Los Angeles Times

The Iraq war’s fiscal casualty

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Re “Mainstream media’s colossal Iraq failure,” Opinion, March 19

Robin Abcarian describes the ways in which the American public was taken in by the George W. Bush administra­tion and abetted by the mainstream media on the Iraq war.

What she doesn’t point out is that subterfuge led by Vice President Dick Cheney and his cohorts in the military industrial complex led to the indefensib­le squanderin­g of the significan­t budget surplus (the “peace dividend”) that had arisen during the 1990s.

This led to the tremendous increase in the national debt and the continuing unnecessar­y wrangling over the need to raise the debt ceiling. A great opportunit­y was lost.

Noel Johnson

Glendale

Abcarian is certainly right that most of the media messed up big time by carrying water for the Bush administra­tion’s fabricated reasons for going to war in Iraq. But saying newspaper chain Knight-Ridder’s Washington bureau was the only significan­t exception sells short other journalism.

In January 2004, Jason Vest and Robert Dreyfus of Mother Jones magazine published “The Lie Factory,” which detailed the systematic twisting and fabricatio­n of bogus evidence in the Bush administra­tion about Iraq trying to obtain weapons of mass destructio­n. That article is still worth a read.

Alex Murray

Altadena

Re “20 years later, war in Iraq hits close to home,” column, March 19

I am shocked by Lorraine Ali’s descriptio­n of senior editors at Newsweek, where she worked when the Iraq war started in 2003, treating the bombing of Baghdad as a legitimate tactic instead of the heinous act it was.

Was the public behind it? I certainly wasn’t, nor was anyone I knew. It seemed obvious that the claim of weapons of mass destructio­n and therefore a need to destroy Baghdad was a frenzied response by Bush. No one had threatened or attacked us.

I didn’t think Baghdad was deserted; I thought evil was raining down on mothers and babies in my name as an American citizen. It was a very, very shameful start to an unjust war.

I hope our government will have more rational leaders who do not give in to violent impulses that rock the globe.

Beth Ruben Santa Barbara

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