Cakewalk Crowd Abandons Bush
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
Victory has
a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan, said a rueful John
F. Kennedy after the Bay of Pigs. George W. Bush knows today whereof
his predecessor spoke.
For as
he prepares to "surge" 20,000 more U.S. troops into a war even he
concedes we "are not winning," his erstwhile acolytes have begun
to abandon him to salvage their own tattered reputations.
Case in
point, the neoconservatives. As the Iraq war heads into its fifth
year, more than half a dozen have confessed to Vanity Fair's
David Rose their abject despair over how the Bushites mismanaged
the war that they, the "Vulcans," so brilliantly conceived.
Surveying
what appears an impending disaster for Iraq and U.S. foreign policy,
the neocons have advanced a new theme. The idea of launching an
unprovoked war of liberation, for which they had beaten the drums
for half a decade before 9-11, remains a lovely concept. It was
Bushite incompetence that fouled it up.
"The policy
can be absolutely right, and noble, beneficial, but if you can't
execute it, it's useless, just useless," wails Ken Adelman, who
had famously predicted in The Washington Post that "liberating
Iraq would be a cakewalk."
Bush's
team of Powell, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice, says Adelman, "turned
out to be among the most incompetent teams in the postwar era. Not
only did each of them, individually, have enormous flaws, but together
they were deadly, dysfunctional." Their incompetence, he adds, "means
that most everything we ever stood for ... lies in ruins."
Professor
Eliot Cohen of Johns Hopkins, whose book on war leaders Bush used
to carry about, says his mistake was in not knowing "how incredibly
incompetent" the Bush team would be.
Richard
Perle is sickened by the consequences of the war he and his comrades
so ardently championed. "The levels of brutality ... are truly horrifying,
and, I have to say, I underestimated the depravity."
Calling
the Bush policy process a "disaster," Perle blames Bush himself:
"At the end of the day, you have to hold the president responsible.
... I don't think he realizes the extent of the opposition within
his own administration, and the disloyalty."
This is
the second fallback position of the War Party. Not only incompetence,
but treachery made a nightmare of their vision.
Über-hawk
Frank Gaffney also hits hard the theme of sabotage and disloyalty:
"This president has tolerated, and the people around him have tolerated,
active, ongoing, palpable insubordination and skullduggery that
translates into subversion of his policies. ... He doesn't in fact
seem to be a man of principle who's steadfastly pursuing what he
thinks is the right course."
David Frum,
the cashiered White House speechwriter who co-authored the "axis-of-evil"
phrase, faults the president. While he provided the words, says
Frum, Bush "just did not absorb the ideas. And that is the root
of maybe everything."
Where Frum,
four years ago, accused antiwar conservatives of being "unpatriotic"
haters of America and President Bush, he is now saying that that
same president either lacked the I.Q. to realize what he was saying
or lacked a belief and commitment to follow through.
As Rose
writes, this is "the most damning assessment of all." Moreover,
it is an indictment of Bush's judgment that he could clasp so many
such vipers to his bosom.
Rose describes
James Woolsey, the ex-CIA director who was ubiquitous on the op-ed
pages and national TV making the case for war, as "aghast at what
he sees as profound American errors that have ignored the lessons
learned so painfully, 40 years ago" in Vietnam.
Conspicuous
by its absence from disparagements of the president by these deserters
from his camp and cause is any sense that they were themselves wrong.
That they, who accuse everyone else of cutting and running, are
themselves cutting and running. That they are themselves but a typical
cluster of think-tank incompetents.
No neocon
concedes that the very idea itself of launching an unprovoked war
against a country in the heart of the Arab world one that had
not attacked us, did not threaten us and did not want war with us
might not be wildly welcomed by the "liberated." No neocon has
yet conceded that Bismarck may have been right when he warned, "Preventive
war is like committing suicide out of fear of death."
"Huge
mistakes were made," says Perle, "and I want to be very clear on
this: They were not made by neoconservatives. ... I'm getting damn
tired of being described as an architect of the war."
Almost
all the neoconservatives have now departed the seats of power in
the Bush administration and retreated to their sinecures at Washington
think tanks, to plot the next war on Iran.
Meanwhile,
brave young Americans, the true idealists and the casualties of
the neocons' war, come home in caskets, 20 a week, to Dover and,
at Walter Reed, learn to walk again on steel legs.
January
5, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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