John Bolton Is Still Wrong About Iraq
Bolton says the Bush administration's biggest error in Iraq was failing to invade Iran too. That's madness.

Twenty years after the disastrous American invasion of Iraq, one of the war's chief architects says the Bush administration's biggest error was not making the conflict an even bloodier, costlier catastrophe.
Writing in National Review, former Bush and Trump adviser John Bolton defends the decision to topple Saddam Hussein's regime and expresses regret for only one aspect of the decadeslong debacle: that America didn't use the opportunity to destabilize Iran too. Having already invaded Afghanistan and Iraq, Bolton writes, the Bush administration should have tried to go three-for-three and "seek regime change in between, in Iran, before Tehran's own WMD programs neared success."
"Unfortunately," he concludes, "as was the case after expelling Saddam from Kuwait in 1991, the United States stopped too soon."
It takes a special kind of hubris and a serious shortage of respect for the lives of other human beings to sit here, in the year 2023, and argue that the real problem with America's post-9/11 wars is that they didn't go far enough. The war in Iraq was a humanitarian and strategic disaster for the United States. It was "one of the most grievous errors in superpower history," as Brian Doherty wrote in the March issue of Reason. "Mendacious in its beginnings, incompetent in its aftermath, and downright criminal in the death and civilizational wreckage it caused, the Iraq War was a catastrophe America has not yet properly reckoned with."
If Bolton has his way, we never will.
Still, the idea that Iraq could have been used to launch a regime-change effort in Iran is possibly only the second most unhinged argument in Bolton's National Review column. He also hand-waves away any responsibility that America ought to bear for the violence and disorder in post-invasion Iraq.
The failure of the United States to prop up a functional and democratic government in Baghdad, Bolton argues, "is separable, conceptually and functionally, from the invasion decision. The subsequent history, for good or ill, cannot detract from the logic, fundamental necessity, and success of overthrowing Saddam, a threat to American national security since he invaded Kuwait in 1990."
This is a telling argument—one that reveals how Bolton has failed to learn even the most basic of lessons from the past 20 years, and one that ought to disqualify him from advising future administrations. Of course, it matters what comes after the decision to invade. Of course, any policy can be made to look like a success if you only focus on the positives—as Bolton does, praising the rapid victory of the U.S. military—while ignoring everything else.
Even if the promise of a successful, prosperous, democratic post-Saddam Iraq hadn't been comprehensively tied up in the arguments for launching the war in the first place, no one should want to live in a world where great powers can violate national sovereignty with impunity, then decline to take responsibility for the mess they've made. This is a toddler's view of reality.
One might suspect that Bolton imagines a world where actions should not have consequences because he's been living in exactly that type of world for the past two decades. Somehow, he's retained his Washington status as a foreign policy expert, media commentator, and presidential advisor despite having been so horrifically wrong about Iraq.
But the rest of America—particularly younger generations—is unlikely to be fooled again. "After watching the failures of America's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, young Americans appear to be less supportive of military solutions for international challenges, especially compared to older generations," notes a 2021 report by the Eurasia Group Foundation, a geopolitics-focused think tank.
Writing at Responsible Statecraft—a publication of the Quincy Institute for Public Policy, a noninterventionist think tank—Blaise Malley points to a 2019 poll from the Center for American Progress that found members of Gen Z to be more likely than any other generation to agree with the statement that "The wars in the Middle East and Afghanistan were a waste of time, lives, and taxpayer money, and they did nothing to make us safer at home."
Good. But Bolton's ongoing influence in Republican politics means he (or someone like him) could easily end up inside the next GOP presidential administration, where he could once again push the country toward armed conflict with Iran—as he reportedly did during a brief stint in the Trump administration—or toward more regime-change efforts like the coups he's admitted he helped plot.
And that's the real reason why Bolton's National Review essay matters: because it reveals that he's refused to learn anything from the past 20 years and failed to gain an ounce of humility regarding America's ability to affect regime change with impunity—and to deal with what comes after the bombs stop falling.
Bolton's selective historical analysis and wish casting for even more war put him wildly out of touch with most Americans who lived through the past 20 years. Unfortunately, he's still dangerous—and still very, very wrong.
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And yet, Boehm, you reluctantly voted for Biden. The same Biden who voted for the Iraq War, and the same Biden who is doing much the same thing in Ukraine.
Hypocrite.
Why is it that if someone says to a Trump voter "You voted for him so you support everything he says and does" the response is indignation, but when you say the same about a Biden voter it's a statement of fact?
Oh yeah. You're a hypocrite.
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Remember when Bolton was mad at Trump, and Sarcasmic, along with White Mike, Jeff and Pluggo were treating the vile old warpig like a voice of reason and sanity?
And yet he has the absolute fucking gall to call ITL a hypocrite.
What a piece of shit you are, Sarcasmic.
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He’s a huge, gutless coward too. Threatened to come kick my ass back in February. I’ve repeatedly offered to take him up on it, but he hides like the bitch that he is
There's no question the Iraq war was a complete and total disaster in every single way, but you're one of the biggest piece of shit dishonest hypocrites here, Mingo-Mango-Mongo. You openly shill for pouring hundreds of billions into the Ukraine sinkhole.
You're all for pointless wars so long as they're democrat wars, so stop projecting your own flaws onto others, you freaky-deaky dyed-hair leftie cunt.
"The same Biden who voted for the Iraq War, and the same Biden who is doing much the same thing in Ukraine."
That's a stretch.
I enjoy reminding Koch-funded #LibertariansForBiden who they voted for as much as anyone. But Ukraine is quite different from Iraq until Biden sends American soldiers to die there. Which I don't think his handlers are dumb enough to let him do.
NO BLOOD FOR BORSCHT!
Mmmm.... Beet stew....
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/02/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html
More troops headed to Europe. Don't hold out hope.
You can't fix stupid - Ron White
you could have stopped the headline at "Bolton is still wrong"
Yep, the guy was a menace. Now he's just another pig at the trough.
He’s also 74 years old. He isn’t ever going to be anything again except for a board member at some neocon think tank, and an occasional talking head on some news analysis show.
His day is over.
No they needed to include something that was actual news. Bolton still being wrong is like water still being wet. Important to know, but not exactly startling.
This goes to the very heart of the definition of national interests, vital interests or existential threats. I totally reject the notion that America has ANY vital interests anywhere in the middle east and am highly skeptical that America has any vital interests in the rest of the world as it now stands or at any time in the last fifty years. There are no nations anywhere in the world with the capacity to militarily attack and successfully invade the United States of America, and even Russia has turned out to be a paper tiger that was simply a monster under the bed for our politicians to use for the last sixty years to justify the rest of their nonsense. If Vladimir Putin is not seriously worried about the potency of his nuclear arsenal by now, he’s crazier than I thought! “Vital national interests” are an undefined, vague and nebulous excuse to intervene overseas when they can’t find any better excuse.
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The only good thing I can say about Bolton is that he is consistent, and wrong.
So, just ask yourself "What would Bolton do?", and then do the opposite?
John Bolton Is Still Wrong About Iraq
If John Bolton is wrong, he don't wanna be right.
The problem is it's hardly like Bolton is some sort of outlier. Both the Republicans and the Democrats (Blinken, Nuland, etc.) are rife with the sorts of sociopaths who want these wars until the Treasury is emptied and the graveyard full.
They used to pretend that the US had vital national ECONOMIC interests that were being threatened wherever they wanted to interfere. When people started to wonder why we would fail as a nation without trade in whatever particular region the threat du jour was alleged, they realized that they had to do more to scare Americans into caring, fighting and dying. America has no shortage of vital natural resources or production capacity to survive totally surrounded by enemies. I feel badly for the poor politicians! It's getting harder and harder to find convincing arguments to terrify the people.
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The part that really bothers me is that the whole lot of them have become wildly interventionist. Here's a list of proposed restrictions on U.S. military intervention:
Sounds pretty restrictive, huh? So, who came up with it? Some hippy peacenik? Some archaic Ron Paul-style isolationist? Nope. This is the Weinberger Doctrine. After Caspar Weinberger, Ronald Reagan's Defense Secretary. Not that they always followed it. But, even the idea would be ridiculed today.
This is exactly what we should be doing. Cap Weinberger was right.
I'm thinking we should consider reviving the Monroe Doctrine.
Marilyn?
I can get behind that. And in front. On top, under...
Yes, resurrect her, and Weinberger while we’re at it.
That's so last century. Now government zealots have more pure motives: saving democracy itself. That justifies extreme policies at home and limitless overseas adventures.
I'll say this much for the fucker Bolton: unlike Mingo-Mango-Mongo (aka sarcasmic) and the rest of the fake libertarian shitbags of Reason, he's a consistent sociopath. He genuinely loves war regardless of who controls congress and/or the White House, and he's proud of it!
Mingo-Mango-Mongo (aka sarcasmic) and the fake libertarian shitbags of Reason on the other hand pretend that they hate war when it's a republican war, but are its biggest cheerleaders when it's an Obama war or a Biden war.
Totally agree. Perhaps we should put Bolton’s ugly mug on the front line if we do go to war and see if that wipes that smug, condescending look off of his face. I still find it hard to believe that Trump actually had this self-promoting, war-mongering POS in his administration. While I liked Trumps stated policies, he made very poor choices for several of his key administration posts.
I agree with Bolton that the invasion and its aftermath were separable. Bush could have listened to the people who were telling him that you couldn't just chop off the head, you needed to have a plan to take run the country and keep its institutions from falling apart. He chose to listen to the people who said don't worry, Iraq will keep functioning without much effort and we don't need those Ba'ath party members.
That doesn't mean he's right about Iran.
We had no right to invade a sovereign country and topple/replace the government of Iraq with our own stooge, killing thousands of civilians in the process. You can’t call Putin a war criminal without calling Bush the same.
It’s not nearly the same situation. Ukraine was not sanctioned after invading a neighbor years earlier, like when Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait.
Just never-mind the 9/11 attack. /s
wonder if he rides a bomb in his dreams.
Yee-ha!
kind of like fauci saying his only mistake was not making the covid restrictions more stringent
Or the gain-of-function stronger.
But is he wrong about the oatmeal?
Bolton has had one position in politics his whole career, we need to start a war.
As long as people continue to listen to that mentay I'll fool and give voice to his insanity America will continue to deteriorate. By writing articles you assume that draft dodger has something relevant to contribute.
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“But Bolton’s ongoing influence in Republican politics means he (or someone like him) could easily end up inside the next GOP presidential administration, where he could once again push the country toward armed conflict with Iran—as he reportedly did during a brief stint in the Trump administration—or toward more regime-change efforts like the coups he’s admitted he helped plot.”
Republicans Bad……… the Trump administration maybe, might-a, could’ve been bad. Thus a new GOP will be bad. because, because, because off in lala land we dream up BS that maybe, might-a, could be to play the “Hey look! A Unicorn over there” game in a USA bordering on Civil War, a forgotten Constitution, and an economy falling to pieces.
Give it a break Nazi-leftards. It’s amazing Reason can keep shoveling 9 out of 10 stories on Republicans while compulsively dismissing the disasters already taking shape from the Democrat Trifecta.
Is someone getting their Nazi-Gov media grants or what?
It's not that far-fetched an opinion. Many say we should have finished off Saddam during Gulf War I instead of leaving the Kurds high & dry.
Iraq is a solid ally today. Imagine an Iran with a friendly government again rather than one hell bent on pursuing nuclear weapons?
Yes it's an insanely far-fetched opinion. Iraq cost $2T, Iran would have cost more, not to mention the additional hundreds of thousands of dead, and for what? So a nuclear weapons program the CIA said had already ended could be stopped?