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		Obama's Failure and Richard Perle's 
		Whitewashing of the Iraq War  
		By Ramzy Baroud 
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 20, 2016 
		   As Iraq stands on the verge of a complete breakdown into 
		mini sectarian states, former leading neoconservative and Iraq war 
		advocate Richard Perle made a sudden appearance on Newsmax TV.
		
		His statements in the interview were yet another testament to the 
		intellectual degeneration of a group that had once promised a ‘new 
		Middle East’, only to destabilize the region with violent consequences 
		that continue to reverberate until this day.    The Islamic State 
		of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which didn’t exist at the time of the US 
		invasion of Iraq in 2003, has seized large swathes of Syria and, along 
		with a brewing Sunni rebellion, stands in control of large chunks of 
		western, northern and central Iraq.    At the time of the 
		invasion, Perle was one of the leading so-called intellectuals that was 
		known for his strong support of right-wing Israeli parties and
		
		his particular closeness to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 
		He served as an advisor to the Netanyahu election campaign in the mid 
		1990’s, and, along with other leading neocons, made Israeli security - 
		read regional domination - a top American priority.    Perle is in 
		no mood to accept any responsibility of Iraq’s protracted tragedy, a 
		behavior that mirrors that of the administration of US President Barak 
		Obama.    As for Perle’s new line of logic, he seems to feel that 
		if you criticize the neocons, you are, well, more or less, an 
		anti-Semite. Although the line is quite useful in the lexicon of 
		Israel’s defenders, Perle’s use of the tactic reflects a level of 
		unprecedented desperation.    Perle said the term 
		‘neoconservative,’ is “often used to describe Jewish Americans because, 
		as it happens, some of the original thinkers whose ideas have now been 
		characterized by this general term 'neoconservative' were in fact 
		Jewish, and it often carries conspiratorial tones on the part of people 
		who throw the term around.”    One could in fact agree, except 
		that the former assistant secretary of defense is now a fellow at the
		American Enterprise Institute, 
		which served as a major lobby platform for Israeli interests, and is 
		also one of the major organizations behind the failed Iraq war strategy.
		   But Perle’s smokescreen of the implied accusation of 
		anti-Semitism could hardly hide the big fib he was about to impart: The 
		neocons “were not doing it (the war and occupation of Iraq) to bring 
		democracy to Iraq, we were not doing it .. on behalf of any other 
		government (meaning Israel). We believed the intelligence that was 
		available at the time that the CIA and other intelligence organizations 
		. . . that Saddam (Hussein) had weapons of mass destruction and there 
		was a danger after 9/11 that he would share those weapons.”    
		Perle, who was known for his nickname ‘Prince of Darkness’, is slyly 
		presenting himself as an innocent, if not gullible average American who 
		too was misled by false intelligence. But it was not the first time that 
		Perle, along with his neoconservative peers, disowned their horrific 
		record in Iraq.    Writing in Vanity Fair in November 5, 2006, 
		under the title ‘Neo Culpa’, David Rose caught up with Perle together 
		with other neocon enthusiasts as
		
		they were starting to repudiate the failed policies of George W. 
		Bush, which until then they had championed.    In 2006, the Iraq 
		war was taking a terrible toll. “At the end of the day, you have to hold 
		the president responsible,” he told Vanity Fair when the calamity was 
		becoming irrefutable. Although Perle’s views were quote rosy and 
		optimistic just before and soon after the US invasion incited a 
		sectarian civil war.   “Iraq is a very good candidate for 
		democratic reform,” he was quoted earlier as saying. Iraq “won’t be 
		Westminster overnight, but the great democracies of the world didn’t 
		achieve the full, rich structure of democratic governance overnight. The 
		Iraqis have a decent chance of succeeding.”   But that ‘decent 
		chance’ at success will never be achieved through the barrel of a gun 
		and no self-respecting intellectual would argue otherwise. Hundreds of 
		thousands of Iraqis lost their lives and a whole generation was raised 
		in the embrace of death and humiliation as the Prince of Darkness was 
		giving interviews from fancy hotels. Now, he is back, hopefully briefly, 
		crying foul and anti-Semitism.    What is equally appalling is 
		that neocon thinking is also consistent with the philosophy of American 
		foreign policy makers in the Obama administration as well. Not only is 
		Obama failing to accept even a level of moral responsibility over the 
		current plight of Iraqis, but it is
		haggling 
		to achieve some political gains from Iraq’s misery. Hundreds of US 
		troops have been ordered back to Iraq to ‘assess’ the fighting 
		capabilities of the Iraqi army, and a cautious attempt at intervention 
		is building up slowly in Washington.    Interventionism is once 
		more permeating American foreign policy thinking; this time around, 
		however, it is ‘soft’ intervention, although it is laden with the same 
		kind of language and misleading references. It seems that the American 
		government has learned so very little since the last botched effort, 
		championed by Perle’s neocons at remaking the Middle East to its liking.
		   On June 26, the White House asked Congress for $1.5 billion to 
		bolster ‘stability’ in Syria’s neighbors - Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and 
		Turkey. A third of that amount will be dedicated to train ‘moderate’ 
		Syrian rebels for the purpose of fighting the Syrian army and its allies 
		on one hand, and on the other, holding back the growing influence of 
		militants from ISIL who are also in control of large parts of Iraq.   
		Considering the level of complexity in the Syrian battleground, and the 
		predictable splinters within existing groups, it’s difficult to imagine 
		that the $500 million would lead to anything but greater instability in 
		Syria and neighboring countries including those who are part of the 
		proposed US
		
		Regional Stabilization Initiative, for which the funds are 
		requested.   It is reported that the administration was
		
		pressured by Republican Senator John McCain and others. But the 
		reading of the Middle East by McCain has been as erroneous as that of 
		the former leading intellectuals of the neoconservative movement. McCain 
		is as discredited as the rest, but the recent gains of ISIL left the US 
		administration with difficult choices: intervention (which proved to be 
		a complete disaster in the past) or non-intervention (which would leave 
		the pro-US camp in the Middle East vulnerable).    The US seems to 
		be opting for neither option, but ‘soft’ intervention: military and 
		financial support of some groups and forging, even if temporary, 
		alliances with others including Iran.    Despite its attempt to 
		exert pressure and demonstrate its relevance, the collapse of US foreign 
		policy is unmistakable and proves to be, at times, meddling for the sake 
		of asserting its relevance, and nothing more.    Considering the 
		multiple crises created by the US in Iraq in past years, no one, not 
		even the supposedly level-headed Obama, can make any difference without 
		a clear and decided shift in US foreign policy, which is yet to 
		actualize.   Such clarity and decidedness would have to be 
		predicated on a level of moral responsibility and legal accountability 
		for the numerous war crimes committed in Iraq. The roots of today’s war 
		was implanted by that of the original sin, the invasion of a sovereign 
		country, promoted by the likes of Richard Perle, and now manipulated for 
		temporary gains by the Obama administration.    - Ramzy Baroud is 
		the Managing Editor of Middle East Eye. Baroud is an 
		internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author and 
		the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was 
		a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).   
		  
     
       
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