Iraq War Quiz
by Stephen R. Shalom
1. The anti-war movement supports our
troops by urging that they be
brought home immediately so they neither
kill nor get killed in a
unjust
war. How has the Bush administration shown its support for our
troops?
a. The Republican-controlled House
Budget Committee voted to cut $25
billion in veterans benefits over the
next 10 years.
b. The Bush administration proposed
cutting $172 million from impact
aid programs which provide school
funding for children of military
personnel.
c. The administration ordered the Dept.
of Veterans Affairs to stop
publicizing health benefits available to
veterans.
d. All of the above.
2. The anti-war movement believes that
patriotism means urging our
country to do what is right. How do Bush
administration officials
define
patriotism?
a. Patriotism means emulating Dick
Cheney, who serves as
Vice-President while receiving
$100,000-$1,000,000 a year from
Halliburton, the multi-billion dollar
company which is received major
contracts in post-war Iraq.
b. Patriotism means emulating Richard
Perle, the warhawk who serves
as head of the Defense Intelligence
Board while at the same time
meeting
with Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi on behalf of Trireme,
a company of which he is a managing partner, involved in security and
military technologies, and while agreeing to work as a paid lobbyist
for Global Crossing, a telecommunications giant seeking a major
Pentagon contract.
c. Patriotism means emulating George W.
Bush, Dick Cheney, Paul
Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, John Bolton,
Tom DeLay, John Ashcroft, Lewis
Libby, and others who enthusiastically
supported the Vietnam War while
avoiding serving in it and who now are
sending others to kill and be
killed in Iraq.
d. All of the above.
3. The Bush administration has accused
Saddam Hussein of lying
regarding his weapons of mass
destruction. Which of the following
might
be considered less than truthful?
a. Constant claims by the Bush
administration that there was
documentary evidence linking Iraq to
attempted uranium purchases in
Niger, despite the fact that the
documents were forgeries and CIA
analysts doubted their authenticity.
b. A British intelligence report on
Iraq's security services that
was in fact plagiarized, with selected
modifications, from a student
article.
c. The frequent citation of the
incriminating testimony of Iraqi
defector Hussein Kamel, while suppressing
that part of the testimony
in
which Kamel stated that Iraqi weapons of mass destruction had been
destroyed following the 1991 Gulf War.
d. All of the above.
4. White House Press Secretary Ari
Fleisher stormed out of a press
conference when the assembled reporters
broke into laughter after he
declared that the U.S. would never try
to bribe members of the UN.
What
should Fleisher have said to defend himself?
a. It wasn't just bribery; we also
ordered the bugging of the home
and office phones and emails of the UN
ambassadors of Security Council
member states that were undecided on
war.
b. Oh, come on! We've been doing this
for years. In 1990 when Yemen
voted against authorizing war with Iraq,
the U.S. ambassador declared
"That will be the most expensive
'no' vote you ever cast."
c. Why do you think the Africa Growth
and Opportunity Act makes one
of the conditions for an African country
to receive preferential
access
to U.S. markets that it "not engage in activities that
undermine United States national security or foreign policy
interests"?
d. All of the above.
5. George Bush has declared that
"we have no fight with the Iraqi
people." What could he have cited
as supporting evidence?
a. U.S. maintenance of 12 years of
crippling sanctions that
strengthened Saddam Hussein while
contributing to the death of
hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.
b. The fact that "coalition"
forces have indicated that they will
use cluster bombs in Iraq, despite
warnings from human rights groups
that "The use of cluster munitions
in Iraq will endanger civilians for
years to come."
c. By pointing to the analogy of
Afghanistan, which the U.S. pledged
not to forget about when the war was
over, and for which the current
Bush administration foreign aid budget
request included not one cent
in aid.
d. All of the above.
6. The Bush administration has touted
the many nations that are part
of the "coalition of the
willing." Which of the following statements
about this coalition is true?
a. In most of the coalition countries
polls show that a majority,
often an overwhelming majority, of the
people oppose the war.
b. More than ten of the members of the
coalition of the willing are
actually a coalition of the unwilling -
unwilling to reveal their
names.
c. Coalition members - most of whose
contributions to the war are
negligible or even zero - constitute
less than a quarter of the
countries in the UN and contain less
than 20% of the world's
population.
d. All of the above.
7. The war on Iraq is said to be part of
the "war on terrorism."
Which of the following is true?
a. A senior American counterintelligence
official said: "An American
invasion of Iraq is already being used
as a recruitment tool by Al
Qaeda and other groups....And it is a
very effective tool."
b. An American official, based in
Europe, said Iraq had become "a
battle cry, in a way," for Al Qaeda
recruiters.
c. France's leading counter-terrorism
judge said: "Bin Laden's
strategy has always been to demonstrate
to the Islamic community that
the West, and especially the U.S., is
starting a global war against
Muslims. An attack on Iraq might confirm
this vision for many Muslims.
I
am very worried about the next wave of recruits."
d. All of the above.
8. The Bush administration says it is
waging war to stop the spread
of weapons of mass destruction. Which of
the following is true?
a. The United States has refused to
ratify the Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty, viewed worldwide as the
litmus test for seriousness about
nuclear disarmament.
b. The United States has insisted on a
reservation to the Chemical
Weapons Convention allowing the U.S.
President the right to refuse an
inspection of U.S. facilities on
national security grounds, and
blocked
efforts to improve compliance with the Biological and Toxin
Weapons
Convention.
c. Vice Admiral Lowell E. Jacoby,
Director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency, testified on Feb.
11, 2003, "The long-term trends
with respect to WMD and missile
proliferation are bleak. States seek
these capabilities for regional
purposes, or to provide a hedge to
deter
or offset U.S. military superiority."
d. All of the above.
9. The Bush administration says it wants
to bring democracy to Iraq
and the Middle East. Which of the
following is true?
a. If there were democracy in Saudi
Arabia today, backing for the
U.S. war effort would be the first thing
to go, given the country's
"increasingly anti-American
population deeply opposed to the war."
b. The United States subverted some of
the few democratic
governments in the Middle East (Syria in
1949, Iran in 1953), and has
backed undemocratic regimes in the
region ever since.
c. The United States supported the
crushing of anti-Saddam Hussein
revolts in Iraq in 1991.
d. All of the above.
10. Colin Powell cited as evidence of an
Iraq-Al Qaeda link an
audiotape from bin Laden in which he
called Saddam Hussein and his
Baath
Party regime "infidels." Which of the following is more
compelling evidence?
a. An FBI official told the New York
Times: "We've been looking at
this hard for more than a year and you
know what, we just don't think
it's there."
b. According to a classified British
intelligence report seen by BBC
News, "There are no current links
between the Iraqi regime and the
al-Qaeda network."
c. According to Rohan Gunaratna, author
of Inside Al Qaeda: Global
Network of Terror, "Since U.S.
intervention in Afghanistan in October
2001, I have examined several tens of
thousands of documents recovered
from Al Qaeda and Taliban sources. In
addition to listening to 240
tapes
taken from Al Qaeda's central
registry, I debriefed several Al
Qaeda
and Taliban detainees. I could find no evidence of links
between Iraq and Al Qaeda."
d. All of the above.
Answers and Sources
1. d (a) Cong. Lane Evans,
"Veterans Programs Slashed by House
Republicans," Press Release,
3/13/03,
http://www.veterans.house.gov/democratic/press/108th/3-13-03budget.htm
.
(b) Brian Faler, "Educators Angry
Over Proposed Cut in Aid; Many
Children in Military Families Would Feel
Impact," Washington Post,
3/19/03, p. A29. (c) See Veterans' for
Common Sense, letter to George W.
Bush, 3/20/03
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/print.asp?id=563;
Melissa B. Robinson, "Hospitals
Face Budget Crunch," Associated Press,
7/31/02; Jason Tait, "Veterans
angered by marketing ban," Eagle-Tribune
(Lawrence, MA), 8/2/02,
http://www.eagletribune.com/news/stories/20020802/FP_003.htm
2. d (a) Warren Vieth and Elizabeth
Douglass, " Ousting Hussein
could open the door for U.S. and British
firms. French, Russian and
Chinese rivals would lose their
edge," Los Angeles Times, 3/12/03, p.
I:1; Robert Bryce and Julian Borger,
"Halliburton: Cheney is still
paid
by Pentagon contractor, Bush deputy gets Dollars 1m from firm
with Iraq oil deal," Guardian (London), 3/12/03, p. 5 (which notes
that Halliburton "would not say how
much the payments are; the
obligatory disclosure statement filled by all top government
officials says only that they are in the range of" $100,000
and $1
million. (b) Seymour M. Hersh, "Lunch with the Chairman,"
New Yorker,
3/16/03; Stephen Labaton, "Pentagon Adviser Is Also Advising
Global
Crossing," NYT, 3/21/03, p. C1. Perle is to be paid $725,000 for his
lobbying effort, including $600,000 if his lobbying is successful.
(c) New Hampshire Gazette,
"The Chickenhawks,"
http://nhgazette.com/chickenhawks.html.
3. d (a) See the evidence collected in
Cong. Henry Waxman's letter
to George W. Bush, 3/17/03,
http://www.house.gov/waxman/text/admin_iraq_march_17_let.htm.
(b) See
Glen Rangwala's report,
http://traprockpeace.org/britishdossier.html.
(c) See Glen Rangwala's report,
http://traprockpeace.org/kamel.html.
4. d (a) Martin Bright, Ed Vulliamy, and
Peter Beaumont, The
Observer (London), 3/2/03. (b) Quoted in
Phyllis Bennis, Calling the
Shots: How Washington Dominates Today's
UN, New York: Olive Branch,
1996, p. 33. (c) Sarah Anderson, Phyllis
Bennis, and John Cavanagh,
Coalition of the Willing or Coalition of
the Coerced?: How The Bush
Administration Influences Allies in Its
War on Iraq, Washington, DC:
Institute for Policy Studies, 2/26/03,
p. 4.
5. d (a) For background, see Anthony
Arnove, ed., Iraq Under Siege:
The Deadly Impact of Sanctions and War,
Cambridge: South End Press,
updated ed. 2003. (b) Paul Waugh,
"Labour MPs Attack Hoon After He
Reveals That British Forces Will Use
Cluster Bombs," Independent,
3/21/03, p. 4; Human Rights Watch, Press
Release, 3/18/03: "Persian
Gulf: U.S. Cluster Bomb Duds A Threat;
Warning Against Use of Cluster
Bombs in Iraq." (c) Zvi Bar'el,
"Flaws in the Afghan Model," Ha'aretz,
3/14/03,
http://www.haaretzdaily.com/hasen/objects/pages/PrintArticleEn.jhtml?i
te
mNo=272884.
6. d (a) See, for example, the revealing
comment of Secretary of
State Powell: "We need to knock
down this idea that nobody is on our
side. So many nations recognize this
danger [of Iraq's weapons]. And
they do it in the face of public
opposition." Quoted in Steven R.
Weisman With Felicity Barringer,
"Urgent Diplomacy Fails To Gain U.S.
9
Votes In The U.N." NYT, 3/10/03, p. A1) (b) U.S. Dept. of State,
Daily
Press Briefing, Richard Boucher, Washington, DC, 3/18/03. (c)
Country
list: White House, Statement of Support
from Coalition, 3/25/03,
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/print/20030325-8.html;
population calculated from Statistical
Abstract of the United States,
2001, Washington, DC: 2001, table 1327.
Total includes USA. The White
House list includes countries whose
leaders have done no more than state
their support for the United States, and
the listing changes from day to
day, with some countries being added and
some removed.
7. d (a) Don Van Natta Jr. and Desmond
Butler, "Anger On Iraq Seen
As New Qaeda Recruiting Tool," NYT,
3/16/03, p. I:1. (b) Van Natta and
Butler, NYT, 3/16/03. (c) Van Natta and
Butler, NYT, 3/16/03.
8. d (a) Colum Lynch, "U.S.
Boycotts Nuclear Test Ban Meeting; Some
Delegates at U.N. Session Upset at
Latest Snub of Pact Bush Won't
Back," Washington Post, 11/12/02, p. A6. (b) Amy E. Smithson,
"U.S.
Implementation of the CWC," in
Jonathan B. Tucker, The Chemical
Weapons
Convention: Implementation Challenges
and Solutions, Monterey Institute,
April 2001, pp. 23-29,
http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/reports/tuckcwc.htm;
Jonathan Tucker, "The Fifth Review
Conference of the Biological and
Toxin Weapons Convention," Feb.
2002,
http://www.nti.org/e_research/e3_7b.html.
(c) Testimony before the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
excerpted at
http://traprockpeace.org/usefulquotesoniraq.html.
9. d (a) Craig S. Smith, "Saudi
Arabia Seems Calm But, Many Say, Is
Seething," NYT, 3/24/03, p. B13. In
fact, "Though the Saudi government
officially denies it, the bombing
campaign is being directed from
Saudi
Arabia - something that few Saudis realize." (b) On Syria, see
Douglas
Little, ACold War and Covert Action: The United States and
Syria, 1945 1958,@ Middle East Journal, vol. 44, no. 1, Winter 1990,
pp. 55 57. On Iran, see Mark J. Gasiorowski, "The 1953 Coup D'Etat in
Iran," International Journal of Middle East Studies, vol. 19, Aug.
1987, pp. 261-86. (c) Andrew Cockburn and Patrick Cockburn, Out of
the Ashes: The Resurrection of Saddam Hussein, New York:
HarperPerennial. 1999, chap. 1.
10. d (re audiotape, see David Johnston,
"Top U.S. Officials Press
Case Linking Iraq To Al Qaeda,"
NYT, 2/12/03, p. A1; Mohamad Bazzi,
"U.S. says bin Laden tape urging
Iraqis to attack appears real,"
Newsday, 2/12/03, p. A5. (a) James Risen
and David Johnston, "Split at
C.I.A. and F.B.I. On Iraqi Ties to Al
Qaeda," NYT, 2/2/03, p. I:13.
(b)
"Leaked Report Rejects Iraqi al-Qaeda Link," BBC News, 2/5/03.
(c) Rohan Gunaratna, "Iraq and Al Qaeda: No Evidence of
Alliance,"
International Herald Tribune, 2/19/03.
Interpreting Your Score
9-10 Correct: Excellent. Contact United
for Peace and Justice,
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/, and work
to fight the war and the
system
that produced it.
6-8 Correct: Fair. You've been watching
a few too many former
generals and government officials who provide the "expert"
commentary
for the
mainstream media. Read the alternative media!
3-5 Correct: Poor. Don't feel bad.
George W. Bush only got a C- in
International Relations at College.
0-2 Correct: Failing. You have a bright
future as an "embedded"
journalist.
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