Biking With Donald Rumsfeld
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
Rumsfeld's
Last Stand
Last week,
someone slipped
New York Times reporters Michael R. Gordon and David S. Cloud
the secret memo finished by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
just two days before he "resigned." It was the last in a flurry
of famed Rumsfeldian "snowflakes"
that have fluttered down upon the Pentagon these past years. This
one, though, was "submitted" to the White House and clearly meant
for the President's eyes. In it, the Secretary of Defense offered
a veritable laundry list of possible policy adjustments in Iraq,
adding up to what, according to Gordon and Cloud, is both an acknowledgement
of failure and "a major course correction."
Think of this
last zany, only
semi-coherent Rumsfeldian document part of Washington's grim
ongoing silly season over Iraq as Rumsfeld's last stand. In it,
he quite literally cycles (as in bicycles) back to the origins of
the Bush administration's shredded Iraq policy. It is, in a pathetic
sense, that policy stripped bare.
Here are just
three last-stand aspects of the
memo that have been largely or totally overlooked in most reporting:
1. "Begin
modest withdrawals of U.S. and Coalition forces (start ‘taking our
hand off the bicycle seat'), so Iraqis know they have to pull up
their socks, step up and take responsibility for their country."
From the early,
carefree, "stuff
happens" period of the occupation comes the wonderfully patronizing
image embedded in this mixed metaphor of a passage though I suppose
Iraqis perched on bike seats could indeed have crumpled socks. The
image of the Iraqi (child) learning how to ride the bike of democracy
or whatever with the American (parent) looming behind, hand
steadying the seat, was already not just a neocolonial, but a neocon
classic by the time the President used it back in May 2004. (In
fact, in an even more infantilizing fashion, he spoke of taking
the "training
wheels" off the Iraqi bike.)
Many others
in the administration proudly used it as well. Rumsfeld in his rococo
fashion elaborated
wildly on the image in a speech to U.S. troops that same year:
"Getting
Iraq straightened out… was like teaching a kid to ride a bike: ‘They're
learning, and you're running down the street holding on to the back
of the seat. You know that if you take your hand off they could
fall, so you take a finger off and then two fingers, and pretty
soon you're just barely touching it. You can't know when you're
running down the street how many steps you're going to have to take.
We can't know that, but we're off to a good start.'"
And now, long
after kids stopped riding bikes in Iraq and started ending up dead
in ditches, our nearly former Defense Secretary just couldn't help
cycling back to the good old days.
2. "Conduct
an accelerated draw-down of U.S. bases. We have already reduced
from 110 to 55 bases. Plan to get down to 10 to 15 bases by April
2007, and to 5 bases by July 2007."
Talk about
cycling back to the beginning, Rumsfeld's "major course correction"
takes us right to the original basing plans the Pentagon had on
entering Iraq. As the New York Times reported in a front-page
piece on April 19, 2003 (and then no one, including reporters
at the Times, paid much attention to again), the Pentagon
entered Iraq with plans already on the drawing board to build four
major bases well beyond urban areas. These were to be permanent
in all but name and, from them, the Bush administration planned
to nail down the oil heartlands of the planet (while making up for
the loss thanks to Osama bin Laden's efforts of our bases
in Saudi Arabia).
Now, here
we are, over three and a half catastrophic years later, back to
those four bases (built to the tune of multibillions of American
taxpayer dollars) plus one undoubtedly the former Camp Victory,
the huge American base that grew up on the edge of Baghdad International
Airport (as well, of course, as the new, almost finished billion-dollar
U.S. embassy with its "staff" of thousands inside Baghdad's Green
Zone).
3. "Aggressively
beef up the Iraqi MOD [Ministry of Defense] and MOI [Ministry of
the Interior], and other Iraqi ministries critical to the success
of the ISF [Iraqi Security Forces] the Iraqi Ministries of Finance,
Planning, Health, Criminal Justice, Prisons, etc. by reaching
out to U.S. military retirees and Reserve/National Guard volunteers
(i.e., give up on trying to get other USG Departments to do it.)"
This mad suggestion,
hardly noticed by anyone, cycles us back to the attitude with which
Bush & Co. first entered Iraq. Iraqi sovereignty? Who ever heard
of it? Just do what you want. Flood any ministry with a bunch of
U.S. military retirees, all of whom can have their heavy hands on
untold Iraqi bureaucratic bike seats. This is an idea just about
as brilliant as every other one initiated by this administration
in Iraq.
And why do
I have a sneaking suspicion that all those "U.S. military retirees"
and other "volunteers" might just not rush to offer their services
to Iraq's death-squad infiltrated Ministries of the Interior and
Defense? If you biked around that corner without those training
wheels and some body armor I suspect you'd be likely to find
yourself in the Baghdad morgue in no time at all.
In
this way was Rumsfeld's last stand remarkably like his first pedal.
If only, after September 11, 2001, someone had left the training
wheels on when the Bush administration went pedaling off on its
merry, shock-and-awe way.
December
6, 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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