fuzzy dots on a satellite image and saying “see? Here, this is a
chemical weapons factory!” did seem a bit far fetched even then. I, for
one, didn’t believe you for a second. But there was your perceived
honesty and integrity that did leave some reasonable doubt that you
could be, after all, right.
Well, you were not, and it seems to me that the only decent thing to do
at this point -- if you really are as honest and deserving of respect
as I still think you may be -- is to admit that you and Bush were
wrong, and leave the latter to face the consequences.
Yes, I know, you have been saying that surely no decent person can
regret the departure of Hussein and the liberation of Iraq. I
completely agree on the first point, though the second one will depend
greatly on what will happen there during the next few months (you don’t
really think that an Iran-style theocracy would be an improvement, do
you? And yet, at the moment that seems the most likely outcome of
upcoming democratic elections).
But that wasn’t why you and Bush (and Cheney, and Rumsfeld, and the
rest of that fine gang) advocated war. If it were a matter of loosing
American lives and jeopardizing American international prestige in
order to liberate oppressed people, why start with Iraq? Pakistan or
North Korea would have made much worthier targets, especially
considering that we know they have nuclear capability. Not to mention
other croocked countries, such as Saudi Arabia (remember that Bin Ladin
and most of his followers come from there, not from Iraq?), or Iran
(look at what sham the “democratic” elections have been there very
recently).
No, what you said to the world that fateful day at the United Nations
was that the reason for the US to invade Iraq was that Hussein was
working toward developing the capacity for direct nuclear strike on
America. He wasn’t, you were wrong, and honest people of integrity
admit their mistakes and try to amend the consequences, if possible. It
is the decent thing to do, Mr. Powell.
Hopefully Yours,
Massimo Pigliucci
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