A British Harbinger of American Defeat
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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Don Rumsfeld
is fond of historical analogies when pontificating about Iraq; he
particularly favors comparisons to the Nazi era and the Allied occupation
of Germany after World War II. Unfortunately, any historian will
tell you that Rummy's parallels are invariably false, even ludicrous.
So we thought we'd give the beleaguered Pentagon warlord a more
accurate and telling analogy to chew on.
Try this one,
Don. Imagine that British occupation troops in, say, Hanover, had
been forced to abandon a major base, under fire, and retreat into
guerrilla operations in the Black Forest in 1948, three years
after the fall of the Nazi regime. And that as soon as the Brits
made their undignified bug-out, the base had been devoured by looters
while the local, Allies-backed authorities simply melted away and
an extremist, virulently anti-Western militia moved into the power
vacuum.
What would
they have called that, Don? "Measurable progress on the road
to democracy?" "Another achieved metric of our highly
successful post-war plan?" Or would they have said, back in
those more plain-spoken, Harry Truman days, that it was "a
major defeat, a humiliating strategic reversal, foreshadowing a
far greater disaster?"
You'd have
to wait a long time perhaps to the end of the "Long War" to get a straight answer from Rumsfeld on that one, but this precise
scenario, transposed from Lower Saxony to Maysan province, unfolded
in Iraq last week, when British forces abandoned their base at Abu
Naji and disappeared into the desert wastes and marshes along the
Iranian border. The move was largely ignored by the American media,
but the implications are enormous. The UK contingent of the invading
coalition has always been the proverbial canary in the mine shaft:
if they can't make a go of things in what we've long been told is
the "secure south," where friendly Shiites hold absolute
sway, then the entire misbegotten Bush-Blair enterprise is well
and truly FUBAR.
The Queen's
Royal Hussars, 1,200-strong, abruptly decamped from the three-year-old
base last Thursday after taking constant mortar and missile fire
for months from those same friendly Shiites. The move was touted
as part of a long-planned, eventual turnover of security in the
region to the Coalition-backed Iraqi central government, but there
was just one problem: the Brits forgot to tell the Iraqis they were
checking out early and in a hurry.
"British
forces evacuated the military headquarters without coordination
with the Iraqi forces," Dhaffar Jabbar, spokesman for the Maysan
governor, told Reuters on Thursday, as looters began moving into
the camp in the wake of the British withdrawal. A unit of Iraqi
government troops mutinied when told to keep order at the base and instead attacked a military post of their own army. By Friday,
the locals had torn the place to pieces, carting away more than
$500,000 worth of equipment and fixtures that the British had left
behind. After that initial, ineffectual show of force, the Iraqi
"authorities" stepped aside and watched helplessly as
the looters taunted them and cheered the "great victory"
over the Western invaders.
The largely
notional if not fictional power of the Baghdad central government
simply vanished while the forces of hardline cleric Moqtada al-Sadr,
which already controls the local government, stepped forward to
proclaim its triumph and guide the victory celebrations in the nearby
provincial capital, Amarah. "This is the first city that has
kicked out the occupier!" blared Sadr-supplied loudspeakers
to streets filled with revelers, as the Washington Post noted in
a solid but deeply buried story on the retreat.
British officials
were understandably a bit sniffy about the humiliation. First, they
denied there was any problem with the handover at all: the Iraqis
had been notified (a whole 24 hours in advance, apparently), the
exchange of authority was brisk and efficient, and the Iraqis had
"secured the base," military spokesman Major Charlie Burbridge
insisted to AP. But when reports of the looting at Abu Naji began
pouring in, British officers simply washed their hands of the nasty
business. The camp was now "the property of the Maysan authorities
and Iraqi Forces [are] in attendance," said Burbridge; therefore,
Her Majesty's military would have no more comment on the matter.
In this casual not to mention callous dismissal of the chaos
spawned in wake of the Hussars' departure, we can see in miniature
the philosophy now being writ large across the country in the Bush
administration's "Iraqization" policy: "We broke
it; you fix it."
And where
are Her Majesty's Hussars now? Six hundred of them have dispersed
into guerrilla bands in the wilderness, where they will survive
on helicopter drops of supplies while they patrol the Iranian border.
The ostensible reason behind this extraordinary operation is two-fold,
said the doughty Burbridge: first, to find out if the Bush administration
is up to its usual mendacious hijinks in claiming that the evildoers
in Iran are fuelling the insurgency among the happily liberated
Iraqi people; and second, to do a little more of that Iraqization
window dressing before finally getting the hell out of Dodge completely,
beginning sometime next year, according to reports across the UK
media spectrum.
Of course,
the good major didn't put it quite like that. "The Americans
believe there is an inflow of IEDs and weapons across the border
with Iran," he told the Post. "Our first objective is
to go and find out if that is the case. If that is true, we'll be
able to disrupt the flow." The second aim is training Iraqi
border guards, he added.
Yes, a few
hundred men wandering through the wasteland, dependent on air-dropped
rations, will certainly be able to seal off an almost 300-mile border
riddled with centuries-old smuggling routes. And modern-day Desert
Rats rolling up in bristling Land Rovers to isolated villages where
Shiite clans span both borders will no doubt be gathering a lot
of actionable intelligence from the locals. And of course it is
much easier to "train Iraqi border guards" on the fly
in the wild than at a long-established base with full amenities
and, er, training facilities.
In other words,
the British move makes no sense if you accept the official spin
at face value, i.e., that it's an act of careful deliberation aimed
at furthering the Coalition's stated goals of a free, secure, democratic
Iraq. But those in the reality-based community will see it for what
it is: a panicky, patchwork reaction to events and forces far beyond
the Coalition's intentions or control.
The other
six hundred Hussars driven out of Abu Naji have retreated to the
main British camp at Basra another "safe" city that
has now degenerated into a level of violence approaching the hellish
chaos of Baghdad, the Independent reports. British troops who once
walked the streets freely, lightly armed, wearing red berets instead
of helmets, are now largely confined to the base, except for excursions
to help Iraqi government forces in pitched battles against the Shiite
militias that control the city. Harsh religious rule has long descended
on the once freewheeling port city, again presaging the sectarian
darkness now settling heavily across Baghdad.
Just a few
months ago, the UK's Ministry of Defence was churning out "good
news" PR stories about life at Abu Naji such as the whimsical
tale of the troop's pet goat, Ben, a lovable rogue always getting
into scrapes with the regiment's crusty sergeant major, even though
the soldiers "knew he had a soft spot for Ben." The goat,
we were told, had enjoyed visits from such distinguished guests
as the Iraqi prime minister and the Duke of Kent. Now this supposed
oasis of British power has been destroyed, with the Coalition-trained
Iraqi troops meant to secure it either fading into the shadows or
actively joining in with the rampaging crowds and extremist militias.
Meanwhile, the Hussars are reducing to roaming the countryside on
vague, pointless, impossible missions, killing time, killing people and being killed until the inevitable collapse of the whole
shebang.
The goat is
gone. The canary is dying. The surrender and sack of Abu Naji is
a preview of what's to come, on a much larger scale of death and
chaos, as the bloodsoaked folly of Bush and Blair's war howls toward
its miserable end.
September
2, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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