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tv   The Bottom Line  Al Jazeera  March 25, 2023 3:00pm-3:30pm AST

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cheers from school children in the island community of east and the excitement is over the arrival of their teacher. but nc scoping, because there's only one school kayla casinos influence. the school is the only teacher, the fact that these children are able to have an education at all the result of years, hard work from the local community here in keynes, coaching at the store. this year, the us government announced $33000000.00 to increase access to education, part of a broader strategy by the by did administration to address the root causes of migration from central america. critics. in honduras, however, warn the ramp and government corruption means that foreign assistance too often goes straight. in north korea, supreme leader kim jones sister is emerging as a likely successor. when or when you investigate north korea's most powerful woman on l. g 0? ah,
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me. this is al jazeera, i'm tell you navigator with a check on your world headlines. the world health organization says rapid response . teams are being deployed to tanza need to investigate an outbreak of the marburg virus disease. at least 12 people have died since the new outbreak began there and the equitorial, guinea, kenya, and uganda are now on high alert and have started screening travelers on their borders with tons and at least 34 people are missing after a boat carrying mostly african asylum seekers sent off the coast of tin, his young. it's the 5th such incidents and today's, the coastline of fox has become a major. the parts are points for europe. us president joe biden has wrapped up a visit to the canadian capital. he is prime minister adjustment rudo announced plans to close and immigration loophole that allow thousands of asylum seekers to cross into canada from the u. s. while in canada, president biden, warren iran,
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the u. s. will quote act forcefully to protect americans. the u. s. military carried out air strikes against iran, ling targets in syria, following an attack that killed an american contractor and injured 5 soldiers. and also grades from the professionalism. our service members, who are so ably carried out this response and to make no mistake, united states does not, does not emphasize seek conflict with iran, but be prepared to fresh jack forcefully protect our people. that's exactly what happened last night. at least 23 people had been killed after tornado ripped through mississippi and alabama. winds of more than a 100 kilometers per hour, tor roofs, from houses uprooted trees and knocked out power. people in the path of the storm are being urged to take cover. 2 people had been found dead in 13 others, suffering illness inside a sweltering train car in southern texas. there believes to be migrants who crossed
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into the united states or mexico. the us border patrol stopped the train on friday after an anonymous emergency call. in the leading opposition figure role gandhi says, his expulsion from parliament on friday was politically motivated. gandhi was disqualified as an m p a day after he was sentenced to 2 years in jail for a defamation. that case involved comments he made about prime minister under, under moody surname in 2019 gandhi says the move is rapid retribution for questioning modi's relationship with a business tycoon, gal. tom, donnie. i am. you are defending the democratic voice of the indian people. i will continue to do that. i am not scared of these threats of these disqualifications of these allegations of these prison sentences. i don't care, i'm not scared of them. ok, these people don't understand me yet. i am not scared of them. they are used to
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everybody being scared of them. i am not scared of them. right, and i will continue to law the question. what is the prime minister relationship with mr. dunning? it is an old relationship. it is a relationship that began when it was cheap and stuff, put it up. mr. dunny constructed the idea. what research and good, good job organized all that. this is a partnership. it's a close partnership. i'm going to keep asking that question. paul recess, a beginner, who saved more than 1200 lives during the rwandan genocide has been released from prison. he'd been sentenced to 25 years on terrorism charges 2 years ago. u. s. cord has heard the 1st guilty plea in the case of the assassination of the haitian president of an alma weez resolve jar, a dual haitian chalet and citizen entered the play on 3 charges. on friday. he acknowledged that he provided money to pay for food weapons on lodging for others suspected of shooting louise in 2021 argentinians of mark b,
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47th anniversary of the 19762000. the people marched in one osiris, demanding justice from the government, and remembering the victims of what's described as a journey war. human race. campaigners say 30000 people were kidnapped, tortured, and killed during military rule. firefighters and spain have contained the 1st major wildfire of the year. the flames spread through the valencia region, destroying more than 4000 hector's forest. you have today through the headlines on algae. they are coming up next. it's the bottom line. thanks for watching. bye bye . ah hi, i'm steve clemens and i have some questions. 20 years later was invading iraq, a major mistake, and should the u. s. apologize, let's get to the bottom line. ah, we strong support from the american public and both political parties. the u. s.
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government launched a massive invasion of iraq in 2003. it removed its president at the time saddam hussein and occupied the country directly for years. the official reasons were that iraq was stockpiling weapons of mass destruction and was supporting al qaeda which had carried out the attacks of $911.00 on american soil. both of these accusations quickly turned out to be really false and the you and called the invasion illegal under international law. the iraqi people launched a resistance to the occupation and also fought each other in a bloody civil war. hundreds of thousands of iraqis had been killed since then. along with more than 4500 american troops and thousands of military contractors, millions of iraqis have either fled the country as refugees, or had been displaced inside their own country. now, 20 years later, the u. s. military is still there with a few 1000 soldiers, but was it all a historic wonder and what have the long term consequences of that war been for america and for the world. today we're talking with jonathan land day,
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the us national security correspondent for reuters here in washington, who holds a special place in us journalism history for his work back then, which we'll get to in a 2nd. and also retired army colonel andrew bass, of ich, professor of international relations and history at boston university and author of washington rules america's path to permanent war. thank you both for joining us on this anniversary. and let me just start with you dr. base of ej. why did we go to war in iraq and did america get anything constructive or productive from that engagement? well, the answer to the 2nd question is emphatically know? ah, the answer, the 1st question i think becomes complicated. oh, and in the, the answer i have come to think is most important is that we went to war in iraq in order to, to demonstrate that 911 didn't matter. and what i mean by that is that
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the end of the cold war had given rise to a set of expectations, particularly prominent among american, the american elite. that we were the sole superpower. that history had reached its final conclusion that we were the indispensable nation. that our military couldn't be beat. and then the, the $911.00 attack seems to seemed at the time to say, not so fast. and i think that the, although there are a variety of considerations that mattered the most important, i think ultimately was that da da da, georgia to be a, been a bush administration, was absolutely a determined to demonstrate that there was only one superpower in that american global primacy was secure. they expected a quick victory. they didn't get it. we ended up getting the, the dirty, ugly, a costly war, that dough, that we all had to endure. let me ask you in just
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a quick follow up, andy. i'm just interested in the band wagging effect of why iraq afghanistan, i could understand iraq, i didn't, didn't see things coming into place. can, can you just share with our audience the sorts of pressures that were unleashed, and you worry about them being unleashed, again, in future cases like this? well, i'm way up here in, in walk whole massachusetts. so i don't to sort of feel the inside the beltway pressures that you're referring to, although i'm sure the existent and yeah, i suspect that they exist, not, not to his great extent, but exist today to that. there is a, a bandwagon in an expectation that you need to get on board with regard to the biden administration's policy regard to ukraine. if you're not on board, you're in appeaser. ah, now that sort of
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a one track mind thinking did not serve as well with regard to iraq, my personal judgment and that of the quincy institute. is it, it's not going to serve our interest on this occasion as well. jonathan lan day, when i was reading about that conflict before we had invaded and as things were building up, you were the 1st journalist i ever read that raise questions. serious questions and, and, and i'm just interested in what you saw of it. no one else saw, so i don't want to take full credit back then i was working for mcclatchy's. sorry for knight ridder newspapers. ah, i and i had, we were a team warren strobe who's now at the wall street journal or editor john walcott and joe galloway, the late joe galloway who eventually joined the team and, and essentially what happened was the following. i, i, i admittedly, was among those who believed at the group think here and d. c. that, of course,
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saddam hussein was amassing weapons of mass destruction. of course, he was trying to develop a nuclear weapon. on september 12th, warren came back to the bureau and called us in called me into john's office and said, they're discussing at the national security council to push national security council . i'm afghanistan, but also iraq. and we looked at each other and said, iraq, why are they talking about iraq? and that led us into this very this years long a project of looking at what the administration was using as this justification for invading iraq. as you pointed out at the beginning of the show, saddam hussein was a massy weapons of mass destruction. and he had this tie up with al qaeda and there had to have been a state sponsor of 911. and of course it had to have been saddam and worn, and i divided up the work i started looking at the weapons of mass destruction ah
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question. and quickly came to doing the journalism to the understanding that it was not a clear case that he was amassing weapons of mass destruction. he had been under the most rigid, most intense un inspection program up to that date. and there were a satellites and spy planes watching iraq. and they were not uncovering anything, if in fact, what they were fighting was that a, they were either finding the remnants of these programs or they were learning that in fact he had gotten rid of these programs. and, you know, that took us into the, into this reporting project where we determined that the information and i call it information, not intelligence, that the administration was using to justify the invasion to sell to the united,
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to the american people. was in fact, either bogus, exaggerated, or was cherry picked and that's exactly what came to be known. that in fact, they did not have this solid intelligence that they claimed to have about him having about saddam. but in my own view, i always saw those people who wanted to invade iraq, iraq was a stepping stone to actually taking on iran. and we had a lot of people that were part of that's who said that was the ultimate objective. but iraq proved but how do you see that? yeah, i mean, there, we ran over the project for a new american century. i mean, they were looking at the audience, the project for newark and century was the center place of neo conservative or thinking at that time. right. and they were looking not just at iraq. of course, they were major advocates for the invasion, but they were looking at other countries who either because they were amassing weapons of mass destruction or they were tied to terrorism. but, but the irony in all of this is that the american invasion of iraq actually
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opened the door to iranian influence in iraq, a massive iranian influence in iraq. and it's, they still maintain that influence. and, and, and that is one of the consequences of this invasion. there are others, of course, we still have troops in iraq. there is a massive american loss of influence in the region. we've just seen china step in to mediate this agreement between iran and saudi arabia. to reestablish diplomatic relations and on and on and on. you know, i, i go ahead, i don't disagree with anything that has just been said, but i think the part i would add is that in the wake of 911 important voices in our society columnist for the new york times. people who worked in the
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office of the secretary of defense of people who were in the congress, not everybody, but a set of people needed a war. they needed a war as the way to respond to 911. and they, and, and part of that need reflected their absolute conviction that if we went to war, particularly against a relatively weak figure, like saddam hussein in iraq, that we were going to triumph. we were going to, we were in a when big when, quickly and, and, and then scoop up all the chips. so the, the bush administration miscalculated on a variety of fronts. but the most tragic of those miscalculations was there absolutely unrealistic understanding of warfare and of how this particular war was likely to unfold. are there consequences that have not yet been revealed from this
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decision we took 2 decades ago? well that they have been revealed, they just not have not been recognized. oh, i'll, i'll be guilty here. of vast oversimplification iraq gave us donald trump, if it weren't for the iraq war, and the catastrophe that it became, and the cost that we were obliged to to pay donald trump would never have become president of the united states. and, and trump isn't, you know, the sense of anger and aly ation, and alienation and division. that is such a, up, undermines our democracy and powerful ways. trump ism, would exist. that i think would have been nowhere as influential as it has become because of the iraq war doesn't really be living in paradise if the war hadn't happened. but i think that in many respects,
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the most important negative consequences of the war are here at home in our democracy. one of the questions i have johnathan president biden was recently in poland. here's what he said. is a literary is, is take is not just ukraine is freedom. the idea that over a $100000.00 forces would invade another country after war since war 2. that's like that. it's happened. he did the president of united states, forget what, in fact, the country he now leads did in 2003. i can't say that i'm not a speech writer, but i would up point out that he but nonetheless, he said, nevertheless, he said that in a line i would someone say a lot of americans have a real problem with even flirtation with the fact that there was moral equivalence here or something went on, but a lot of the world doesn't see that where they saw the united states go in without justification, particularly after the fact into innovation. iraq that it sees high will
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illegitimate. he had to point out that he was a supporter of the invasion right. of iraq. i'm talking about, but there, i, i, you know, i've spent a lot of time covering the war in ukraine as well. and i think ukraine is, is probably the war that the bush administration would have liked to have fought in iraq. i mean, the, the differences are fast. another words, the justifications, it least in ukraine, those, the administration can make those arguments has made the arguments about, you know, trying to prevent autocracy from spreading on authoritarianism from spreading in europe. and, you know, ukraine being the front line. and this is an argument that has found a support not just within the democratic party, but more, but it split the republican party. you can see the, the split between most members, republican members of the senate, and many in the house are supporting the war in ukraine. and, and,
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you know, you have to point out that back in the day before the invasion of iraq, it was a minority of, of people on both sides. i don't remember any republican who opposed it, but i do remember some democrats who were very vocal about opposing the war and, and finding fault with the justifications that the administration was marching out . in fact, was one of those democrats who was then the head of the intel, a senate intelligence committee, who is who, who, whose objections and an arguments about. we're not hearing anything new here, forced the administration to publish or to it's famous now, famous national intelligence estimate on iraq's weapons of mass destruction, which in itself was extremely problematic because they made arguments publicly that it did not make in the classified versions and,
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and the differences between what they were telling the public publicly about weapons of mass destruction in iraq and what they were telling people who had clearances were, were vast. and i, i should just quickly point out that one of the differences between what's happened ukraine and what happened in iraq, is that the, i think the, the biden ministration looked at what happened in iraq, in terms of a, it's a getting up public support. and they were out in front, before the russian invasion de, classifying intelligence about russian intentions that proved to be accurate as opposed to what the bush administration did with its so called intelligence on iraq's w. m t. right? i think this is a you know, faster you talk about, i think one of the other things that unfolded at that time and we heard it from then president bush and people like honda. lisa rice is that the venture into a rock was going to spread democracy around the world, was going to spread democracy on through the middle, middle east,
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that this was about democracy promotion. and if you're around the world today, jonathan land day, um, how does, what does democracy promotion translate to in foreign languages? in fact, this was an argument that was made by, by the neoconservatives for a justify one of their justifications for invading iraq. because don't forget a, someone we haven't brought into this discussion was the former, the late head of the iraqi national congress, a ahmed chalabi who was there. so we used to see around town all the time. he was then only weiss on in iraq and evasive it may not have sandra if you spend a lot of time and he with the oc much all, but he was one i make it up to want to help. but he was kind of that lynch pin in their, their strategy because he, there were 2 things he, he, he promised one that he was gonna a, bring them up. well, 3 things bring democracy on an established diplomatic relations with israel and
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allow the united states to put military bases in iraq. and this idea that by invading iraq, the united states could make the middle, we safer for israel and safer for democracy. i mean, if you look at the middle east today that, that hasn't happened at all. and, and, and in fact, you could say that there's did a lot of backsliding as well. backsliding in that regard, in the region. you know, and if so, so no, it did that, that did not happen. and, and that was one of the things we were we looked at as journalists, when we were doing our reporting, was this idea that, that they would be able to bring democracy to the, to the middle east. one of the things that we, we determined when we were doing the reporting is while they were planning the war . there were various parts of the u. s. government, national security agencies who were sending in analyses warning that no, this is not going to happen. and one of the things that could, could, in fact,
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very likely happen is, this is igniting this, this civil war, essentially between iraq, shia and sunni muslims. and that's exactly what happened. in fact, the, the, that the now head of the cia bill burns wrote a paper when he was head of the middle east, a bureau at the nearest bureau. it state called a perfect storm war warning about what would happen in terms of unleashing ethnic religious strife. and, and setting back a, you know, the possibility of democracy. that was one of the papers in what we did to, we're told was an 18 inch stack of analysis from various parts of the government that was never read in the white house. we containing all of these warnings. my question is on this is just coming back. is it? i think it's very hard. you know, when you watch, you know, a lot of heroism among ukrainians defending was going on,
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fueled in part and supported by the west of, you know, are these conflicts, ones that have become defining for the west of certainly brought back nato? are they worth the effort enterprise or are they are slippery slope to much greater dangers? you talk in your article in foreign affairs about a potential su as moment, which i think a lot about is there a moment out there where the world just all of a sudden no longer sees the united states as a major factor in defining the direction of the world and it becomes significantly weaker just by the change in attitude. what are your thoughts about ukraine today given our experience in iraq? well, i think, i think that there's a were repeating this crucial mistake. we were just talking about the idiot, logical framing of the iraq war, particularly in neoconservative headquarters quarters. rather. you know this, this is about freedom and democracy. we need to go to war to,
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to spread freedom and democracy. and when we, when a all kinds of good things here happened, i'm sorry to say that the biden administration is sounding some of the same themes by, by framing the ukraine war as a war. busy against autocracy for democracy, let me be very clear. you know, this is a war of aggression launch without any justification by vladimir putin, the resistance of the ukrainians is gallant. and you know, you, you have to be impressed. but this is not in particular about freedom and democracy . it's about the geo politics of a particular region in, in asia. and i think if we, if we look at it, look at the problem through a geo political lens, then it becomes at least possible to begin envisioning an off ramp that will lead
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to a diplomatic conclusion of the war. if we insist that this is about the survival of democracy in the 21st century, then it seems to me that the wars elected to go on for a long, long time. and that ain't good. let me ask you finally, jonathan, i'm given what we now know about the iraq war, who perpetrated at how it was justified. does united states have to have some form of reconciliation process with the iraqi people? do we owe them something for what we've done to their history into the region, or do we simply walk away justified at that time we thought we were right here it's, i think that's a hard question to answer. but i would posit the fact that we have troops, several 1000 troops are still in iraq, not as part of an occupation force, but part of this anti isis ah, coalition. they went in, there were, at the invitation of the iraqi government when isis took over
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a great chunk of that, of that country. um and, and so is that a gesture also of how the united shades wanted to try it at least safeguards, something of ah, what it created in iraq in terms of a having you know, the shia majority more represented in the government than they horror under the you know, saddam a minority sunni, i can't answer that. certainly they were put there because of this threat to that was caused by isis. right. you know, it's, it's, it's a, it's a great question. i'm not sure that i'm qualified to answer that, andy, do we just ask you the same question here? we need to do something on behalf of iraq to, to reconcile. here's the answer. the answer is, steve, is we're america. and therefore, we forget what we choose to forget and we live,
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we set aside any sense of obligation. think about vienna. we screwed up, we lost, we walked away and we left the vietnamese people wrestle with the consequences. because where america and this pattern of your responsibility is very much part of our national, you know, behavior well, we will have to leave it there. that's a somber note on this 20th anniversary of the iraq war historian, andrew bass eviction journalist jonathan land. a thank you so much for your candor, for being with us today. great thing. so what's the bottom line? former national security agency director william odom once told me on a street corner here in washington that the invasion of iraq was, in fact, the biggest strategic mistake america had made in its history. it's true that america is still globally powerful, deploying drones in tanks and sanctions and power around the world. but something
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definitely has changed after a rock that war planted doubts about the legitimacy of american leadership in the world made international law look like the law of the jungle and sheared off the veneer of superpower mystique. by showing the limits of american military force. america hasn't fully reckoned with the legacy of the iraq war, nor with the crimes committed, which were then used to ramp up recruitment by groups like isis and keep the cycle of violence going. in my view, iraq remains a significant black spot on the story of america's role in the world. but we have to remember history as it was not as we would have wished it to be. so that mistakes like this don't happen over and over again. and that's the bottom line ah, tension in the occupied west. thank is on the increase leading to a new wave of palestinian retaliatory action. you are one of the most one thing,
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but is that a al jazeera world investigates 2 new groups, gaining public support and meeting israeli forces had on a new phase of palestinian resistance on al jazeera a with move.

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