by Karen J. Alter - CommonDreams News center
Sept 2, 2002.
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"Why did America let this disaster unfold when it knew better?
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Ten years from now, will we be looking back asking: "How could the U.S. have
thought that an unprovoked preventative war on Iraq could succeed? The signs of
danger were so clear and ominous.
"How could America's leadership not have seen that the impossibility of accomplishing
the mission through air power would lead to levels of American casualties not
seen since the Vietnam War? How could our leaders have failed to anticipate that
an oil shock and deficit spending for war would plunge the U.S. and world economies
into a major recession? How could the Bush administration be so focused on getting
rid of Saddam Hussein that it failed to create a workable policy to shape a post-Hussein
Iraq?"
The most compelling way to answer these questions will be to apply the late
Irving Janis' insights on "groupthink." Looking back on the disastrous Bay of
Pigs, Janis, one of the world's leading authorities on decision-making, asked,
"How could bright, shrewd men like John F. Kennedy and his advisers be taken by
the CIA's stupid patchwork plan?"
Drawing on psychological studies of group decision-making, Janis argued that
the pressures of like-minded people deciding as a group lead to a deterioration
of mental reasoning, reality testing and moral judgment. In short, groupthink
leads to a complete breakdown of critical thinking. The Bush administration's
foreign policy team manifests all the symptoms of groupthink that Janis identified:
- illusions of invulnerability leading to the taking of extreme risks;
- collective efforts to rationalize, leading decision-makers to discount warnings
that might otherwise force them to reconsider;
- stereotyped views of enemy leaders as too evil to warrant genuine attempts
to negotiate, and as too weak or stupid to counter an attack against them, leading
to miscalculations;
- an unquestioned belief in the group's inherent morality, inclining group members
to ignore the ethical or moral consequences of their decisions;
- advocates of the consensus view, putting pressure on those who express strong
arguments against any of the group's commitments, making clear that dissent is
contrary to what is expected of all loyal members;
- self-appointed mind guards emerging to protect the group from advice, information
and views that might shatter the shared complacency about the effectiveness or
morality of their decisions;
- self-censorship by people with views deviating from the apparent group consensus,
creating an illusion of unanimity within the group.
Candidate Bush ran for office by arguing that America cannot be the world's
policeman, that the U.S. must avoid entanglements in the world, and most of all,
avoid anything that resembles "nation-building." But Bush's conversion to war
with Iraq will obliterate all those arguments with nation-building certain to
follow.
President Bush is no foreign-policy expert. So how could he decide not to
go to war when his most trusted advisers--the head of the National Security Council,
the secretary of defense, the vice president--all say that the threat of nuclear
proliferation makes removing Saddam Hussein unavoidable? Once Saddam Hussein is
gone, they argue, Iraq will no longer be a dangerous problem for us.
Bush's mistake will have been to surround himself with advisers sharing an
ideological cohesiveness and radical views. Of course, war was neither unavoidable
nor inevitable.
The real question to consider is: How could the rest of America's leadership
have let this happen? The extreme nature of Bush's advisers and their pathological
distaste for Saddam Hussein was well-known. The drumbeat leading up to war was
prolonged and extremely transparent. Why did America let this disaster unfold
when it knew better?
As soon as President Bush starts making his case to the American public, the
decision for war will have been made. In essence that will be the United States'
declaration of war. Already the Bush administration is preparing, inviting proposals
for humanitarian aid projects in Iraq and for Iraqi refugees in surrounding countries.
It is time for those who are still thinking clearly to ratchet up the rhetoric.
An unprovoked "preventative" war with Iraq is insane.
Before the administration creates a flimsy pretext to go in, Congress must
insist that Bush not wage war without its assent. Members of the administration
who disagree with a war in Iraq must publicly voice their opposition, to lend
support to those outside with serious reservations. The people who have supported
George Bush, and on whom he is counting for re-election, must also make it known
that they do not support war with Iraq. It is better to voice your opposition
now, when backing down is still relatively easy, than to reflect 10 years from
now upon how this fiasco happened.
Karen J. Alter is an assistant professor of political science at Northwestern
University
Copyright © 2002, Chicago Tribune