Why Kill bin Laden Now?
Gareth Porter: Domestic politics dictated decision to assassinate bin Laden, not national security.
Bio
Gareth Porter
is a historian and investigative journalist on US foreign and military
policy analyst. He writes regularly for Inter Press Service on US policy
towards Iraq and Iran. Author of four books, the latest of which is
Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam.
PAUL JAY, SENIOR
EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in
Washington. One of the things that I've wondered about during all of
this discussion and debate about the assassination of Osama bin Laden is
why now. When one looks at the assessment of all of this by various
experts and analysts, bin Laden had seemed to disappear, more or less,
into the dustbin of history. Much of the Muslim world and everywhere
else considered him obsolete. Apparently, operationally he hadn't been
active for six or seven years. He'd kind of become almost irrelevant,
especially after the Arab uprisings that showed that the way to
challenge these Arab dictatorships was not through extreme Islamic
radical behavior or actions like al-Qaeda, but in fact mass actions on
the streets, most of which turned out to be secular. Given all of that,
why bring back bin Laden now and turn someone who was increasingly
irrelevant into a martyr who in many ways gets back to the front page
more powerful dead than alive? So I am going to pose that question now
to Gareth Porter, who's an investigative journalist and historian who's
been working on these questions. He joins me from our other Washington
studio. Thanks for joining us, Gareth. GARETH PORTER,
INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALIST: Thanks, Paul. I think the answer to your
question is really quite simple, and that is that the Obama
administration had a very powerful political motive for wanting to claim
credit for killing bin Laden, and that is that regardless of the
reality of the situation in terms of global politics, which I think you
are correctly stating, you have correctly stated that Osama bin Laden is
really not the kind of gigantic figure in a global jihadist movement
that he was ten years ago at all. But regardless of that political
reality globally, the political reality in the United States, of course,
is that Obama stood to gain enormously by being able to find credit for
this. And, indeed, he's reaped roughly a ten-point increase in his
popularity, and even more important, I would say, has protected himself
now against, really, Republican efforts to portray him as weak on
terrorism. He's really now in a very much stronger position politically
because of that. And so I think that really this is all about domestic
politics. It's not about the fact that Obama--excuse me. It's not about
the fact that Osama bin Laden is the kind of threat that he's being
portrayed as being today. I think you're absolutely correct that not
only was he not the critical factor operationally in efforts to attack
the United States, but indeed his popularity had declined throughout the
Islamic world. There's survey data that show that compared with 2003,
when it was at its height, Osama bin Laden's popularity had declined in
one country after another by 60, 70, 80 percent.JAY: Now,
does it not also--again, this is a domestic political consideration,
partly, but does he now not have the cover to do a withdrawal from
Afghanistan? Instead of being depicted as the president who lost the
Afghan war, he's going to be the president that killed bin Laden, which
means he can now start getting out of Afghanistan if they want to. And
we know there's been a lot of internal debate and struggle within his
administration over this. But if he wants to do a more serious drawdown
and just kind of have a minimal holding operation there--and even if
much of Afghanistan gets retaken by the Taliban, I don't know that US
really cares about that. Maybe they just can protect Kabul and forget
about the rest of the place. I don't think they ever cared very much
what happens to the Afghan people. But doesn't this give him the cover
to do this now?
PORTER: Oh, it clearly does. I mean, and
this is what I think the proponents of the war, those who are continuing
to support the war, are really afraid of right now. Definitely there
are those within the Obama administration who want to move in that
direction, who want to use this as an opportunity to accelerate
withdrawal and to portray the president as the guy who is getting out of
Afghanistan rather than the one who was winning in Afghanistan. But my
problem with that hope that the Obama administration will move for the
exit strategy now is that I'm afraid that even within the
administration, and particularly the national security elite outside the
administration, are still very much hung up on the idea that we must
continue to have troops in Afghanistan, even after the formal troop--the
combat mission of the United States is over. And as we now know, I
mean, the Obama administration, both in Iraq and again in Afghanistan,
plays around with the term of "combat mission". I mean, they will say
that the combat mission is over when they still want to keep US troops
there who will be, obviously, there to carry out combat. And so I think
that what we're looking at here is an effort to pare down the presence
but not to end it. And I think that the real problem here is: will the
administration--the question is: will the administration be able to or
be willing to initiate negotiations with the Taliban, which require that
it says to the Taliban, yes, we agree that we're ready to withdraw all
of our troops as part of an agreement?
JAY: And I wouldn't
put that off the table. The other thing I wouldn't take off the table is
are the--is the Americans--are US really going to get out of Iraq. I
think that's still a question mark, in spite of all the agreements and
all the rhetoric to the contrary.
PORTER: Well, it's a
question mark insofar as we don't know yet whether the Iraqi government
is going to make the request. But we do know in fact that the Obama
administration wants it to make the request. That's very clear.
JAY: Thanks very much for joining us, Gareth.PORTER: Thank you, Paul.JAY: Thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
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