Bush's Texas Chainsaw Massacre
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
The Clock
Ticks for Thee (in Baghdad and Washington)
It had taken
much thought and planning that wartime May Day four years ago when
George W. Bush co-piloted an S-3B Viking sub reconnaissance Naval
jet onto the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln. Scott Sforza,
a former ABC producer, had "embedded" himself on that aircraft carrier
days before the President landed. Along with Bob DeServi, a former
NBC cameraman and lighting specialist, and Greg Jenkins, a former
Fox News television producer, he had planned out every detail of
the President's arrival as Elisabeth
Bumiller of the New York Times put it then "even
down to the members of the Lincoln crew arrayed in coordinated
shirt colors over Mr. Bush's right shoulder and the ‘Mission Accomplished'
banner placed to perfectly capture the president and the celebratory
two words in a single shot. The speech was specifically timed for
what image makers call 'magic hour light,' which cast a golden glow
on Mr. Bush."
Before the
President could descend jauntily from that plane into the perfect
light of a late spring afternoon, and onto what was essentially
a movie set, the Abraham Lincoln, which had only recently
hit Iraq with 1.6
million pounds of ordnance, had to be stopped
just miles short of its home base in San Diego. No one wanted
George W. Bush simply to clamber aboard.
Who could
forget his Tom-Cruise-style "Top Gun swagger"
across that deck so much commented on in the media in the
following days to the carefully positioned podium where he
gave his speech? It was to be the exclamation point on his invasion
of choice and provide the first fabulous photos for his presidential
campaign to come. Only two things about that moment, that speech,
are remembered today that White House-produced "Mission Accomplished"
banner behind him and his announcement, with a flourish, that "major
combat operations in Iraq have ended."
If his landing
and speech are today remembered as a woeful moment, an embarrassment,
if those fabulous photos never made it into campaign 2004, that
was, in part, because of another event a minor headline
that very same May day: Halfway around the world, soldiers from
the 82nd Airborne Division, occupying an elementary school in Fallujah,
fired on a crowd of angry Iraqi demonstrators. Perhaps 15 Iraqis
died and more were wounded. Two days later, in a second clash, two
more Iraqis would die.
On CNN's website
the day after the President's landing, the main
headline read: "Bush calls end to ‘major combat.'" But there
was that smaller, secondary headline as well: "U.S. Central Command:
Seven hurt in Fallujah grenade attack." Two grenades had been tossed
into a U.S. military compound, leaving seven American soldiers slightly
injured.
In the months
to follow, those two headlines would jostle for dominance, a struggle
now long over. Before May 1, 2004 ever rolled around, "mission accomplished"
would be a scarlet phrase of shame, useful only to critics of the
administration. By that one-year anniversary, Fallujah had morphed
into a resistant city that had withstood an assault by the Marines.
In November 2004, it would be largely destroyed by American firepower
without ever being subdued. Now, the already failed American method
of turning largely destroyed Fallujah into a giant
"gated" prison camp for its residents is being applied to the
Iraqi capital, Baghdad, where huge walls are slated to rise around
10 or more recalcitrant neighborhoods as part of the President's
Baghdad Security Plan, or "surge."
Four years
later, casualty figures are so terrible in Iraq that the government,
locked inside the Green Zone in the capital, has, for the first
time, refused to reveal the monthly figures to the United Nations,
though figures do
show a continuing epidemic of assassinations of Iraqi academics
and of torture of prisoners, a steep rise in deaths among policemen,
and a rise in "honor killings" of women by their own families. Four
years later, those few "slightly injured" men of the 82nd Airborne
Division have morphed into last week's 9 dead and 20 wounded from
a double-truck-bomb
suicide attack on one of that division's outposts in Diyala
Province; over
100 Americans were killed in the month
of April alone; 3,350 Americans in all (not including hundreds
of "private security contractors").
Four years
later, the American military has claimed dramatic success in reducing
a wave of sectarian killings in the capital but only by leaving
out of its count the dead from Sunni car/truck/motorcycle-bomb
and other suicide-bomb attacks; with over 100 car bombings last
month, and similar figures for this one, Sunni militants are outsurging
the U.S. surge in Baghdad, making "a mockery of the US and Iraqi
security plan," according to BBC
reporter Andrew North.
Four years
later, not only has the Bush administration's "reconstruction" of
the country been a record of endless uncompleted or ill-completed
projects and massive overpayments, not to speak of financial
thievery, but even the projects once proclaimed "successes"
turn out, according to inspectors
from the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction,
to be disasters "no longer operating as planned"; the biggest business
boom in a country in which unemployment is sky-high may be "a run
on concrete
barriers" for security, which are so in demand that sometimes
they "are not fully dry when military engineering units pick them
up"; electricity availability and potable water supplies are worse
than ever; childhood malnutrition is on the rise; no one even mentions
Iraqi oil production which remains well below the worst days of
Saddam Hussein and billions of dollars of which are being siphoned
off onto the black market.
Four years
later, U.S. prisons, one of the few reconstruction success stories
in Iraq, are chock-a-block full, holding 18,000
or more Iraqis in what are essentially terrorist-producing factories;
Iraq has the worst
refugee problem (internal and external) on the planet with perhaps
4 million people in a population of 25 million already displaced
from their homes (202 of whom were admitted to the United States
in 2006); the Iraqi government inside the Green Zone does
not fully control a single province of the country, while its
legislators are planning to take a two-month summer "vacation";
a State
Department report on terrorism just released shows a rise of
25% in terrorist attacks globally, and 45% of these attacks were
in Iraq; 80% of
Iraqis oppose the U.S. presence in their country; 64%
of Americans now want a timetable for a 2008 withdrawal; and the
President's approval rating fell to its lowest point, 28%, in the
most recent Harris
poll, which had the Vice President at a similarly record-setting
25%.
During this
grueling, destructive downward spiral through the very gates
of hell, whose end is not faintly in sight, the administration's
war words and imagery have, unsurprisingly, undergone continual
change as well. In the course of these last years, the "turning
points," "tipping points," "milestones," and "landmarks" on the
road to Iraqi democracy and freedom have turned into modest marks
on surveyor's yardsticks ("benchmarks"), not one of which can be
met
by the woeful Iraqi government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
The "magic hour light" of May 2003 has disappeared, along with those
glorious photos from the deck of the carrier. The sort of descriptions
you see today, as in a recent David
Ignatius column in the Washington Post, sound more like
this: "Republicans voice the bitterness and frustration of people
chained to the hull of a sinking ship." (The USS George W. Bush,
undoubtedly.) Oh, and the President and what's left of his tattered
administration have stopped filming on a Top Gun-style movie
set and seem now to be intent on remaking The
Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
This White
House has plunged Iraq and the world into the geopolitical equivalent
of a blood-and-gore exploitation film that simply won't end. Call
that "Mission Accomplished"!
The Mission
Continues (2003)
Just the other
day, with the fourth anniversary of the Top Gun speech looming,
Deputy White House Press Secretary Dana Perino was questioned
at a press briefing yet again about that infamous banner and "major
combat operations" being at an end. Here is part of the exchange:
"MS.
PERINO: …I think that if you only take the one line, that the end
of combat operations major combat operations, that's true,
but the President also
"Q: Yes,
but the banner is [a] consideration, as well.
"MS. PERINO:
Okay, well… And we have explained it many times. And you know
what? I have a feeling I'm just on the losing end of this battle
because the left has decided to believe what they want to believe,
which is that the President was saying that the war was over and
the troops were coming home. That's not what he said, and I just
told you specifically what he said, and I encourage people to
read the whole speech. And that ship… USS America [sic] Lincoln
had been deployed for well over its stated period… they were coming
home. And it was the ship that that['s] mission was accomplished.
And the President never said, ‘mission accomplished' in the speech…"
Actually,
Perino isn't wrong on "mission accomplished" and not just
in the literal sense either. It's well worth taking up her suggestion,
in fact, and rereading that
speech, though in order to do so you have to travel a vast distance,
as if through some Star-Trekian wormhole into an alternate universe.
You have to
reach across the chasm of Bush administration disasters from
Kabul and Baghdad to New Orleans and Walter Read Medical Center
to another moment, another mood in the United States. If
you do, perhaps the first thing you'll note about that magic-hour
speech is its globally messianic and militarized nature. The President,
for instance, congratulated the returning sailors and airmen in
this over-the-top way: "All of you all in this generation
of our military have taken up the highest calling of history."
It's the sort of line that brings to mind one of the President's
favorite hymns, "A Charge to Keep": "To serve the present age,/
My calling to fulfill:/ O may it all my powers engage/ To do my
master's will!" It also brings to mind Bush's post-9/11 slip of
the tongue when he spoke
of his beloved "war" as: "this crusade, this war on terrorism."
And what exactly
was that calling, the highest in history, for which they were fighting?
A President, just off the plane ride of his dreams, was perfectly
willing to spell it out. It was nothing less he announced
from the deck of a ship whose planes had just pummeled Saddam Hussein's
Iraq than "the peace of the world." And the "peace" the President
had in mind wouldn't be some namby-pamby cooperative endeavor. It
would be an armed demand of the rest of the world. After all, the
invasion Bush had launched just weeks before, hadn't been an ordinary
military operation, a simple superpower "cakewalk"
over a pathetic force hollowed out by years of war and fierce economic
sanctions. Operation Iraqi Freedom, as it was called, was something
"the world had not seen before." Talk about awesome! "You have shown
the world," the President assured the Abraham Lincoln crew,
"the skill and the might of the American Armed Forces" the
likes of which, the power of which, it was clear, had never been
witnessed on the face of this planet in all of history from all
the empires that ever were.
Invoking the
American-manufactured
image of Saddam's falling statue in Baghdad's Firdos Square,
Bush waxed enthusiastic, perhaps imagining Biblical idols dropping
before the one true God: "In the images of falling statues, we have
witnessed the arrival of a new era." A new era! You can feel that
messianic exclamation point embedded in the spirit of the claim.
And it wouldn't for a second be an era in which the lion lay down
with the lamb; it would be a U.S. military-enforced era of "freedom."
In the American military's ability to crush enemies without harming
civilians, the kind of war being fought, he swore, was nothing less
than "a great moral advance."
The highest
calling in history! The peace of the world! Something the world
had not seen before! A new era! A great moral advance!
Given all
this, Perino was absolutely on the mark. The President didn't consider
his mission accomplished not by a long shot. That's why he
never used the two words together in a speech otherwise filled to
the brim with "victory," flushed with success, high on winning.
Yes, "major combat" was over in Iraq, but that represented only
"one victory in a war on terror." The "mission" and it was
indeed a mission he was talking about was nothing as small
as a world historic success against one brutal dictator. No indeed.
True, the
regime of the monster in Baghdad had been felled or, as the term
of tradecraft of that moment went, "decapitated"; Saddam's program
of weapons of mass destruction had been thwarted ("We've begun the
search for hidden chemical and biological weapons and already know
of hundreds of sites that will be investigated…"); and Saddam's
(implied) links to al-Qaeda and the 9/11 attacks handsomely repaid.
Naturally, as well, American military personnel wanted to return
home after such a successful venture, but that was not yet possible.
The planet
must first be set right and the President's speech that May Day
four years ago was nothing less than a trumpet call to the troops
and a warning to planet Earth. "[A]ll can know," the President
intoned, "friend and foe alike, that our nation has a mission: We
will answer threats to our security, and we will defend the peace…
We do not know the day of final victory, but we have seen the turning
of the tide." The mission, despite that fatal banner, was not
"accomplished." Not in the least. As the President said ringingly,
quoting the Bible and thanking God, "Our mission continues."
Looking back
across the vast expanse of disaster that is Bush policy in Afghanistan,
Iraq, "the Greater Middle East" (aka the oil heartlands of the planet),
and elsewhere (including our own country), his was, in fact, a particularly
chilling speech a ringing reaffirmation that one war was
so many too few; a resounding endorsement of what would later be
dubbed by Centcom Commander John Abizaid, "The Long War." Our President
was already imagining an Orwellian future in which military power
beyond compare was to actively remake the planet, cruise missile
by cruise missile, under the banner of "peace." Above all else,
his speech was a reaffirmation of an American "mission" in which
time, maybe even all eternity, was on our side.
As it happens,
those Pax Americana pipedreams would never make it out of
Iraq. That speech, suffused with George W. Bush's personal sense
of pleasure, satisfaction, and all-American war play ("When I look
at the members of the United States military, I see the best of
our country, and I'm honored to be your Commander-in-Chief…"), would
be destroyed by "all the citizens of Iraq who welcomed our troops
and joined in the liberation of their own country." Put more precisely,
it would be done in by a ragtag minority Sunni insurgency and a
ragtag Shiite government that shared hardly a shred of his particular
vision. Perhaps the moral here, if there is one, might be: Beware
the man who praises himself and his nation too highly.
Tick…Tick…Tick
(2007)
"No man is
an island, entire of itself," wrote John Donne. "...[A]ny man's
death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore
never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."
Unfortunately,
our President was, four years ago, already a man on an island, or
the deck of an aircraft carrier doubling as a movie set, separated
from the mainland of this world. He already had his military
outfits to dress up in and his cowboy language ("bring
em on") straight from the films of his childhood to wield.
Back in those days, he was already favoring appearing in specially
tailored military jackets in front of military crowds that would
hoo-ah him enthusiastically and his handlers and enablers
were already making ever so sure that no challenging human ever
made it onto that island of his.
When he moved
globally, he did so only on his bubble-island, surrounded by specially
flown-in protection and entourage. To offer but a partial
list from one such trip: armored escort vehicles, the presidential
car (known to insiders as "the beast"), 200 Secret Service agents,
15 sniffer dogs, a Blackhawk helicopter, 5 cooks, and 50 White House
aides. From London to Manila, his arrival automatically emptied
whole central cities of life.
Not surprisingly,
then, when the bell first began to toll for him, when those first
signs of trouble began to appear in Iraq, he and his aides, officials,
and advisors simply dismissed reality. As former CIA Director George
Tenet's new memoir evidently makes clear, the island looked so much
more appealing. According to New
York Times book reviewer Michiko Kakutani, for instance:
"Mr. Tenet writes that the C.I.A.'s senior officer in Iraq was dismissed
as a ‘defeatist' for warning in 2003 of the dangers of a growing
Iraqi insurgency, though it was already clear then that United States
political and economic strategies were failing. Although the trends
were clear, he adds, those in charge of policy ‘operated within
a closed loop.' In that atmosphere, he says, bad news was ignored:
the agency's subsequent reporting, which would prove ‘spot-on,'
was dismissed."
As a senior
advisor to the President told
journalist Ron Suskind back in 2002:
"[G]uys
like me were ‘in what we call the reality-based community,' which
he defined as people who ‘believe that solutions emerge from your
judicious study of discernible reality... That's not the way the
world really works anymore,' he continued. ‘We're an empire now,
and when we act, we create our own reality... We're history's actors...
and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'"
Four years
after the President's smooth landing, it's hard even to express
just how unaccomplished their non-reality-based "mission" remains.
New Centcom Commander Adm. William J. Fallon is complaining
about the use of "the Long War" ("unhelpful") to describe our world
and even the President seems less focused on planting the stars
and stripes on the heights of eternity. In fact, when it comes to
Iraq, administration officials are now reportedly
trying to "scale back talk of Iraq progress" talk that
could not be scaled back much further without ceasing to exist.
No longer
is there a landscape of freedom with its milestones and turning
points; no longer is the timescale in generations. Now, administration
officials are begging, wheedling, or bullying for months, thinking
in weeks, worrying in days. They no longer demand several lifetimes'
worth of time, but plead for just a little extra bit of it
a modest suspension of disbelief until September
to give the President's "new" plan a "chance."
Today, only
one image seems to be on official lips in Washington and Baghdad
and it's an ominous one: the ticking clock. It combines a complaint,
a whine, a weapon against the war's critics, an explanation, a plea,
and a mantra of sorts (all we are saying, is give time a chance).
It is also a covert acknowledgement of the pressure reality turns
out to be all-too-capable of exerting on the non-reality-based community.
Time, it says, is no longer on our side; the sand in the proverbial
hourglass may be running out. In its present incarnation, the image
has been most vigorously championed by Gen. David Petraeus, the
man chosen to lead the President's surge in Baghdad. Certainly,
in recent weeks, both in
Baghdad and Washington,
he's been wielding a two-clocks-ticking image for all it's been
worth, saying things like:
"…[T]he
Washington clock is moving more rapidly than the Baghdad clock,
so we're obviously trying to speed up the Baghdad clock a bit and
to produce some progress on the ground that can perhaps give hope
to those in the coalition countries, in Washington, and perhaps
put a little more time on the Washington clock."
Dana Perino
seconded him last week:
"Granted…
this is very tough going; it is slow going. But we have to have
slow, focused, persistent work, and encouraging patience on behalf
of the American people. As you said, there's a there's this
talk about an American clock versus an Iraqi clock, and sometimes
the two don't tick at the same time."
As if to speed
up the pace of time, she even threw in this twist:
"Q:
...What is a reasonable period of time for the American people to
expect the Iraqi government to work out these critical measures
of political accomplishment?
"MS. PERINO:
I'm not going to start the stop watch on the Iraqi government."
And the two
of them have had plenty of company. Navy
Rear Adm. Mark Fox, communications director for the Multinational
Force Iraq, upped the number of ticking clocks to three: "It's clear
that the Washington clock and the London clock [are] ticking faster
than the Baghdad clock."
White House
Press Spokesman Tony Snow, on the other hand, reduced
the clocks to one, but it was clearly the clock of clocks he was
talking about: "The other thing the President wants to make clear
is, right now what Democrats are doing is they're wasting time at
a time when the clock is ticking."
Vice President
Cheney, as he is wont to do, spelled
the image out in extreme terms, making a single clock stand in as
a symbol of surrender, not to say the ultimate victory of terrorism:
"When members of Congress pursue an anti-war strategy that's been
called ‘slow bleed,' they're not supporting the troops, they're
undermining them. And when members of Congress speak not of victory
but of time limits, deadlines or other arbitrary measures, they're
telling the enemy simply to run out the clock and wait us out."
But no one
has evidently heard the clock ticking louder than the President
himself. Everywhere he went, he seemed to mention it:
March 28th:
"Yet Congress continues to pursue these bills, and as they do, the
clock is ticking for our troops in the field."
April 4th:
"In the meantime, the
clock is ticking for our military."
April 7th:
"For our troops, the
clock is ticking. If the Democrats continue to insist on making
a political statement, they should send me their bill as soon as
possible."
April 10th:
"Now, the Democrats who pass these bills know that I'll veto them,
and they know that this veto will be sustained. Yet they continue
to pursue the legislation. And as they do, the
clock is ticking for our troops in the field."
April 16:
"As Congress delays, the
clock is ticking for our troops."
Who knows,
of course, what a man who cannot admit to, or perhaps even conceive
of, doubt or error, or imagine "significant
discussion," no less "serious
debate," actually makes of all this. Is anyone there who could
say to him: The clock ticks for thee? I doubt it. No man is an island;
but, for our boy President, the alarm going off may always be for
Groundhog Day.
Whether he
knows whom the clock ticks for (other than the Democrats or the
troops), we, at least, know that the clock is ticking down on his
second term. Unfortunately, by my count, 31,536,000 ticks will only
get us to this time next year. That's an awful lot of seconds to
pass, given what we know we can expect from our President, Vice
President, and their supporters more of the same. They've
always had a knack, but only for destruction.
In Baghdad,
can there be a question that any ticking clocks are attached to
bombs? In Washington, they seem to be attached to mouths that never
stop talking.
Thought
of another way, from the moment those two towers came down on September
11, 2001, our President and Vice President have themselves been
ticking clocks. Before their terms are done, before the clock runs
out on them, they may turn out to be the true suicide bombers of
this era. Already, they have managed to leave Iraq a modest-sized
country with an immodest pool of oil underneath it in a state
which we have no adequate word to describe, though when coined it
will undoubtedly have a "-cide" at its end.
The clock
continues to tick. By January 20, 2009, who knows what destruction
they will have wrought; what chaos they will have brought to our
world?
May
2, 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.
Copyright
© 2007 Tom Engelhardt
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