I suspect that a lot of people, upon hearing about the possibility of a preemptive strike in Iran, dimissed the possibility. It’s just too reckless, even for Bush. There are certain decisions that are so dangerous, so beyond-the-pale, that it’s hard to imagine any president agreeing to them.
But [tag]Paul Krugman[/tag] makes a compelling case today that this approach is of limited use when it comes to Bush.
“But he wouldn’t do that.” That sentiment is what made it possible for President Bush to stampede America into the Iraq war and to fend off hard questions about the reasons for that war until after the 2004 election. Many people just didn’t want to believe that an American president would deliberately mislead the nation on matters of war and peace.
Now people with contacts in the administration and the military warn that Mr. Bush may be planning another war. The most alarming of the warnings come from Seymour Hersh, the veteran investigative journalist who broke the Abu Ghraib scandal. Writing in The New Yorker, Mr. Hersh suggests that administration officials believe that a bombing campaign could lead to desirable regime change in Iran — and that they refuse to rule out the use of tactical nuclear weapons.
“But he wouldn’t do that,” say people who think they’re being sensible. Given what we now know about the origins of the Iraq war, however, discounting the possibility that Mr. Bush will start another ill-conceived and unnecessary war isn’t sensible. It’s wishful thinking.
Krugman reviews the history of the president’s decisions in Iraq and reminds us that Bush said the war was a “last resort,” despite British documents that highlight how determined Bush was to launch an invasion. Bush cited intelligence that he had been warned was false. And now, facing his status as an unpopular lame-duck president, Bush may, [tag]Krugman[/tag] argues, be willing to follow “exactly the same script on Iran.”
Does this sound far-fetched? It shouldn’t. Given the combination of recklessness and dishonesty Mr. Bush displayed in launching the Iraq war, why should we assume that he wouldn’t do it again?
Given what we’ve seen, it’s not an unreasonable question.