Why We Must Not Re-elect President Bush

Category: Americas, World Affairs Topics: George W. Bush Views: 8229
8229

A Personal Message from George Soros

This is the most important election of my lifetime. I have never been heavily involved in partisan politics but these are not normal times. President Bush is endangering our safety, hurting our vital interests and undermining American values. That is why I am sending you this message. I have been demonized by the Bush campaign but I hope you will give me a hearing.

President Bush ran on the platform of a "humble" foreign policy in 2000. If we re-elect him now, we endorse the Bush doctrine of preemptive action and the invasion of Iraq, and we will have to live with the consequences. As I shall try to show, we are facing a vicious circle of escalating violence with no end in sight. But if we repudiate the Bush policies at the polls, we shall have a better chance to regain the respect and support of the world and to break the vicious circle.

I grew up in Hungary, lived through fascism and the Holocaust, and then had a foretaste of communism. I learned at an early age how important it is what kind of government prevails. I chose America as my home because I value freedom and democracy, civil liberties and an open society.

When I had made more money than I needed for myself and my family, I set up a foundation to promote the values and principles of a free and open society. I started in South Africa in 1979 and established a foundation in my native country, Hungary, in 1984 when it was still under communist rule. China, Poland and the Soviet Union followed in 1987. After the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, I established foundations in practically all the countries of the former Soviet empire and later in other parts of the world and in the United States. These foundations today spend about 450 million dollars a year to promote democracy and open society around the world.

When George W. Bush was elected president, and particularly after September 11, I saw that the values and principles of open society needed to be defended at home. September 11 led to a suspension of the critical process so essential to a democracy - a full and fair discussion of the issues. President Bush silenced all criticism by calling it unpatriotic. When he said that "either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists," I heard alarm bells ringing. I am afraid that he is leading us in a very dangerous direction. We are losing the values that have made America great.

The destruction of the twin towers of the World Trade Center was such a horrendous event that it required a strong response. But the President committed a fundamental error in thinking: the fact that the terrorists are manifestly evil does not make whatever counter-actions we take automatically good. What we do to combat terrorism may also be wrong. Recognizing that we may be wrong is the foundation of an open society. President Bush admits no doubt and does not base his decisions on a careful weighing of reality. For 18 months after 9/11 he managed to suppress all dissent. That is how he could lead the nation so far in the wrong direction.

President Bush inadvertently played right into the hands of bin Laden. The invasion of Afghanistan was justified: that was where bin Laden lived and al Qaeda had its training camps. The invasion of Iraq was not similarly justified. It was President Bush's unintended gift to bin Laden.

War and occupation create innocent victims. We count the body bags of American soldiers; there have been more than 1000 in Iraq. The rest of the world also looks at the Iraqis who get killed daily. There have been 20 times more. Some were trying to kill our soldiers; far too many were totally innocent, including many women and children. Every innocent death helps the terrorists' cause by stirring anger against America and bringing them potential recruits. 

Immediately after 9/11 there was a spontaneous outpouring of sympathy for us worldwide. It has given way to an equally widespread resentment. There are many more people willing to risk their lives to kill Americans than there were on September 11 and our security, far from improving as President Bush claims, is deteriorating. I am afraid that we have entered a vicious circle of escalating violence where our fears and their rage feed on each other. It is not a process that is likely to end any time soon. If we re-elect President Bush we are telling the world that we approve his policies - and we shall be at war for a long time to come.

I realize that what I am saying is bound to be unpopular. We are in the grip of a collective misconception induced by the trauma of 9/11, and fostered by the Bush administration. No politician could say it and hope to get elected. That is why I feel obliged to speak out. There is a widespread belief that President Bush is making us safe. The opposite is true. President Bush failed to finish off bin Laden when he was cornered in Afghanistan because he was gearing up to attack Iraq. And the invasion of Iraq bred more people willing to risk their lives against Americans than we are able to kill - generating the vicious circle I am talking about.

President Bush likes to insist that the terrorists hate us for what we are - a freedom loving people - not what we do. Well, he is wrong on that. He also claims that the torture scenes at Abu Graib prison were the work of a few bad apples. He is wrong on that too. They were part of a system of dealing with detainees put in place by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and our troops in Iraq are paying the price.

How could President Bush convince people that he is good for our security, better than John Kerry? By building on the fears generated by the collapse of the twin towers and fostering a sense of danger. At a time of peril, people rally around the flag and President Bush has exploited this. His campaign is based on the assumption that people do not really care about the truth and they will believe practically anything if it is repeated often enough, particularly by a President at a time of war. There must be something wrong with us if we fall for it. For instance, some 40% of the people still believe that Saddam Hussein was connected with 9/11 - although it is now definitely established by the 9/11 Commission, set up by the President and chaired by a Republican, that there was no connection. I want to shout from the roof tops: "Wake up America. Don't you realize that we are being misled?" 

President Bush has used 9/11 to further his own agenda which has very little to do with fighting terrorism. There was an influential group within the Bush administration led by Vice President Dick Cheney that was itching to invade Iraq long before 9/11. The terrorist attack gave them their chance. If you need a tangible proof why President Bush does not deserve to be re-elected, consider Iraq.

The war in Iraq was misconceived from start to finish -- if it has a finish. It is a war of choice, not necessity, in spite of what President Bush says. The arms inspections and sanctions were working. In response to American pressure, the United Nations had finally agreed on a strong stand. As long as the inspectors were on the ground, Saddam Hussein could not possibly pose a threat to our security. We could have declared victory but President Bush insisted on going to war.

We went to war on false pretences. The real reasons for going into Iraq have not been revealed to this day. The weapons of mass destruction could not be found, and the connection with al Qaeda could not be established. President Bush then claimed that we went to war to liberate the people of Iraq. All my experience in fostering democracy and open society has taught me that democracy cannot be imposed by military means. And, Iraq would be the last place I would chose for an experiment in introducing democracy - as the current chaos demonstrates. 

Of course, Saddam was a tyrant, and of course Iraqis - and the rest of the world - can rejoice to be rid of him. But Iraqis now hate the American occupation. We stood idly by while Baghdad was ransacked. As the occupying power, we had an obligation to maintain law and order, but we failed to live up to it. If we had cared about the people of Iraq we should have had more troops available for the occupation than we needed for the invasion. We should have provided protection not only for the oil ministry but also the other ministries, museums and hospitals. Baghdad and the country's other cities were destroyed after we occupied them. When we encountered resistance, we employed methods that alienated and humiliated the population. The way we invaded homes, and the way we treated prisoners generated resentment and rage. Public opinion condemns us worldwide.

The number of flipflops and missteps committed by the Bush administration in Iraq far exceeds anything John Kerry can be accused of. First we dissolved the Iraqi army, then we tried to reconstitute it. First we tried to eliminate the Baathists, then we turned to them for help. First we installed General Jay Garner to run the country, then we gave it to Paul Bremer and when the insurgency became intractable, we installed an Iraqi government. The man we chose was a protg of the CIA with the reputation of a strong man - a far cry from democracy. First we attacked Falluja over the objections of the Marine commander on the ground, then pulled them out when the assault was half-way through, again over his objections. "Once you commit, you got to stay committed," he said publicly. More recently, we started bombing Falluja again.

The Bush campaign is trying to put a favorable spin on it, but the situation in Iraq is dire. Much of the Western part of the country has been ceded to the insurgents. Even the so-called Green Zone (a small enclave in the center of Baghdad where Americans live and work) is subject to mortar attacks. The prospects of holding free and fair elections in January are fast receding and civil war looms. President Bush received a somber intelligence evaluation in July but he has kept it under wraps and failed to level with the electorate.

Bush's war in Iraq has done untold damage to the United States. It has impaired our military power and undermined the morale of our armed forces. Before the invasion of Iraq, we could project overwhelming power in any part of the world. We cannot do so any more because we are bogged down in Iraq. Afghanistan is slipping from our control. North Korea, Iran, Pakistan and other countries are pursuing nuclear programs with renewed vigor and many other problems remain unattended.

By invading Iraq without a second UN resolution, we violated international law. By mistreating and even torturing prisoners, we violated the Geneva conventions. President Bush has boasted that we do not need a permission slip from the international community, but our actions have endangered our security - particularly the security of our troops.

Our troops were trained to project overwhelming power. They were not trained for occupation duties. Having to fight an insurgency saps their morale. Many of our troops return from Iraq with severe trauma and other psychological disorders. Sadly, many are also physically injured. After Iraq, it will be difficult to recruit people for the armed forces and we may have to resort to conscription.

There are many other policies for which the Bush administration can be criticized but none are as important as Iraq. Iraq has cost us nearly 200 billion dollars -- an enormous sum. It could have been used much better elsewhere. The costs are going to mount because it was much easier to get into Iraq than it will be to get out of there. President Bush has been taunting John Kerry to explain how he would do things differently in Iraq. John Kerry has responded that he would have done everything differently and he would be in a better position to extricate us than the man who got us in there. But it won't be easy for him either, because we are caught in a quagmire. 

It is a quagmire that many predicted. I predicted it in my book, The Bubble of American Supremacy. I was not alone: top military and diplomatic experts desperately warned the President not to invade Iraq. But he ignored their experienced advice. He suppressed the critical process. The discussion about Iraq remains stilted even during this presidential campaign because of the notion that any criticism of our Commander-in-Chief puts our troops at risk. But this is Bush's war, and he ought to be held responsible for it. It's the wrong war, fought the wrong way. Step back for a moment from the cacophony of the election campaign and reflect: who got us into this mess? In spite of his Texas swagger, George W. Bush does not qualify to serve as our Commander-in-Chief.

There is a lot more to be said on the subject and I have said it in my book, The Bubble of American Supremacy, now available in paperback. I hope you will read it. You can download the chapter on the Iraqi quagmire free from www.georgesoros.com

George Soros is Chairman of Soros Fund Management LLC. He was born in Budapest in 1930. He survived the Nazi occupation and fled communist Hungary in 1947 for England, where he graduated from the London School of Economics. He then settled in the United States, where he accumulated a large fortune through an international investment fund he founded and managed. Mr. Soros has been active as a philanthropist since 1979, when he began providing funds to help black students attend Capetown University in apartheid South Africa. He has established a network of philanthropic organizations active in more than 50 countries around the world. These organizations are dedicated to promoting the values of democracy and open society. The foundation network spends about $450 million annually to promote these goals. Mr. Soros is the author of eight books including, most recently, The Bubble of American Supremacy: The Costs of Bush 's War In Iraq. His articles and essays on politics, society, and economics regularly appear in major newspapers and magazines around the world.


  Category: Americas, World Affairs
  Topics: George W. Bush
Views: 8229

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Older Comments:
SABRINA FROM MALAYSIA said:
Dear Steve

I think people like you have confirmed my belief that Americans are generally very arrogant and think that other people around the world don't know whats going on in this world. Wake up Steve!
2004-10-23

AKBAR AHMED FROM PAKISTAN said:
Mr Soros has done a very good job of putting down his views in a concise manner, which is appreciated greatly.
However, I would like to suggest that Mr. Soros should now be concerned about ALL the people of the world, and just not merely contribute for "democracy". If there is a worldwide referendum, Bush will surely have to go. So "democracy" is a very restricted term. It may or may not be "democracy for USA", (rigging etc) but in the event of Bush re-election, it will definitely not be "democracy" for the world, because the world views would not have been taken into consideration
The poor people of the world need a better deal. Mr Soros should now find a way to get rid of the debt of the poor countries. Perhaps he can mobilise some other billionaires, and develop some plans and help the poor countries solve this terrible problem.
Mr. Soros, you have done a great job with this article, which-even though great- is peanuts in relation to what you should be doing and can do for the world in general.
Please take the above comments in a constructive critical way, and now build up this billionaire club and solve the problem of the poor people of the world, with the help of people who are not so poor all over the world.
Salutations to you, Mr. Soros.
Akbar Ahmed

2004-10-20

HANS FROM UK said:
I think Steve Stephenson's points beautifully illustrate why Americans are so despised in the world today. Despite all evidence to the contrary the US public largely continues to support the rape of Iraq.
Indeed they consider it their "job" to bomb entire cities, they consider it their "job" to pump bullets into peaceful demonstrators. They consider it their "job" to crush the bodies of children under their hummers. They consider it their "job" to torture and sexually abuse captives held without charge, which may explain why they refuse to join the world court and wish immunity for their war criminal soldiers from any form of prosecution.
Some people think Americans are merely ignorant and naive about what is done in their name. The fact of the matter is THEY DONT CARE. I pray to the Almighty that they pay for their crimes against humanity, one war criminal at a time.
2004-10-18

BLAZER FROM UK said:
Steve, the US is THE cancer in Iraq. You people are megalomaniacs who are destroying the lives of millions of innocent people. You have the nerve to call this "a good thing."
2004-10-18

STEVE STEPHENSON FROM USA said:
I believe a lot of the comments made by the writer are not accurate in fact. Iraq will require a lot of time to right what is wrong with a country that has seen repression for thirty years. All good things take time. It would sure help if the iraqi people helped lift themselves from the horrible situation they were in. Instead they seem to want to support the wrong people. People that want to control their country. The US removed the cancer that was eating Iraq now its time for the people to stand up and make their on way, if they can.
2004-10-16

LUQMAN HASHI FROM CANADA said:
I know that Bush is a very bad idiviusal but has anybody listened to the "John's" policy. Muslims in the States are between a rock and a hardspot. If you elect kerry gays will be educating your kids. Bush against that but if you vote bush well..... we all know what happens then. The best choice I belive is not vote at all mt brothers and sisters. May the blessings of Ramadan be upon you all.
2004-10-16

YAHYA BERGUM FROM USA said:
God willing, I love everybody - "euromongers" included! May blessings of Ramadan be yours, George Soros. And peace.
2004-10-15

UNOHILL FROM USA said:
I absolutely agree that this country goes to a wrong direction especially with its foreign policy. Being isolate by the world especially muslim countries, double standard in any aspect, supressing what so called human right and sent the kids life for nothing to another land in the name of business. A new style of colonialism in the name of democracy. Shame on him!!!
2004-10-15

SIDDIQ MOHAMED FROM USA said:
Because President Bush is doing what we as muslims should have done a long time ago.Going after evil in the middle east and the world at large.If we,as muslims are not oppressing,we are ignoring oppression.Saddam Hussein was an oppressor and tyrant.No muslim ever stood up and condemned him unless sovereignty is involved.The Kurds have been crying foul from day one,no muslim ever echoed their cry.Thousands of muslims were massacred in the former Youguslavia,how many muslims actually stood up at the U.N and condemned that?Muslims are hungry in other parts of the world,e.g Africa, but if America or europe does nothing,wealthy middle east is busy basking in the glory of their wealth.Yasser Arafat gets billions of Dollars for the Palestinians,the vast majority of them know nothing of such.meanwhile, his family live in the one of the most lavish lifestyles in France.Do muslims condemned that? NO.Billionaire muslims choose to invest in riba dealing banks in the west instead of helping hard working muslims there own properties and businesses.But when Isreal steps on their necks and crushes them into the ground, then they remember there muslims in other parts of the world to call brothers in Islam.Allah is ever watching.And most important, the only thing that unites middle east is sheer hatred for Jews.They only recognise oppression when it aim at them.Wake up my fellow muslims in the middle east before it is too late.Remember it is all too easy for Allah to relpace you if you do not carry out His commands.
2004-10-15

SR DEBBIE FROM USA said:
Has it run through anyone's mind for a second that the Bush administration could have prevented the attacks and that having prior knowledge of the threat gave Bush the perfect excuse to go after the oil, diminish civil rights that ultimately affect the poor,the immigrant and the weak and establish a well planned culture of ruling by fear? We must say no more loud and clear Nov 2
AsalamAlaikum
2004-10-15

TED HAMILTON FROM USA said:
No wonder why Bush elected to stay out out the International Court of Justice.
2004-10-14

GLENDA FROM USA said:
I do understand Mr.Soros' view.I also believe that the reasons for our occupation in Iraq has much to do with oil, daddys' unfinished business and we are next door to Iran.Being that close to Iran is all too convenient for American warminds.
Iran in the minds of american politics has nukes and that isn't good.Iran is also "unfinished business".
While I disagree with Kerry/Edwards on many moral issues I really find Bush/Cheney a threat to the living.
I am an american and recently converted to Islam from judaism.
2004-10-14

RONALD F. NINO FROM USA said:
I agree with the article that we did the county poorly by invading Irag without U.N support
2004-10-14

YAHYA BERGUM FROM USA said:
It didn't change my mind but the appeal seems well written. I think it contains several valid complaints about U.S. post-invasion policy with respect to Iraq.
2004-10-13

ROMESH CHANDER FROM US said:
Don't worry. John Keery won't be any better. On Iraq, he wants to "stay the course", which means no "change in policy" on Iraq.

Vote for Kerry is vote for Bush. So vote for third party and independent candidates.
2004-10-13