Wednesday, December 15, 2004

Medal Of Freedom





Yesterday, George Bush awarded America’s highest civilian honour to three men who served him in Iraq. As he pinned the Presidential Medal of Freedom onto the proud recipients, he painted a rosy picture of their achievement. ‘They have played pivotal roles in great events, ‘ he said, smirking disingenuously . Others might be forgiven if they entertained uneasy feelings that the trio actually made pivotal misjudgements. First, came George Tenet, Director of the CIA during the time that 9/11 was planned and carried out without his knowledge, he who told Bush, it was a ‘slam dunk’ that Iraq had an arsenal of weapons of mass destruction. Then came General Tommy Franks - the man who planned an invasion on the cheap. Other commanders say he should have stood up to Rumsfeld and insisted that if an invasion was to happen, it should involve enough manpower to control the country. The final recipient, and perhaps the most guilty of misjudgement, was Paul ‘Jerry’ Bremer, de facto ruler of Iraq in the months after invasion. Bremer at the stroke of his pen, dismissed the four hundred thousand man Iraqi army and national guard with the chilling words, ‘You have no future in the new Iraq - allowing them to melt away with weapons and become insurgents. This week, Iraqi interim president, Ghazi Yawer complained in a BBC interview, that American policy (Bremer’s policy in fact) had created a security vacuum. "We could have screened people out instead of screening them in, and this could have saved us a lot of hassle and problems," he said, during a discussion of the fact that thousands of newly trained security personnel are absent without leave in the face of an insurgent onslaught.

Bush’s honouring of those associated with the miserable policy in Iraq, discredits earlier recipients of the medal, but also confirms that he is a man determined to manipulate the minds of those he swore to serve.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4090963.stm


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4096741.stm


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