Yogi Catches Up With W
by
Richard Cummings
by Richard Cummings
Yogi:
This has gotta be déjà vu all over again. The news
is you’re pullin’ out troops from Iraq by sending in more of them.
W:
Well, sometimes, more is less.
Yogi:
Casey Stengel said somethin’ like that about the Mets. "We
came up slow, but fast." So what you’re tellin’ us is you’re
pullin’ out fast but slow.
W:
What I’ve been saying, Yog, is that we need to significantly lower
our expectations about what we can achieve in Iraq. Let’s admit
it. We were somewhat unrealistic. We can no longer expect to see
a model new democracy, a self-supporting oil industry, or a society
in which the majority of people are free from serious security or
economic challenges.
Yogi:
There’s a mental health group that says, "Lower you expectations
and your performance will rise." Are you saying that you’re
joinin’ up?
W:
Well, it’s a fact that we can no longer defeat the insurgence with
American forces. All we can do is train and equip enough Iraqi security
forces to take over the fight.
Yogi:
So, it’s mission accomplished, right?
W:
We’re working on an exit strategy that meets our objectives.
Yogi:
McCain says that the day he can land at the airport in Baghdad and
ride in an unarmed car down the highway to the Green Zone is the
day that he’ll start considering withdrawals from Iraq. Is he right?
And how can you win with troops there if everyone says the troops
are the problem? How can you get those Sunni guys to go along if
you plan to keep 50,000 troops there on a permanent basis?
W:
I think you mean on permanent bases. McCain is running for president,
so he has got to talk tough to win. I’m finished running so I can
do what I have to do.
Yogi:
So, you’ll meet with that lady whose standing outside your ranch?
W:
Look, I’ve got to get on with my life.
Yogi:
This sounds a little like cutting and running, if you don’t mind
my saying so.
W:
We’ve got 2006 mid-term elections coming up. Do you want to see
a Democratic congress? How would you like to be bossed around by
Nancy Pilosi?
Yogi:
I’ve been a player and I’ve been a manager. I know what it’s like
to be bossed and to boss. What matters is a winning team. I can’t
really see that you’ve got one. What ever happened to all those
guys you signed up to win the war with? You know, guys like Feith,
Wolfowitz and Perle? I don’t hear anything from them now.
W:
Well, they’ve all got other jobs.
Yogi:
When guys messed up in my time, they got sent down or were traded.
And the manager got fired. I know all about that.
W:
It’s too late to fire me.
Yogi:
Not so fast. You could get impeached.
W:
No problem. My guys control the House and the Senate.
Yogi:
What happens if the other guys take over in 2006? Couldn’t they
impeach you, as sort of payback for what you guys did to Clinton
because he hooked up with some broad? Messin’ up a war you sort
of fibbed to get us into is a helluva lot worse. At least, that’s
my way of lookin’ at it.
W:
I’m not sure I appreciate this. I mean, I used to go to a lot of
Yankee games and actually rooted for them until I bought the Texas
Rangers.
Yogi:
I’m told you did that with other people’s money and that you used
imminent domain to clinch the deal to build a new stadium.
W:
You mean eminent domain.
Yogi:
Well, the whole thing was kinda imminent, wasn’t it?
W:
That was then, this is now.
Yogi:
So you sold out and made a cool thirteen million and never put up
a penny of your own money. Pretty shrewd. Now, a bunch of your friends
are raking in big bucks because of Iraq, like Riley Bechtel. Your
uncle, too. Even Vice President Cheney. Frankly, I think the whole
business stinks.
W:
All this stuff makes people forget about the great economic news.
Yogi:
If you look at that news, it’s kinda of contrived. The money isn’t
worth anything. So, its phony good news. The good news is bad news.
And as for Iraq, what you’re saying is that the bad news is good
news. You won’t catch me saying stuff like that.
W:
I’ve got to get back to the ranch. Laura is waiting for me.
Yogi:
I’ve got news for you. We’re all waiting for you. You know, fish
or cut bait. In or out. As for me, I’m for out. There’s no point
putting bad money after good. And dollars are still money, but not
for long.
W:
Well, it’s still better than being French.
Yogi:
I don’t get your meaning.
W:
The French are chicken.
Yogi:
I like French chicken. They call it poulet roti.
W:
I’ve got to hand it to you, Yogi, you’re a great comedian.
Yogi:
Hey, nothin’ like you.
August
16, 2005
Richard
Cummings [send
him mail] taught international law at the Haile Selassie
I University and before that, was Attorney-Advisor with the Office
of General Counsel of the Near East South Asia region of U.S.A.I.D,
where he was responsible for the legal work pertaining to the aid
program in Israel, Jordan, Pakistan and Afghanistan. He is the author
of a new novel, The
Immortalists, as well as
The Pied Piper Allard K. Lowenstein and the Liberal Dream,
and the comedy, Soccer Moms From Hell. He
holds a Ph.D. in Social and Political Sciences from Cambridge University
and is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
He is writing a new book, The
Road To Baghdad The Money Trail Behind The War In Iraq.
He is a contribution editor for The
American Conservative.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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Cummings Archives
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