With the tenth anniversary of the Iraq invasion coming up next month, we can expect a surge of explanations for what made that catastrophe possible. An axiom from Orwell — “who controls the past controls the future” — underscores the importance of such narratives.
I encountered a disturbing version last week while debating Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. Largely, Wilkerson blamed deplorable war policies on a “bubble” that surrounds top officials. That’s not just faulty history; it also offers us very misleading guidance in the present day.
During our debate on Democracy Now, Wilkerson said:
What’s happening with drone strikes around the world right now is, in my opinion, as bad a development as many of the things we now condemn so readily, with 20/20 hindsight, in the George W. Bush administration. We are creating more enemies than we’re killing. We are doing things that violate international law. We are even killing American citizens without due process. . .
But why does this happen?
“These things are happening because of that bubble that you just described,” Colonel Wilkerson told host Amy Goodman. “You can’t get through that bubble” to top foreign-policy officials, “penetrate that bubble and say, ‘Do you understand what you’re doing, both to American civil liberties and to the rest of the world’s appreciation of America, with these increased drone strikes that seem to have an endless vista for future?’”
Wilkerson went on: “This is incredible. And yet, I know how these things happen. I know how these bubbles create themselves around the president and cease and stop any kind of information getting through that would alleviate or change the situation, make the discussion more fundamental about what we’re doing in the world.”
Such a “bubble” narrative encourages people to believe that reaching the powerful war-makers with information and moral suasion is key — perhaps the key — to ending terrible policies. This storyline lets those war-makers off the hook — for the past, present and future.
Hours after my debate with Wilkerson, I received an email from Fernando Andres Torres, a California-based journalist and former political prisoner in Chile under the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet. Referring to Wilkerson as “that bubble guy,” the email said: “Who they think they are? No accountability? Or do they think the government bubble gives them immunity for all the atrocities they commit? Not in the people’s memory.”
Later in the day, Torres sent me another note: “Not sure if we can call it a bubble, ’cause a bubble is easy to break; they were in a lead bunker from where the bloody consequences of their action can pass unnoticed.”
Wilkerson’s use of the bubble concept is “a tautology, a contradiction implicit,” wrote the co-editor of DissidentVoice.org, Kim Petersen, in an article analyzing the debate. “Often people escape culpability through being outside the loop. After all, how can one be blamed for what one does not know because one was not privy to the information. Can one credibly twist this situation as a defense? Wilkerson and other Bush administration officials were in the loop – privy to information that other people are denied — and yet Wilkerson, in a strong sense, claims to be a victim of being in a bubble.”
In that case, the onus is shared by those inside and outside the bubble. Wilkerson said as much when I mentioned that a decade ago, during many months before the invasion, my colleagues and I at the Institute for Public Accuracy helped to document — with large numbers of news releases and public reports — that the Bush administration’s claims about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction were full of holes.
From there, our debate swiftly went down a rabbit hole, as Wilkerson took me to task for not getting through the bubble that surrounded him as chief of staff for Secretary of State Powell. “I didn’t see a single one of your reports,” Wilkerson said. “So, nobody called me from your group. Nobody tried to get in — nobody tried to get into my office and talk to me from your group. Other groups did, but your group never got into my office, never called me on the phone — never talked to me. Other groups did. Why didn’t you?. . . You didn’t call. . . You didn’t call. . . You did not call.”
Non-apology apologies have been a forte of former impresarios of the Iraq war. It speaks volumes that Col. Wilkerson has been more apologetic than most of them. The scarcity of genuine public remorse is in sync with the absence of legal accountability or political culpability.
The partway apologies are tethered to notable narcissism. It’s still mainly about them, the seasoned ones who have worked in top echelons of government, whose self-focus is enduring. At the same time, scarcely a whisper can be heard about renouncing the prerogative to launch aggressive war.
So, when faced with occasional media questions about Powell’s WMD speech to the U.N. Security Council six weeks before the Iraq invasion, both Wilkerson and Powell routinely revert to the same careful phrasing about their own life sagas. Interviewed by CNN in 2005, after his three years as Secretary of State Powell’s chief of staff, Wilkerson described his key role in preparing that speech as “the lowest point in my life.” Last week, in our debate, he called the U.N. presentation “the lowest point in my professional and personal life.”
As for Colin Powell, guess what? That U.N. speech was “a low point in my otherwise remarkable career,” he told AARP’s magazine in 2006. Yet the U.N. speech gave powerful propaganda support for the invasion that began the Iraq war — a war that was also part of Powell’s “otherwise remarkable career.”
So, too, a dozen years earlier, was the Gulf War that Powell presided over as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in early 1991. On the same day that the Associated Press cited estimates from Pentagon sources that the six-week war had killed 100,000 Iraqi people, Powell told an interviewer: “It’s really not a number I’m terribly interested in.”
The illustrious and sturdy bow on the entire political package is immunity — a reassuring comfort to retired and present war leaders alike. Former Bush officials and current Obama officials have scant reason to worry that their conduct of war might one day put them in a courtroom dock. They’ve turned their noses up at international law, lowered curtains on transparency and put some precious civil liberties in a garbage compactor with the president’s hand on the switch.
Normalizing silence and complicity is essential fuel for endless war. With top officials relying on their own exculpatory status, a grim feedback loop keeps spinning as the increasingly powerful warfare state runs roughshod over the principle of consent of the governed. Top officials dodge responsibility — and pay no penalty — for lying the country into, and into continuing, horrendous wars and other interventions.
Without an honest reckoning of what did and didn’t happen in the lead-up to the Iraq war, a pernicious message comes across from Wilkerson, Powell and many others: of course we stuck it out and followed orders, we had private doubts but fulfilled our responsibilities to maintain public support for the war.
It’s a kind of role modeling that further corrodes the political zeitgeist. The upshot is that people at the top of the U.S. government — whether in 2003 or 2013 — have nothing to lose by going along with the program for war. In a word: impunity.
Photo by Marc Morell released under a Creative Commons Share-Alike license.




3 Comments

One need only imagine how ludicrous his self-defense is. Can they all be confirming among themselves their failures are due to “living in a bubble”? If so, even that lie is part of their sociopathy. But it is more likely that Wilkerson is hired for PR due to his persona.
It is interesting to note that Assange’s strategy was to put sufficient trepidation in the national security system that it was unable to function – i.e. blow the fog of war back into the empire brain. Though they have the judicial system locked down, it remains necessary to propagandize the public about their cupability. So, the machine propagandizes “Assange’s” concept as it’s exculpation. I say they are constructing their insanity defense.
Everyon in DC surely knows that Yoo and other assholes were tasked to cover the tyrants asses. Is it likely that Wilkerson’s rhetoric of impunity is only a desperate movement by DC minions or is it rather an imitative and calculated strategy? Until they come clean about their criminal involvement one cannot give them the benefit of the doubt.
Thank you Norman Solomon for this cogent overview. Recommended.
Presents much needed reset of post 2001 / post March 2003 fables and tales told coming out of UniPartyWarPartyEmpireParty run WashingtonDC.
It is not a far reach to suggest 1930′s German militarism and bellicose nationalism and the conduct of post 1990 USA/WashingtonDC/Pentagon/CIA have come to share similar DNA strands of high powered propaganda,might makes right policies and politics. With unquestioned or not questioned adequately expansive tendency to get in line,march to the beat and justify the militarism and wanton expanisionism that American Empire has claimed is it’s manifest destiny for since its creation over two centuries ago.
Maginot Lines can be jumped over.
One can only hope the Maginot Line WashingtonDC has constructed with bent and bendable to suit legalisms, twisted moral ,ethical and political constructs will be exposed for the fraud it is and taken from behind where invincible myth(s) become exposed for what they are.
The ongoing contrived legal and political immunity/impunity zones and protected from scrutiny climate claimed by both Bush/Cheney and Obama WH now evidently the feature — not the bug.
Hopefully this corrupted and hollowed out Maginot Line these cowards and monsters in WashingtonDC seek to hide in and behind will one day be jumped and taken from behind.
WikiLeaks was one such jumping over. Hence the reaction of WashingtonDC to crush and banish WikiLeaks and people like Assange and Manning.
USians may not like where all this is going to lead but this is the stern lesson that appears now to be inevitable and must take place to move USA off and away from errors and relic(s) of 19th/20th American Empire claims and self inflicted propaganda untruths and deceptions.
I think the family of the dead 16 year old should sue the president and his personal trigger man for a $ Billion each for the wrongful death of their relative in civil court. That might just slow them down a bit .