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	Overcoming The Bush Legacy in Iraq and Afghanistan  
	By Deepak Tripathi 
	A Book Review  
	By Ramzy Baroud  
	Al-Jazeera, ccun.org, May 24, 2010 
	  
	  When former US President George W. Bush left the White House, he 
	left behind one of the most unpleasant legacies in history. He redefined the 
	US’ role in world affairs, tainted the country’s reputation, and left his 
	successor with a political inheritance that seemed almost irrevocable. This, 
	of course, says nothing of the terrible toll Bush’s policies inflicted on 
	millions of innocent people, many of whom have so unjustly suffered and 
	perished, and many more who are still held hostage to unyielding pain.    
	While reputable author and world renowned journalist Deepak Tripathi agrees 
	with this grim view, he doesn’t think all is lost. He believes that there is 
	still a chance, an opportunity even to redress the injustice and reverse the 
	terrible mistakes that were made.    A compelling writer and a 
	meticulous researcher, Tripathi’s work is both gripping and comprehensive. 
	His latest book, Overcoming The Bush Legacy in Iraq and Afghanistan serves 
	as a glaring reminder of what military power can do when it goes unchecked, 
	and when it is combined with religious fanaticism or misguided political 
	ideology.     The book’s first chapter starts with a quote by 
	Abraham Lincoln, and it ends with another by Martin Luther King Jr, which 
	serve as a clear indication of Tripathi’s own moral stances. Tripathi 
	courageously exposes the policies of the Bush administration and its 
	neoconservative clique, which took advantage of the terrible attacks of 
	September 11, 2001 to reassert the authority of a weakening superpower. But 
	the push to reclaim America’s standing actually preceded the terrorist 
	attacks. In fact, Tripathi claims that “the ideological vehicle used to get 
	George W. Bush elected to the White House in November 2000 was the Project 
	for the New American Century (PNAC). Several of its founders were close to 
	Bush and secured key positions in his first administration.”    This 
	assertion is of immense importance. In its statement of Principles, dated 
	June 3, 1997, PNAC warned of the “danger of squandering the opportunity and 
	failing the challenge,” because the US seems to lack “the resolve to shape a 
	century favorable to American principles and interests.” One of the 
	recommendations was to “increase the defense spending significantly if we 
	are to carry out our global responsibilities today and modernize our armed 
	forces for the future.”    But with the Cold War being settled in 
	favor of the US, there seemed little need to invest in what the 
	neoconservatives saw as an acceptance of “responsibility of America’s unique 
	role in preserving and extending an international order friendly to our 
	security.”    September 11 was the very opportunity which allowed the 
	militancy of a small, detached and very influential group to define and 
	eventually dictate the policies of the United States. “We stand together to 
	win the war against terrorism,” Bush said on September 11. This was not 
	simply a declaration of war against an elusive enemy, but also a declaration 
	of unreserved violence and political imprudence, a blank check to 
	reconfigure the world.    Tripathi has done a superb job in addressing 
	this topic. His successful approach is largely owed to his ability to locate 
	the book within a most suitable historical and intellectual, as opposed to a 
	purely political or event-driven context. This approach is a direct 
	challenge to those who wish to examine the Bush legacy with September 11 as 
	a starting point. Such a point might be considered rational, but it in fact 
	represents a reductionist approach to history, and can only allow a limited 
	understanding of its consequences. Tripathi has no such illusions.    
	In ‘With Us or Without Us’, Tripathi emphasizes that a better understanding 
	of the war in Afghanistan requires a historical analysis of the US-Pakistan 
	relations that takes us to the Regan administration, and even earlier. 
	Important names, dates and events appear in that historical examination, and 
	are quickly tied into the immediate past and present. Without such context, 
	there can be no true understanding of what took place in Afghanistan under 
	the Bush regime, and what continues to unfold there. Tripathi’s narrative 
	replaces the media’s caricatured account of both wars, and instead provides 
	an objective study of rational events and those who shaped them.    
	Indeed, it was not Bush and his neoconservative friends alone who wrought 
	such disasters to the world. A whole array of individuals provided political 
	cover and even, to a lesser extent, material support. In ‘The Battle for 
	Afghanistan’, Tripathi shows how the likes of Tony Blair and Silvio 
	Berlusconi colluded with Bush’s War on Terror. The bombs began falling on 
	Afghanistan on October 7, 2001 and are yet to cease falling, despite the 
	fact that Bush is no longer in the White House.    This is largely 
	what makes Tripathi’s book so important. It is not about Bush as a man, but 
	Bush’s legacy. This legacy is an inheritance of other political legacies of 
	various administrations and numerous interests. It continues to engulf, if 
	not control US foreign policy to the present day. To detain that perpetual 
	deterioration in world affairs, a proper deconstruction of history is a 
	must.     But why should we reiterate what we already know? Isn’t 
	enough that most of us at least acknowledge already that to link Iraq to 
	al-Qaeda and September 11, 2001 is absurd? That the weapons of mass 
	destruction allegations were a baseless concoction and a complete fraud? No, 
	it is not enough. A better understanding of the world doesn’t automatically 
	make it a better place. Whether we like it or not, Bush and the 
	neoconservatives got away with serious crimes. And the peoples of both 
	Afghanistan and Iraq continue to suffer.    The US must and will 
	withdraw from both countries, largely because the stubborn resistance of 
	their peoples will eventually prevail. However, Americans must discuss more 
	than “an exist strategy”. They should also discuss how they got there in the 
	first place, when they supposedly had a democratic system with political 
	transparency and accountability. Obama might someday 
	act upon his promises to shut down the US gulag at Guantánamo Bay, 
	but the challenge will remain in understanding how America allowed few 
	individuals to suspend such basic principles as habeas corpus, which 
	Tripathi so ably traced to the Magna Carta under King John of England back 
	in June 1215.    Deepak Tripathi’s Overcoming the Bush Legacy in Iraq 
	and Afghanistan gives us a well structured understanding of a seemingly 
	chaotic legacy, and answers many of the innumerable unanswered questions. It 
	is an honest and formidable attempt at understanding one of the darkest 
	periods in the history of America and the world. We owe him more than a 
	thank you. He deserves an earnest attempt from us to understand his book, 
	and to act upon his counsel.    - Ramzy Baroud 
	(www.ramzybaroud.net) is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the 
	editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is "My Father Was a 
	Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story" (Pluto Press, London), now available 
	on Amazon.com. 
	 
       
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