9/11: Tales of America’s Longest War
JAMAL KANJ*
SEP. 3, 2021
This year’s 9/11 commemoration marks
the ending of America’s longest war, leaving behind a country swirling in
confusion and fright. Like Vietnam, it’s a war ended by facts on the ground,
not military might.
Why would a war between the
strongest army and a group alienated from the world last so long and end up
with such dismal outcomes?
Throughout history, superpowers
lost wars to weaker adversaries not for lack of resources, but rather when
diabolical individuals manipulate political discourse and overextend the
military’s reach to serve hidden agendas.
America lost the peace in
Afghanistan because political appointees fettered the Army’s momentum and
diverted its mission halfway through the war on terror to regime change in
Iraq. Not for Iraq’s culpability in 9/11, but to execute a parochial agenda
concocted by Israeli-Firsters in the Pentagon.
In 2002, acting on his established
convictions, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, the intellectual
godfather of the Iraq invasion, enlivened dormant plans through the specially
created Office of Special Plans (OSP). He tasked Douglas Feith to fish out
evidence connecting Iraq to al-Qaeda and weapons of mass destruction.
OSP staff Feith, Lawrence
Franklin, David Wurmser and then-chairman of the Defense Policy Board, Richard Perle,
had for years advised Israeli Likud leaders on regime change in Iraq.
In 1996, they co-authored a policy
paper for right-wing Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu, “A Clean Break: A New
Strategy for Securing the Realm.” They called on Israel to disengage from the
Oslo Peace Accords with Palestinians and urged the Israeli prime minister to
remove “Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq.”
In December 1997, the Weekly
Standard ran a cover piece titled “Saddam Must Go,” quoting Wolfowitz that a
“liberated Iraq” would advance democracy throughout the Middle East. A year
later, Wolfowitz and Perle petitioned then-President Bill Clinton for regime
change.
Israeli-Firsters achieved their
objectives in March 2003, taking America where Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
refused to go seven years earlier. Their actions sidetracked the U.S. Army from
its core mission and overextended the theater of operations throughout the
region. Emboldened OSP pundits pressed further for sweeping regime change,
which ultimately transformed into a euphemism for “clash of civilizations,” and
led to a significant uptick in anti-Muslim and anti-Arab-American hate crimes
at home.
Besides foundering in the battle
for world public opinion, OSP’s doctrine offered Taliban and al-Qaeda an
opportunity to regroup, effectively extending the Afghanistan war. Meanwhile,
Osama bin Laden continued to release propaganda tapes for eight more years.
Doubling down on his duplicity
following the Iraq invasion, Wolfowitz misled, once again, the House
Appropriations Committee on March 27, 2003. Responding to a question regarding
U.S. taxpayers’ cost for rebuilding, he asserted Iraq can “really finance its
own reconstruction.”
After failing to find purported
weapons of mass destruction, Wolfowitz salved his initial lie, telling Vanity
Fair in May 2003, “For bureaucratic reasons, we settled on ... weapons of mass
destruction because ... everyone could agree on.”
Eventually in 2007, as U.S.
soldiers waded through the quagmire of the improvised explosive devices in the
sweltering Iraq desert, the Pentagon’s inspector general concluded that
Wolfowitz’s office “disseminated alternative intelligence assessments” to
justify invading Iraq.
By then, the Bush administration
had promoted Wolfowitz to head the World Bank. Two years later, however,
Wolfowitz became the first World Bank president to resign in a scandal.
It’s worth noting that Wolfowitz,
Perle, Feith, Wurmser and Franklin, at one point or another during government
service, were either questioned by the FBI, fired, or pleaded guilty for
passing information to Israeli or AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs
Committee) officials.
Alas, America’s system of justice
and Congress failed to hold accountable the sordid civilians who instigated an
illegal war and blundered the war on terror. The same Congress squabbled for
more than 14 years to agree on a $7 billion permanent health bill for 9/11
first responders but took less than 14 hours debating wars costing U.S.
taxpayers, on average, $110 billion, every year, for 20 years.
This year’s 9/11 remembrance
should pay tribute to victims of OSP’s deliberate “alternative intelligence”
that resulted in the needless loss of 5,000 American soldiers, and more than
650,000 innocent Iraqis.
As we commemorate 9/11 for the
pain it caused so many Americans, history will equally recall the nefarious and
lopsided influence of political appointees in the making of America’s longest
war.
It will recall OSP lies about
weapons of mass destruction; lies about the cost of war; lies that dismantled
the strategy for the war on terror and catapulted America into misguided
adventures fomenting decades of political upheaval; lies that dragged America
into futile side conflicts in Syria, Libya and sub-Saharan Africa, and
culminated — 20 years later — in two lost wars.
*Kanj is the author of “Children of Catastrophe: Journey from
a Palestinian Refugee Camp to America.” His recent co-authored novel “Bride of
the Sea” was published in Germany and Poland. He lives in East San Diego
County.