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May
10, 2003
William Bennett:
Next Viceroy
of Iraq?
by LARRY MAGNUSON
What are the odds? For that answer you'll have
to ring up Vegas oddsmakers or catch Pete Rose on the corner.
But Bill Bennett, toppled from his post as self-insinuated czar
of moral accusation, may be an odds-on favorite for Iraq's Viceroy.
Oddly, this pilgrim's progress may end in Baghdad, where gambling's
illegal but the moral stakes are tremendous.
After a war seen as illegal by an increasing
number of Americans and as actionable in an international court
of law, Bennett as civilian czar of Iraq might not be the dark
horse bet his detractors imagine. It's uncomfortably apparent
from the mishandling of the invasion's aftermath that the US
needs a lot more moral bulk and circumspection on the ground.
Burning books and stealing Mesopotamian statues is bad. And without
weapons found and Al-Queda missing, increasingly it appears that
the Bush gang needs a dispensation on the order of a miracle
to excuse its invasion in the eyes and minds of the world at
large. Could Bennett's lofty moral demeanor include the very
highest connections the Bush administration needs at this point?
Bennett does look to have as much a chance
as anyone to find the weapons of mass destruction, even though
the odds have soured along with the Bush administration's still
legless justifications for all-out war waging. A moral crusade,
such as Bennett has helped oversee domestically and as Franklin
Graham is incipiently trying to form in (infidel) country, might
distractively enhance the Bush administration's failure-laden
unMarshall Plan. Certainly, the track record indicates fresh
horses are needed on the track.
Now weeks into the reconstruction phase
of post-invasion Iraq, a blue collar jihad to rebuild the infrastructure
and get the oil flowing is required. Bennett, who oversaw the
flow of drugs into the US but never really stemmed it, still
has the civilian administrative background that retired lieutenant
general Jay Garner cannot bring to Iraq's empty table. The US
military's moral neutrality that watched Baghdad burn has been
no church picnic for the already ravaged Iraqi citizenry. While
the moral imperative to restore civil society in Iraq remains
unredressed, the military, bungling their most civilized chance
to act, are pulling out as fast as they can, though Garner himself
("Damn, we're Americans!") remains in charge.
Garner's Defense Department blessed maneuvering
to ensconce Ahmad Chalabi, an embezzler that the US landed in
Iraq complete with his own armed forces, seems basis enough to
have demanded this viceroy's termination and a clamoring for
Bennett's apotheosis there. Didn't Garner understand that expatriate
Chalabi, who has spent his own long nights at the roulette tables
of Europe, hadn't seen an Iraqi sunrise in long pants until an
American Blackhawk flew him in? Didn't Garner understand that
Iraqis reject American interference in their self-determination,
and specifically don't want American-sponsored outsiders like
Chalabi? Wanted in Jordan on 31 convictions for thefts of funds,
Chalabi may be Viceroy Garner and the Bush administration's loss-leader
of democracy, but in the last fifty years Bennett's been in Iraq
as much as Chalabi, and Bennett's decade long squandering of
eight million dollars of his own funds represents a moral step
up from Chalabi who absconded with $70 to $200 million of other
people's money. (It's hard to say exactly how much Chalabi left
with, but Jordan's central bank was forced to pump $164 million
into Chalabi's Petra bank to keep it afloat.)
Though the Bush administration has chosen
to ease out Garner, his replacement Paul Bremer similarly seems
a longer shot than the rugged though thoughtfully bemused Bennett.
Ronald Reagan's ambassador at large for counterterrorism and
then managing director for Kissinger Associates, Bremer arrives
in country with a portfolio emphasizing power tactics and stealth
rather than friendly skills. More than likely, changes will be
afoot in Iraq as the population realize they have an American
counterterrorist in charge. William Bennett, translate your moral
tomes into Arabic. The odds are getting better: bind your wounded
loins for foreign service.
The erratic "in country" leadership
currently floundering on the ground in Iraq-- by itself a challenging
affair calling for Bennett or someone like himmight
occlude Bennett's homeland virtues and the local power Bennett
has wielded in the past . Thus, from a strictly domestic vantage,
Bennett may also represent the Bush administration's best bet
as pit boss of Iraq. Though a family man who from his moral aerie
swooped earthward to waste $20,000 every week for the last ten
years on legal gaming tables, Bennett has demonstrated a visible
commitment to other moral issues not strictly his own.. And he
sounds more like a your dad when you were nine than a man bent
on turning your school over to Microsoft or turning McDonalds's
wages into Palm Beach's dividends.
On the treadmill of media interviews
and in his books, Bennett's moral excoriation comes across as
chummy. Bennett's managed to present an avuncular, threatless
image, while still urging disagreeable, punitive outcomes for
lots of people--from those addicted to drugs to those addicted
to free public education, If it must be acknowledged that many
across the domestic political spectrum currently harbor doubts
about an egregious gambler who's variously gone disguised both
as a moral broadsider in the streets and as a drug czar in office,
Bennett's domestic discourse has consistently displayed a bedside
manner his more Hobbesian moral cohorts can only envy. And its
powerful message stays the course of moral and political vision
through its insistence on hardly more than truismsthings
can get better, Bennett says, without government and without
money. Like Dorothy, we can will our way back to Kansas. It indeed
may be time to put this money-saving domestic asset into foreign
territory.
The wolf pack yelps of the Republican
womanizers Bennett joined in a sex hunt that tied up government
in the Clinton nineties have fairly quieted. And though Bennett's
voice sharpened the point on that moral spearhead, it always
spoke in frank, not frenzied tones. Perhaps that manner will
mesmerize a new, eastern audience. We will see.
In a press almost magically turned from
scandal and witch-hunting after January 20, 2001, revelations
of high rolling games of chance funded by Bennett's stacks of
gold chips and his piles of $1000 tokens will die swiftly. No
point in starting a moral fuss. The after midnight Bennett with
sleeves rolled up and sweat on the brow will dissolve. The folksy
prophet of moral probity will soon reappear. But where and when?
Iraq, looted and robbed of its cultural
treasure and operating cash, needs someone like Bennett to console
them with parables of how easily it all comes and goes. This
same Iraq, still thirsty and in the dark, has wounds that its
raided and stripped hospitals cannot yet heal. What better time
for a burnished and refurbished, slightly sun-burnt prophet like
Bennett to shine his light down upon the citizenry of Iraq until
the power is finally restored? Who knows, under his tutelage,
like loaves and fishes, even the weapons of mass destruction
may proliferate and appear. What are the odds? Ask Pete Rose--though
like the Bush administration and its moral pals, the line has
it that everyone's still in denial about what's happening to
America's moral sense, ten to one.
Larry Magnuson,
a professor of English, lives in Wavery, Tennessee.
He can be reached at: lawrence@pmicomputers.com
Yesterday's
Features
Julie
Hilden
When It's a Crime to Visit Your Son
Mickey
Z.
Partisan Protests?
Mark
Zepezauer
Evil is as Evil Does
David Lindorff
The Coming Senior Revolution
Abu
Spinoza
The Detention of Dr. Huda Ammash
Ben
Tripp
The Other "F" Word
Norman
Madarasz
God in the Service of the Security
State: a Dispatch from Brazil
Stew Albert
Pushovers
Steve
Perry
Bush's War Web Log 5/08
Website
of the Day
Department of Sexual Security
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