Bush's Wizard-of-Oz Iraq Plan
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Robert Dreyfuss
by Tom Engelhardt and
Robert Dreyfuss
DIGG THIS
Every now and
then, you have to take a lesson or two from history. In the case
of George Bush's Iraq, here's one: No matter what the President
announces in his "new way forward" speech on Iraq next week
including belated calls for "sacrifice"
from the
man whose answer to 9/11 was to urge Americans to surge into
Disney
World it won't work. Nothing our President suggests in
relation to Iraq, in fact, will have a ghost of a chance of success.
Worse than that, whatever it turns out to be, it is essentially
guaranteed to make
matters worse.
Repetition,
after all, is most of what knowledge adds up to, and the Bush administration
has been repetitively consistent in its Iraqi and larger
Middle Eastern policies. Whatever it touches (or perhaps
the better word would be "smashes") turns to dross. Iraq is now
dross and Saddam Hussein was such a remarkably hard act to
follow badly that this is no small accomplishment.
A striking
but largely unexplored aspect of Saddam
Hussein's execution is illustrative. His trial was basically
run
out of the U.S. embassy in Baghdad; Saddam was held at Camp Cropper,
the U.S. prison near Baghdad International Airport. He was delivered
to the Iraqi government for hanging in a U.S. helicopter (as his
body would be flown back to his home village in a U.S. helicopter).
Now, let's
add a few more facts into the mix. Among Iraqi Shiites, no individual
has been viewed as more of an enemy by the Bush administration than
the radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. American troops fought bloody
battles with his Mahdi Army in 2004, destroying significant parts
of the old city of Najaf in the process. American forces make periodic,
destructive raids into the vast Baghdad slum and Sadrist stronghold
of Sadr City to take out his followers and recently killed
one of his top aides in a raid in Najaf. The upcoming Presidential
"surge" into Baghdad is, reputedly, in part to be aimed at suppressing
his militia, which a recent Pentagon report described
as "the main threat to stability in Iraq."
Nonetheless
at the crucial moment in the execution what did some of the Interior
Ministry guards do? They chanted: "Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada!" In
all press reports, this has been described as a "taunting" of Saddam
(and assumedly of Iraqi
Sunnis more generally). But it could as easily be described
as the purest mockery of George W. Bush and everything he's done
in the country. If, in such a relatively controlled setting, the
Americans couldn't stop Saddam's execution from being "infiltrated"
by al-Sadr's followers who are also, of course, part of Prime
Minister Maliki's government what can they possibly do in
the chaos of Baghdad? How can a few more thousands of U.S. troops
be expected to keep them, or Badr Brigade militiamen out of the
streets, no less the police, the military, and various ministries?
Consider the
"new way forward," then, just another part of the Bush administration's
endless bubbleworld. And check out exactly what madness to look
forward to in next week's presidential address via Robert Dreyfuss,
a shrewd reporter and the author of the indispensable Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam.
~ Tom
The
Surge to Nowhere: Traveling the Planet Neocon Road to Baghdad (Again)
By Robert
Dreyfuss
Like some
neocon Wizard of Oz, in building expectations for the 2007 version
of his "Strategy for Victory" in Iraq, President Bush is promising
far more than he can deliver. It is now nearly two months since
he fired Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, installing Robert
Gates in his place, and the White House revealed that a full-scale
review of America's failed policy in Iraq was underway. Last week,
having spent months if, in fact, the New York Times
is correct
that the review began late in the summer consulting with
generals, politicians, State Department and CIA bureaucrats, and
Pentagon planners, Bush emerged from yet another powwow to tell
waiting reporters: "We've got more consultation to do until I talk
to the country about the plan."
As John Lennon
sang in Revolution: "We'd all love to see the plan."
Unfortunately
for Bush, most of the American public may have already checked out.
By and large, Americans have given up on the war in Iraq. The November
election, largely a referendum on the war, was a repudiation of
the entire effort, and the vote itself was a marker along a continuing
path of rapidly
declining approval ratings both for President Bush personally
and for his handling of the war. It's entirely possible that when
Bush does present us with "the plan" next week, few will be listening.
Until he makes it clear that he has returned from Planet Neocon
by announcing concrete steps to end the war in Iraq, it's unlikely
that American voters will tune in. As of January 1, every American
could find at least 3,000
reasons not to believe that President Bush has suddenly found
a way to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.
What's astonishing
about the debate over Iraq is that the President or anyone
else, for that matter, including the media is paying the
slightest attention to the neoconservative strategists who got us
into this mess in the first place. Having been egregiously wrong
about every single Iraqi thing for five consecutive years, by all
rights the neocons ought to be consigned to some dusty basement
exhibit hall in the American Museum of Natural History, where, like
so many triceratops, their reassembled bones would stand mutely
by to send a chill of fear through touring schoolchildren. Indeed,
the neocons are the dodos of Washington, simply too dumb to know
when they are extinct.
Yet here is
Tom Donnelly, an American Enterprise Institute neocon, a co-chairman
of the Project for
a New American Century, telling a reporter sagely that the surge
is in. "I think the debate is really coming down to: Surge large.
Surge small. Surge short. Surge longer. I think the smart money
would say that the range of options is fairly narrow." (Donnelly,
of course, forgot: Surge out.) His colleague, Frederick Kagan of
AEI, the chief architect of the Surge Theory for Iraq, has made
it clear that the only kind of surge that would work is a big, fat
one.
Nearly pornographic
in his fondling of the surge, Kagan, another of the neocon crew
of armchair strategists and militarists, makes it clear that size
does matter. "Of all the ‘surge' options out there, short ones are
the most dangerous," he wrote in
the Washington Post last week, adding lasciviously, "The size
of the surge matters as much as the length. … The only ‘surge' option
that makes sense is both long and large."
Ooh
that is, indeed, a manly surge. For Kagan, a man-sized surge must
involve at least 30,000 more troops funneled into the killing grounds
of Baghdad and al-Anbar Province for at least 18 months.
President
Bush, perhaps dizzy from the oedipal frenzy created by the emergence
of Daddy's best friend James Baker and his Iraq Study Group, seems
all too willing to prove his manhood by the size of the surge. According
to a stunning front-page
piece in the Times last Tuesday, Bush has all but dismissed
the advice of his generals, including Centcom Commander John Abizaid,
and George Casey, the top U.S. general in Iraq, because they are
"more fixated on withdrawal than victory." At a recent Pentagon
session, according to General James T. Conway, the commandant of
the U.S. Marines, Bush told the assembled brass: "What I want to
hear from you now is how we are going to win, not how we are going
to leave." As a result, Abizaid and Casey are, it appears, getting
the same hurry-up-and-retire treatment that swept away other generals
who questioned the wisdom on Iraq transmitted from Planet Neocon.
That's scary,
if it means that Bush presumably on the advice of the Neocon-in-Chief,
Vice President Dick Cheney has decided to launch a major
push, Kagan-style, for victory in Iraq. Not that such an escalation
has a chance of working, but there's no question that, in addition
to bankrupting the United States, breaking the army and the Marines,
and unleashing all-out political warfare at home, it would kill
perhaps tens of thousands more Iraqis.
Personally,
I'm not convinced that Bush could get away with it politically.
Not only is the public dead-set against escalating the war, but
there are hints that Congress might not stand for it, and the leadership
of the U.S. Armed Forces is opposed.
Over the past
few days, a swarm of Republican senators has come out against the
surge, including at least three Republican senators up for reelection
in 2008 in states that make them vulnerable: Gordon Smith of Oregon,
whose remarkable speech calling
the war "criminal" went far beyond the normal bland rhetoric
of discourse in the U.S. capital, along with John Sununu of New
Hampshire and Norm Coleman of Minnesota. In addition, Saxby Chambliss
of Georgia, less vulnerable but still facing voters in 2008, has
questioned the surge idea. And a host of Republican moderates
Chuck Hagel (NE), Dick Lugar (IN), Susan Collins (ME) have
lambasted it. (Hagel told Robert
Novak: "It's Alice in Wonderland. I'm absolutely opposed to
the idea of sending any more troops to Iraq. It is folly.") Even
Sam Brownback, one of the Senate godfathers of the neocon-backed
Iraqi National Congress, has expressed skepticism, saying: "We can't
impose a military solution." According to Novak, only 12 of the
49 Republican senators are now willing to back Sen. John McCain's
blood-curdling cries for sending in more troops.
Meanwhile,
says Novak, the Democrats would not only criticize the idea of a
surge but, led by Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee, might use their crucial power over the purse. "Biden,"
writes Novak, "will lead the rest of the Democrats not only to oppose
a surge but to block it." Reports the Financial Times of
London: "Democrats have hinted that they could use their control
over the budget process to make life difficult for the Bush administration
if it chooses to step up the military presence in Iraq." A Kagan-style
surge would require a vast new commitment of funds, and with their
ability to scrutinize, put conditions on, and even strike out entire
line items in the military budget and the Pentagon's supplemental
requests, the Democrats could find ways to stall or halt the "surge,"
if not the war itself.
Indeed, if
President Bush opts to Kaganize the war, he will throw down the
gauntlet to the Democrats. Unwilling until now to say that they
would even consider blocking appropriations for the Iraq War, the
Democrats would have little choice but to up the ante if Bush flouts
the electoral mandate in such a full-frontal manner. By escalating
the war in the face of near-universal opposition from the public,
the military, and the political class, the president would force
the Democrats to escalate their own until now fairly mild-mannered
opposition to the war.
However, it's
possible just possible that what the President is
planning to announce will be something a bit more Machiavellian
than the straightforwardly manly thrust Kagan wants. Perhaps, just
perhaps, he will order an increase of something like 20,000 American
troops, but put a tight time limit on this surge say, four
months. Perhaps he will announce that he is giving Iraqi Prime Minister
Maliki that much time to square the circle in Iraq: crack down on
militias and death squads, purge the army and police, develop a
plan to fight the Sunni insurgency, find a formula to deal with
the Kurds and the explosive, oil-rich city of Kirkuk which they
claim as their own, un-de-Baathify Iraq, and create a workable formula
for sharing the fracturing country's oil wealth.
By surging
those 20,000 troops into a hopeless military nowhere-land, Bush
will say that he is giving Maliki room to accomplish all that
knowing full well that none of it can, in fact, be accomplished
by the weak, sectarian, Shiite-run regime inside Baghdad's fortified
Green Zone. So, sometime in the late spring, the United States could
begin to un-surge its troops and start the sort of orderly, phased
withdrawal that Jim Baker and the Carl Levin Democrats have called
for.
Levin suggested
as much as 2006 ended. "A surge which is not part of an overall
program of troop reduction that begins in the next four to six months
would be a mistake," said Levin, who will chair the Armed Services
Committee. "Even if the president is going to propose to temporarily
add troops, he should make that conditional on the Iraqis reaching
a political settlement that effectively ends the sectarian violence."
That may be
too much to ask for a Christian-crusader President, still lodged
inside a bubble universe and determined to crush all evil-doers.
And it may be too clever by half for an administration that has
been as utterly inept as this one.
At the same
time, it may also be too much to expect that the Democrats will
really go to the mat to fight Bush if, Kagan-style, he orders a
surge that is "long and large." Maybe they will merely posture and
fulminate and threaten to… well, hold hearings.
If
so, it will be the Iraqis who end the war. It will be the Iraqis
who eventually kill enough Americans to break the U.S. political
will, and it will be the Iraqis who sweep away the ruins of the
Maliki government to replace it with an anti-American, anti-U.S.-occupation
government in Iraq. That is basically how the war in Vietnam ended,
and it wasn't pretty.
January
5, 2007
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. Robert Dreyfuss is the author of Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam.
He covers national security for Rolling Stone and writes frequently
for The American Prospect, Mother Jones, and the Nation.
He is also a regular contributor to TomPaine.com, the Huffington
Post, Tomdispatch, and other sites, and writes the blog, The
Dreyfuss Report, at his website.
Copyright
© 2007 Robert Dreyfuss
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