Will Daddy's Boys Extend the War?
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
No Exit?:
What
It Means to "Salvage U.S. Prestige" in Iraq
Things are
always complicated. In the
Washington Post, for instance, James Mann, author of
Rise
of the Vulcans recently suggested that it was far "too simplistic"
to claim "the appointment of Robert M. Gates to replace Donald Rumsfeld
[represents] the triumph of Bush the Father's administration over
Bush the Son's."
Still, I prefer
the analysis of Washington Post reporter (and author of Fiasco)
Thomas Ricks. When asked
by the Post's media columnist Howard Kurtz whether a Newsweek
headline, "Father knows best," was just "an easy, cheap Oedipal
way for the press to characterize what's going on," Ricks replied:
"Well, just because it's easy and cheap doesn't mean it's wrong."
At a moment
when every version of the dramatic arrival of James A. Baker III
and Robert Gates on the scene and the scuttling of Rumsfeld's
Titanic is at least suspect, it's still worth considering
the bare bones of what can be seen and known and then asking what
we have.
Sooner or
later, failure has a way of stripping most of us of our dreams and
pretensions. So let's start with a tiny history of failure. George
W. Bush's life trajectory of failing upward has had a rhythm to
it and a rubric, "crony
capitalism." Daddy's friends and contacts helped him into and
after he failed out of the oil business, into and out of the
baseball business, into and now, it seems, out of the failed game
of global politics. His is, as the
Boston Globe's Michael Kranish and John Aloysius Farrell put
it back in 2002, "the story of a man who struck out numerous times
before being bailed out by big hitters who often were family members,
friends, or supporters of his father."
It's appropriate,
then, that the man who bailed him out in Florida when he essentially
lost the presidency in 2000, Bush
family consigliere James A. Baker III, would reappear six years
later, in the wake of another failed election, to bail him out again
now that he's screwed up the oil heartlands of the planet. Daddy
we're talking here about former President George H.W. Bush has
three adopted boys: His former National Security Advisor (and alter
ego) Brent Scowcroft, who went
into opposition to the younger Bush's Iraq policy even before
the invasion of 2003 and now lurks quietly in the wings; his former
CIA Director Robert Gates; and Baker.
Like Daddy,
Gates was deeply involved in, but never indicted for his
dealings in the scurrilous Iran-Contra affair; was later involved
in the tilt toward and arming of Saddam's Iraq against Khomeini's
Iran, pioneered fertile territory in the late 1980s in terms of
manipulating intelligence in the debate over the nature of Gorbachev's
Soviet Union, had a hand in the first Gulf War, and most recently
held the presidency of Texas A&M, where he was the keeper of the
flame for Daddy's
library. Could you ask for a better insider CV for taking over
the Pentagon from one of Bush elder's rivals in the Gerald Ford
era, Donald Rumsfeld.
We don't know
how all this happened, but a little speculation never hurt anyone.
Congress mandated
the Iraq Study Group (ISG) to come up with some new recommendations
for Iraq policy last March. Baker and co-chair Lee Hamilton began
work in April. Iraq has been in an ever more horrific and bloodthirsty
spiral downward ever since. Yet the ISG has still delivered nothing
but promises of recommendations which Baker and others continue
to swear will be no "magic"
or "silver" bullet sometime in December or even January. Back
in March, Baker insisted on getting the President, who initially
seemed reluctant, to sign on personally. But the question is: What
happened over the last 8 months as Iraq boiled? I think we have
to assume and a cover piece in Time
seems to confirm this that Baker, a distinctly hard-nosed guy,
never intended to present a bunch of suggestions that Donald Rumsfeld
could simply shoot out of the skies and so was stalling until his
departure. (Time quotes a "Gates aide" as saying, "Baker
wasn't going to let his report come out, so that Rummy could stomp
all over it.")
Assumedly,
he knew that, if his group took long enough, Rumsfeld would be gone
and a secretary of defense more to his liking in place. Hence, the
distant date for delivering "solutions." It's been, in essence,
a stall. Everyone involved has claimed, of course, that Father Bush
had nothing directly to do with all this and that Baker didn't even
know, until the last second, that Rumsfeld was about to fall like
a brick. I'd be surprised if that story lasted out the month.
In fact, what
we're seeing undoubtedly adds up to something more than Iraq policy
recommendations possibly even a genuine
purge of most of the remaining neocons and their allies (who
are also in the process of, as ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern has written,
eating
their own). At the Pentagon, rumor has it, the leftover neocons,
many of them allies of Vice President Cheney, are just waiting for
their pink slips when Gates steps aboard. All this seems aimed at
leaving the Vice President's office increasingly
isolated and Cheney himself sidelined.
Someday, when
the full story is in, we're bound to be riveted. After all, Baker
has managed in these months to gather in the wings something like
an alternative State Department/National Security Council/CIA-in-waiting
in the shell of the Iraq Study Group, which is filled with old movers
and shakers going back to the Reagan administration. (He's even
begun to conduct something akin to his own foreign policy, meeting
with the Syrian foreign minister and Iran's ambassador to the UN,
both no-nos for this administration.) The ten key ISG members, in
fact, are largely not military strategists or geopolitical thinkers
of a sort who might be expected to offer Iraq solutions. They are
instead a who's who of establishmentarianism, extending back to
the Reagan era.
Is this a
major shift in Washington? You bet. How big remains to be seen.
But here's the real question: Can the new crowd even if the President
bows down to Daddy's Boys, which is hardly a given get us out
of Iraq? Do they even want to? At a moment of such flux, with a
new Democratic Congress and growing public pressure for a genuine
Iraq exit strategy, what kind of gates will the Gates nomination
actually open?
When Is
an "Exit" Not the Way Out?
Let's start
with one sure side effect of the Gates nomination and the extended
delivery schedule of the Iraq Study Group. It buys time from election-driven
pressure for whatever administration is in formation. We now have
to wait for the Gates confirmation hearings; the ISG recommendations
(and possibly those from an alternate
White House version of the same); endless consideration of them;
and, barring an unlikely flat turn-down from an increasingly cornered
administration, the time to implement those policies and check out
the results (which are guaranteed to be deeply disappointing, if
not disastrous). Six months to a year could easily pass before it
becomes obvious to Americans that we're not really heading out those
Iraqi gates.
If you happen
to have lived through the Vietnam era, then think of this as the
beginning of the season of non-withdrawal withdrawal gestures. The
key word right now is "redeployment," something Senator
Carl Levin, who will soon take over the Armed Services Committee,
is pushing hard. His modest drawdown plan, however, is not even
meant to begin for another four to six months and offers no timetable
or any particular end in sight. Levin does, however, make it clear
that redeployment and departure are two different creatures. In
the form of some kind of military advisory group (not to speak of
our massive new embassy in the heart of Baghdad and a few of the
massive bases we've built), he expects us to be in Iraq into the
distant future.
We don't,
of course, know exactly what plan the Iraq Study Group will offer,
but all reports on its deliberations suggest that, while public
expectations are soaring, the actual recommendations "may sound
familiar." Actually, they may sound that way because the proposals
the group seems to be considering are indeed remarkably familiar.
These range from a bulking
up of U.S. troop strength by 10,00040,000 more soldiers
to a far more likely scenario described by Neil King Jr., Yochi
Dreazen, and Greg Jaffe in the Wall Street Journal just two
days after the election. This would involve a long-term drawdown
of American forces to the 50,000 level still 20,000 more than
Rumsfeld and pals hoped to leave in-country only months after the
taking of Baghdad. Assumedly, these would largely be pulled back
into those permanent bases we've built.
"The
new defense secretary is more likely to oversee a shift of the U.S.
effort away from providing security in urban areas such as Baghdad
to a more advisory role
In such a scenario, the Pentagon would
turn big U.S. units into quick reaction forces to bail out Iraqi
soldiers and advisers who get overrun. Teams of American advisers
who live and work with Iraqi units would increase in number."
Recently,
Julian Borger of the
British Guardian summed up what's known this way: "[The
ISG] is also looking at various types of troop deployment. Most
probably it will suggest pulling US forces out of the urban patrolling
that causes most of the casualties and regrouping in bases in Iraq
or in neighbouring countries."
Along with
this would go various forms of pressure on the Iraqi government
to step up ("benchmarks," but not perhaps the dreaded "timetable"
for withdrawal that the President opposes so vigorously). In addition,
a regional conference of neighboring states, the Europeans, and
the U.S. would be convened whose task would evidently be to draft
Iran and Syria into the process of "stabilizing" Iraq. (Having played
a high-stakes game of chicken with the Bush administration based
on an assessment of American power and seemingly won, the Iranians,
in particular, are unlikely to settle now for what little the Bush
administration might offer in return for their help.)
Yes, the presidential
idea of "victory" or "success" will be nowhere in sight, nor will
an emphasis on fostering "democracy" in Iraq and further coup
rumors may proliferate. But all of this, however palatable it may
seem in Washington, will only add up to a series of tactical, not
strategic readjustments most of which (minus that conference)
have already been tried in Iraq and have only been so many benchmarks
on the road to catastrophe.
Before the
election, an upsurge in violence in Iraq was compared to the Tet
Offensive "turning point" moment in Vietnam. In fact, the last weeks
bear no particular relationship to that nationwide Vietnamese campaign
that saw bitter fighting all over the country, even inside the American
embassy compound in Saigon, the South Vietnamese capital. But let's
remember another, more telling aspect of Tet. As a "turning point"
in that conflict, it was still followed by another seven years of
war. Almost as many Americans, and probably more Vietnamese, died
in the period after Tet as before.
In the post-Tet
period, we had to live through a Senator-Levin-style near complete
withdrawal of American ground troops from Vietnam under the pressure
of a disintegrating army and rising antiwar feeling at home, only
to see the use of U.S. air power escalate dramatically to fill the
power gap. Expect some modified, scaled-down version of this Nixon-era
"Vietnamization" program in Iraq. As early as November 2005, Nixon's
Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, who claims full credit for the
strategy (and still thinks it was a successful way to win the Vietnam
War in the face of increasing public opposition at home), proposed
a similar Iraqification plan in Foreign
Affairs magazine. Now, its moment may be arriving.
Like almost
all strategies floating around Washington at the moment, this is
but another way to try to hang on to some truncated but permanent
imperial presence at the heart of the oil lands of the planet
and as such it is doomed to fail. Unfortunately, to make much sense
of what an Iraqification policy might actually mean, you need to
be able to assess two key aspects of our Iraqi venture that the
mainstream media essentially have not cared to cover.
Permanent
Facts on the Ground
As the New
York Times revealed in a front-page piece by Thom Shanker
and Eric Schmitt on April 19, 2003, just after Baghdad fell, the
Pentagon arrived in the Iraqi capital with plans already on the
drawing board to build four massive military bases (that no official,
then or now, will ever call "permanent"). Today, according to our
former Secretary of Defense, we have 55 bases of every size in Iraq
(down from over 100); five or six of these, including Balad Airbase,
north of Baghdad, the huge base first named Camp Victory adjacent
to Baghdad International Airport, and al-Asad
Airbase in western Anbar province, are enormous big enough
to be reasonable-sized American towns with multiple bus routes,
neighborhoods, a range of fast-food restaurants, multiple PX's,
pools, mini-golf courses and the like.
Though among
the safest places in Iraq for American reporters, these bases have,
with rare exceptions, gone completely
undescribed and undiscussed in our press (or on the television
news). From an
engineering journal, we know that before the end of 2003, several
billion dollars had already been sunk into them. We know that in
early 2006, the major ones, already mega-structures, were still
being built up into a state of advanced permanency. Balad,
for instance, already handled the levels of daily air traffic you
would normally see at Chicago's ultra-busy O'Hare and in February
its facilities were still being ramped up. We know, from the reliable
Ed Harriman, in the latest of his devastating accounts of corruption
in Iraq in the
London Review of Books, that, as you read, the four mega-bases
always imagined as our permanent jumping-off spots in what Bush
administration officials once liked to call "the arc of instability"
were still undergoing improvement.
Without taking
the fate of those monstrous, always-meant-to-be-permanent bases
into account and they are, after all, just about the only uniformly
successfully construction projects
in that country no American plans for Iraq, whatever label they
go by, will make much sense. And yet months go by without any reporting
on them appearing. In fact, these last months have gone by
with only a single peep (that I've found) from any mainstream publication
on the subject.
The sole bit
of base news I've noticed anywhere made an obscure mid-October appearance
in a Turkish
paper, which reported that the U.S. was now building a "military
airport" in Kurdistan. A few days later, a UPI report picked up
by the
Washington Times had this: "Following hints U.S. troops may
remain in Iraq for years, the United States is reportedly building
a massive military base at Arbil, in Kurdish northern Iraq."
Kurdistan
has always been a logical fallback position for U.S. forces "withdrawing"
from a failed Iraq. But so far nothing more substantial has been
written on the subject.
There is,
however, another symbol of American "permanency" in Iraq that has
gotten just slightly more attention in the U.S. press in recent
months the new
U.S. embassy now going up inside Baghdad's well-fortified Green
Zone and nicknamed by Baghdadis (in a sly reference to Saddam Hussein's
enormous, self-important edifices) "George W's Palace." It's almost
the size of Vatican City, will have its own apartment buildings
(six of them) for its bulked-up "staff" of literally thousands and
its own electricity, well-water, and waste-treatment facilities
to guarantee "100 percent independence from city utilities," not
to speak of a "swimming pool, gym, commissary, food court and American
Club, all housed in a recreation building" and it's own anti-missile
system. Ed Harriman tells us that it's a billion dollar-plus project
and unlike just about every other construction project in the
country, it's going up efficiently and on schedule. It will be the
most imperial embassy on the planet, not exactly the perfect signal
of a sovereign Iraqi future.
Again, few
have had much to say about the embassy project here, a rare exception
being an August Dallas Morning News editorial, "Fortress
America: New Embassy Sends Wrong Message to Iraqis," that denounced
the project: "America certainly needs a decent, well-defended embassy
in Baghdad. But not as much as ordinary Iraqis need electricity
and water. That our government doesn't seem to understand that reality
could explain a lot about why the U.S. mission is in such trouble."
Of course,
as we learned in Vietnam, even the most permanent facilities can
turn out to be impermanent indeed and even the best defended imperial
embassy can, in the end, prove little more than a handy spot for
planning an evacuation. But if the Iraq Study Group doesn't directly
confront these facts-on-the-ground (as it surely won't), whatever
acceptable compromises it may forge in Washington between an embedded
administration and a new Congress, things will only go from truly
bad to distinctly worse in Iraq.
The Uncovered
War
Here's another
mystery of Iraq (and Afghani) coverage: The essential American way
of war air power has long been completely MIA, except at websites
like this one. There has been not a single mainstream piece of any
significance on the air war these last years, with the single exception
of journalist Seymour Hersh's remarkable December 2005 report, "Up
in the Air," in the
New Yorker. ("A key element of the drawdown plans, not
mentioned in the President's public statements, is that the departing
American troops will be replaced by American airpower. Quick, deadly
strikes by U.S. warplanes are seen as a way to improve dramatically
the combat capability of even the weakest Iraqi combat units.")
It is, of course, an irony that the only American reporter to look
up and notice all those planes, helicopters, and drones overhead
has never been to Iraq.
Such modest
coverage of the air war in Iraq as exists in our press generally
comes in the form of infrequent paragraphs buried in wire service
round-ups as in a November 14th Associated Press piece headlined,
"U.S. General Confronts Iraqi Leader on Security":
"On
Monday night, U.S. forces raided the homes of some Sadr followers,
and U.S. jets fired rockets on Shula, their northwest Baghdad neighborhood,
residents said. Police said five residents were killed, although
a senior Sadr aide put the death toll at nine. The U.S. military
said it had no comment.
This incident
assumedly took place somewhere in the vast Baghdad slum of Sadr
city. In other words, we're talking about American planes regularly
sending rockets or bombs into relatively heavily populated urban
areas. All you have to do is imagine such a thing happening in an
American city to grasp the barbarism involved. And yet, over these
years in which such targeting has been commonplace and, in larger
campaigns, parts of cities like Najaf and Falluja have been destroyed
from the air, hardly a single reporter has gone to an air base like
Balad and simply spent time with American pilots.
Not surprisingly,
this remains a non-issue in this country. How could Americans react,
when there's no news to react to, when there's next to no information
to be had which doesn't mean that information on our ongoing air
campaigns is unavailable. In fact, the Air Force is proud as punch
of the job it's doing; so any reporter, not to speak of any citizen,
can go to the Air Force website
and look at daily reports of air missions over both Iraq and Afghanistan.
The report
of November 15th, for instance, offers the following:
"In
Iraq, U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18s conducted a strike against anti-Iraqi
forces near Ramadi. The F/A-18s expended guided bomb unit-31s on
enemy targets. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons provided close-air
support to troops in contact with anti-Iraqi forces near Forward
Operating Base McHenry and Baqubah. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles
provided close-air support to troops in contact with anti-Iraqi
forces near Baghdad.
"In total,
coalition aircraft flew 32 close air support missions for Operation
Iraqi Freedom. These missions included support to coalition troops,
infrastructure protection, reconstruction activities and operations
to deter and disrupt terrorist activities."
This was a
pretty typical day's work in recent months; there were 34 strikes
on November
14th, 32 on the
13th, and 35 on the
12th and note that each of the strikes mentioned was "near"
a major city. These reports can be hard to parse, but they certainly
give a sense, day by day, that the air war in Iraq is no less ongoing
for being unreported.
Here's the
crucial thing: American troop levels simply cannot be slowly drawn-down
in Iraq without as in Vietnam some increase in the use of air
power. And yet, you can look far and wide and find no indication
of any public discussion of this at the White House, in Congress,
or in what we know of the deliberations of the Iraq Study Group.
And yet, as the Iraqi chaos and strife grows while the American
public increasingly backs off, air power will be one answer. You
can count on that. And air power especially in or "near" cities
simply means civilian carnage. It will be called "collateral damage"
(if anyone bothers to call it anything at all), but make no mistake
it will be at the heart of any new strategy that calls for "redeployment"
but does not mean to get us out of Iraq.
"A True
Disaster for the Iraqi People"
On ABC's Sunday
political talk show, "This Week," White House Chief of Staff Josh
Bolten had this to say: "I don't think we're going to be receptive
to the notion there's a fixed timetable at which we automatically
pull out, because that could be a true disaster for the Iraqi people."
With hundreds
of thousands of dead and more following daily, it makes you wonder
exactly what it's been so far for the Iraqi people, as Bolten sees
it. But perhaps he's right; perhaps the disaster behind us will
be nothing compared to the disaster ahead, especially if Daddy's
Boys, the Iraq Study Group, other Democratic and Republican movers
and shakers, and all those generals and former generals floating
around our world decide that this isn't the moment to rediscover
a Colin Powell-style "exit strategy," but "one
last chance" to succeed by any definition in Iraq. Then, god
help us and the Iraqis. Sooner or later, we'll undoubtedly be
gone from a land so determinedly hostile to being occupied by us,
but that end moment could still be a long, long time in coming.
Here, for
instance, is Robert
Gates' thinking eighteen months ago in a seminar at the Panetta
Institute at California State University in Monterey on "phased
troop withdrawals" from Iraq:
"But
Mr. Gates qualified his comments, noting it sometimes takes time
to accomplish your goals. Sixty years after the end of the Second
World War, there are still American troops in Germany,' he noted.
We've had troops in Korea for over 50 years. The British have had
troops in Cyprus for 40 years
If you want to change history, you
have to be prepared to stay as long as it takes to do the job."
So hold onto
your hats. Tragedy and more tragedy seems almost guaranteed, and
the Pentagon has just submitted to Congress a staggering
$160 billion supplemental appropriation request in order to
continue its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
American
Dignity
So far, what
have the American invasion and occupation of Iraq led to other
than a staggering bloodbath, killing fields galore, and a secret
landscape of detention centers and torture chambers? As a start,
an already badly battered Iraqi economy was turned into a looting
ground for Bush administration crony corporations and thoroughly
wrecked. (Tall
Afar, for instance, is considered an American "success" story
when it comes to security, though part of the city is now a "ghost
town" of rubble and unemployment there is estimated at almost 70%.)
The Iraqi education system is in tatters; the medical
system in ruins; basic social and urban services almost undeliverable;
oil production barely up to pathetic prewar levels (if present-day
figures are even real, which is in doubt); the position of women
now disastrous; child malnutrition on the rise; and well over a
million Iraqis
have fled their homes in a country of only 26 million people.
In addition,
national sovereignty has been destroyed;
the national police system is on its last legs, its ranks well-stocked
with men loyal to various murderous Shiite militias; a Sunni insurgency
rages ever more violently; a Kurdish form of independence seems
ever more likely (though inconceivable to neighboring states); corruption
is rampant; and a central government, whose sway doesn't reach most
streets in its capital, is now considered "the
least accountable and least transparent regime in the Middle
East." (The Interior Ministry alone "reportedly employs at least
a thousand ghost employees, whose wages amount to more than $1 million
a month.")
Throw in the
fact that the Iraqi Army the Bush administration has been so intent
on "standing up" is largely a Shiite one (as the fine Knight-Ridder
reporter Tom
Lasseter discovered back in October 2005 and New
York Times correspondent Richard A. Oppel found only last
week in Diyala Province, north of Baghdad). So if the plan is to
bulk it up further to create a modicum of "stability" before departure,
forget it. By its nature, such a training program, even if successful,
is but a plan to generate an even more murderous civil war.
Now, add in
endless months or years of non-withdrawal withdrawal plans, keep
in mind the likelihood that American air power will be ratcheted
up, and you have a formula for further carnage, collapses and disintegrations
of every sort, coups, assassinations, civil war, and god knows what
else.
In the Vietnam
era, President Richard M. Nixon went on a well-armed, years-long
hunt for something he called "peace with honor." Today, the catchword
is finding an "exit strategy" that can "salvage U.S. prestige."
What we want, it seems, is peace with "dignity." In Vietnam, there
was no honor left, only horror. There is no American dignity to
be found in Iraq either, only horror. In a Washington of suddenly
lowered expectations, dignity is defined as hanging in there until
an Iraqi government that can't even control its own Interior Ministry
or the police in the capital gains "stability," until the Sunni
insurgency becomes a mild irritation, and until that American embassy,
that eighth wonder of the world of security and comfort, becomes
an eye-catching landmark on the capital's skyline.
Imagine. That's
all we want. That's our dignity. And for that dignity and the imagined
imperial stability of the world, our top movers and shakers will
proceed to monkey around for months creating and implementing plans
that will only ensure further catastrophe (which, in turn, will
but breed more rage, more terrorism that spreads
disaster to the Middle East and actually lessens American power
around the world).
Now,
the dreamers, the greatest gamblers in our history, are departing
official Washington and the "realists" have hit the corridors of
power that they always thought they owned. It wouldn't hurt if they
opened their eyes. Even imperial defenders should face reality.
Someday, it's something we'll all have to do. In the meantime, call
in the Hellfire-missile-armed Predator drones.
November
17, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion.
Copyright
© 2006 Tom Engelhardt
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