Gen. Colin Powell flipped the script on the right’s blind support of foreign wars
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — One could say that there was a “pre” and “post” Gen. Colin Powell for
the American right. It’s this ideological evolution of many on the right that
should ultimately be remembered as the four-star general’s enduring legacy,
sparked in that historical moment in 2003 for which Powell repeatedly spent the
last several years expressing regret, right up until his death this week at age
84.
Some of us who were working in Washington, D.C., at think tanks closely
associated with the Republican Party and the George W. Bush White House still
recall that fateful day of Feb. 5, 2003, when then-Secretary of State Colin
Powell, took center stage at a United Nations Security Council meeting. Holding
up a small vial for visual effect, Powell evoked the damage that such a small
quantity of anthrax — the likes of which Iraq continued to possess and develop,
he claimed — could wreak in the world.
In the post-9/11 era, the U.S. government had a window of time to benefit from
public goodwill and trust in the face of justifiable massive public fear of
terrorism. Public opinion gave U.S. intelligence agencies, and the
decision-makers tasked with acting on their findings, unprecedented leeway.
Arguing the details of which precise actors were – or could potentially be –
responsible for acts of terrorism directed at America was viewed as a perilous
exercise in triaging out humble bumblebees from killer hornets.
Any risk of terrorism was worth neutralizing in the view of public opinion.
Middle Eastern terrorist actors all seemed fair game – all except Saudi Arabia,
which was spared being framed in a bad light by authorities, despite the fact
nearly all the 9/11 hijackers were citizens of the Kingdom. And the very
definition of terrorism itself was granted a free license for liberal
interpretation. Hence, when President Bush and his cabinet — including Powell —
identified Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, or any other traditional U.S. foes as
representing a terrorist threat, public pushback was limited to mostly leftists
still bitter about Bush having beaten former Vice President Al Gore in the 2000
presidential election.
But Powell had for years been on a perpetual apology tour for his moment that
helped grease the skids for the Iraq invasion. It seems that the poor outcome of
that intervention evidently led to soul-searching about whether the threat that
he helped to sell was truly worth the cost in lives — both American military and
Iraqi civilian — and destruction that we witness even 20 years later in Iraq.
“It’s a blot … and will always be a part of my record. It was painful. It’s
painful now," Powell was already telling ABC News in 2005.
And in 2008, when the late John McCain, who rarely saw a country whose interests
diverged from America’s that he wasn’t eager to invade, was running as the
Republican presidential candidate against Democrat Barack Obama, Powell said
that he didn’t like the direction in which the GOP was heading. It was a clear
volte-face from the bandwagon on which Powell helped America charge into wars
that, with hindsight, seem infinitely more debatable.
This regret is perhaps best articulated through remarks made by four-star U.S.
Army Gen. Wesley Clark, the former commander of NATO allied operations, who said
in a 2007 speech at the Commonwealth Club of California that the U.S. reaction
to 9/11 was a “a policy coup” in which “some hard-nosed people took over the
direction of American policy, and they never bothered to inform the rest of us.”
He explained that a memo out of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s office
stated at the time that there was already a plan in place to “attack and destroy
the governments of seven countries in five years”: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya,
Somalia, Sudan and Iran.
Before Powell, there was almost blind faith on the political right in American
defense policy. Since then, the disappointing results of these foreign military
interventions, due to ill-defined missions and the discovery of public
manipulation by political leaders and the foreign policy establishment, have
created a generation of highly vocal war-wary conservatives.
Now, when an American president tries to make a case for foreign conflict
against Russia, China, Iran, Syria, or any other nation that has opposing
interests — the kind of hard-sell effort that Powell made against Iraq in 2003 —
it’s the right that’s more likely to oppose foreign wars not partisans on the
left.
And all that is in large part thanks to Colin Powell.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN