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Robert Higgs

The Iraq War—A Catastrophic Success

Robert Higgs | Independent Institute: Center on Peace and Liberty | December 21, 2004

In a characteristically unwitting way, President George W. Bush himself stumbled upon a resolution of the seeming paradox when he told Time magazine’s interviewer last summer that the war had proved to be a “catastrophic success.” By that oxymoron, he sought to convey the idea that in the invasion the U.S. military forces had overcome the enemy unexpectedly quickly, “being so successful, so fast, that an enemy that should have surrendered or been done in, escaped and lived to fight another day.” [more]

Has the U.S. Government Committed War Crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq?

Robert Higgs | Independent Institute: Center on Peace and Liberty | May 23, 2004

If today the U.S. government were to put itself on trial, on the same basis it employed to try the Nazis at Nuremberg, for actions taken in Afghanistan and Iraq in recent years, it might have to convict itself—if only for the sake of consistency. [more]

The Crimes at Abu Ghraib Are Not the Worst

Robert Higgs | Independent Institute: Center on Peace and Liberty | May 11, 2004

"Although no principle stands higher in military doctrine than that the commander bears full responsibility for the actions of his subordinates, neither Bush nor Rumsfeld, the two top military commanders, has the decency to resign — not just on account of the prison disclosures, of course, but also on account of the plethora of actions by which they have abused their constitutional powers and brought everlasting shame upon the United States." [more]

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