No Exit
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
As Washington
waits with bated bipartisan breath to unwrap the shiny Christmas
present known as "the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group,"
it becomes more and more obvious that the newly empowered Democrats
are walking into a trap.

But it's not
an artful contrivance prepared for their demise by the infinitely
devious Karl Rove the "political genius" who, since
his appearance on the national stage, has managed to lose two elections
(2000 and 2004) and eke out very narrow, dubious victories in two
others. (And it wasn't Rove who cheated Bush into office in 2000,
so that doesn't count even as a technical KO for him. The post-election
coup d'état was directed by Bush family fixer James Baker
now chairman of the, er, Iraq Study Group.)
No, the trap
awaiting the Democrats has been laid by reality itself. As so often
noted here before, there is no good solution to the blood-puking
hell that George W. Bush has wrought in Iraq. There is no path out
of this killing field that won't involve more slaughter, more suffering,
more hate, more grief. No "bipartisan panel" certainly
not one led by the lifelong peddler of Bush Family snake oil, Jim
Baker, and the Democratic whitewasher for all seasons, Lee Hamilton
is going to find some new, unlooked-for way to untangle this
knotted gut. They can only sift through the same reality that we
all can see. The options are extremely limited, and all of them
have ugly consequences.
Writer and
documentary-maker Edward Cox gives a mostly excellent analysis of
the situation in a recent Guardian article, Same
as it Ever Was. (He is, I think, off base in a brief look at
the 2008 presidential election, but this is a minor point in a penetrating
takedown of the wildly unrealistic expectations rising around the
"Baker Commission.") Very briefly, the main choices break
down this way:
1. More
of the same. Basically continuing the current "strategy,"
if that's what it is, of "training" Iraqi police and military
forces while maintaining a more or less full-scale occupation of
the country. The fact that this approach is already a proven failure
in no way precludes its continuation, with a few cosmetic changes
here and there, at least until the end of Bush's term or the final
collapse of the Iraqi government. This option will very likely lead
to full-blown civil war.
2. Phased
withdrawal, in-country. This would involve removing U.S. forces
from direct occupation of Iraqi cities. Some troops would go home,
but most would relocate to the giant permanent bases now being built
in remote areas. These troops would continue to "train"
the Iraqi security forces, while essentially abandoning the rest
of the country to sectarian warfare until somebody comes out on
top and we can sign oil deals with them. If Bush swallows the bone
and decides to make any major changes, this is a likely scenario.
Its many drawbacks are apparent, as Cox outlines, but again, the
evident stupidity of a strategy rarely stops stupid leaders from
implementing it. This option will very likely lead to full-blown
civil war.
3. Phased
withdrawal, "over the horizon." This the option first
bruited by Rep. Jack Murtha, the former defense contractor bagman
who unexpectedly became the point man for Establishment criticism
of the war. This involves pulling all U.S. troops out of Iraq proper,
but somehow keeping enough of them lurking over the border so they
can rush in at any time and help the Iraqi government out of a jam.
There are manifold difficulties with this approach as well, not
least how happily the surrounding Muslim nations would welcome a
long-term American military force darting in and out of Iraq
and attracting reprisals from terrorists and Iraqi insurgents on
the host country's soil. This option is really only a fig-leaf for
a later (or sooner) full withdrawal at the "request"
of the host nations, no doubt. In any case, Bush will not choose
this option, because it defeats the entire purpose of the war
establishing a permanent U.S. presence in Iraq to secure dominance
(or at least a tasty slice) of Iraq's energy resources and serve
as a linchpin for further adventures in "full spectrum dominance"
over geopolitical affairs in a "new American century."
Such "hyper-power" dreams are of course receding into
the distance with each passing year, but that doesn't mean that
true believers in unlimited power and wealth for the American elite
will stop chasing them. This option will very likely lead to full-blown
civil war.
4. Phased
withdrawal, piecemeal. This is similar to No. 3, except that
as the troops come out, bit by bit, they come home rather than move
to some transborder base for a while. This approach could actually
be the worst of all possible worlds, leaving a dwindling number
of troops to face an increasingly powerful insurgency and ever more
virulent sectarian militias, with mounting deaths on all sides until
the inevitable last-second bugout of the handful of suckers left
in the final "phase." This option will very likely lead
to full-blown civil war.
5. Send
in more troops. This is the "McCain Option": somehow
scare up tens of thousands of new U.S. troops, presumably without
a draft, and fling 'em into the fire, then, as Cox notes, "take
the cities street by street and hold them through a massive security
and intelligence clamp-down." But he also notes the further
undeniable truth: "It is of course politically inconceivable,
on either side of the Atlantic." However, this is the only
serious option that would not very likely lead to full-blown civil
war mostly because it would unite many of the Iraqi factions
now at odds into the mother of all insurgencies against the intensified
occupation.
6. Immediate
withdrawal "immediate" here meaning as fast
as humanly possible commensurate with a more or less secure and
more or less orderly extraction. The troops come home, they don't
dawdle on the doorstep in some other country for a while. But Bush
will certainly never adopt this option, and neither will the Democrats,
who, as Cox points out, will be too eager to prove their still-vulnerable
"national security" bona fides, especially with the 2008
election looming, and blanch at being labeled the party who "cut
and ran" from Iraq. And yes, it goes without saying by now,
this option will very likely lead to full-blown civil war.
7. Help
us, Syria! Help us, Iran! This is the option now being proffered
by Tony Blair (and mooted earlier by Don Rumsfeld's replacement,
Robert Gates). It is so lame and unrealistic that it scarcely rates
being mentioned at all, but there will be a good deal of blather
about it in the days to come, so it should be dealt with. However,
it is not entirely clear why either nation having been demonized
without ceasing by the Bush Faction, and put squarely in the frame
for the old "path of action" regime change would
leap to help America out its spot of bother in Iraq. Cox points
out the utter absurdity of this approach:
"Negotiations
would doubtless involve some interesting elements. If the Iranians
promised to keep their hands off the Basra oilfields, perhaps they
could be allowed to develop whatever nuclear weapons they wanted,
and if they absolutely insisted on being given free rein to wipe
Israel off the map, well, there you go. Maybe Syria could be allowed
to re-annex Lebanon, in return for leaving Iraq's Sunnis to their
fate."
8. Partition.
This is another idea so bad that it can hardly be taken seriously
except that it is taken seriously by a lot of people who,
while perhaps not serious themselves, are in serious positions.
It was a favorite of "conservative Democrats" in the last
election, such as Tennessee's Harold Ford Jr. in his failed Senate
race. Again, Cox deals with this idea succinctly:
Unfortunately,
although the north is Kurdish and the south is Shia, most of the
cities, including Baghdad, are mixed. In any case, the integrity
of Iraq is the key to regional stability. An autonomous Shia south
would effectively become part of a greater, and more dangerous,
Iran. The Turks know that an independent Kurdistan would foster
secession in their own Kurdish south-east. The Syrians would feel
obliged to support their threatened Sunni co-religionists against
the more numerous Shia. Neither, Russia, Israel or Saudi Arabia
could be expected to view such developments with equanimity.
And, needless
to say, this option would certainly lead to full-blown civil
war.
These are the
options; this is the reality. What will the vaunted "Baker
Commission" do with this intractable material? Cox's conclusion
is, I think, right on the money:
So, what's
going to happen is this: Baker will recommend the status quo with
minor variations, which will be hyped as dramatic revisions. Bush
will announce that he completely accepts every jot and tittle
of the Baker formula. What then? Bush has already signalled that,
understandably enough, he now wants a bipartisan approach to the
country's problems. As soon as the Baker report is on his desk,
he will call in the leaders of both houses of Congress for a chat.
The Democrats
will doubtless see the dangers of such an invitation all too clearly.
However, Iraq has been their springboard to office. They will
hardly be able to refuse to engage with the issue when given the
chance. Indeed, Pelosi has already been talking of a "partnership"
with the White House to solve the country's problems. To cut off
the Democrats' escape route, Bush need only promise to accept
any amendments they may choose to make to the Baker scheme. Doubtless,
they will insist upon one or two tweaks, and flaunt them as major
triumphs. Sheepishly, though, they will have to acknowledge that
in all other respects the Bush-Baker scheme will pretty much have
to do.
Thereafter,
criticism of what will have become a joint approach will slowly
begin to subside. Thus reinforced, the policy will trundle on
much as it does now, bringing ever more misery in its wake. Voters
will blame Congress more than the White House for this state of
affairs, because, unlike Bush, the Democrats had appeared to promise
a way out.
At this point
assuming that anyone is still reading at this point
the question arises: OK, Floyd, which of these horrible options
would you choose? In which particular way would you inflict
even more pain and suffering on the people of Iraq, who never asked
to be invaded or to be lorded over by a tyrant who was put
in place and kept in place for years with
the helping hand of the United States?
I answered
this question in April 2004 in a piece called No
Direction Home: The Red Wheel of War Crime Keeps Rolling, and
it still holds true for me today:
As the red
wheel of Operation Iraqi FUBAR continues to roll, spewing hundreds
of corpses in its wake, it becomes clearer by the hour that there
is only one way for America to end this stomach-churning nightmare
it has created: get out.
That's it.
The occupying armies including Bush's 20,000 corporate
mercenaries should leave now. They should never have been
sent in the first place on this ghoul's errand: a war of aggression,
a mission of murder and plunder the perversion of every
enlightened value of the civilization that the Coalition's "Christian
leaders" purport to defend.
And what
a sickening spectacle these "leaders" presented last
weekend: George W. Bush and Tony Blair piously kneeling in prayer
on Easter Sunday, pledging their fealty to Jesus Christ and His
teaching of mercy and lovingkindness while ordering missile
strikes on crowded cities, while filling hospitals with the mutilated
bodies of young children, while shoveling fat war profits to their
cronies and contributors. Only the most craven, bootlicking sycophant
could fail to be revolted at the hypocrisy of these murderous
cynics. They are a perfect match in moral idiocy for their crack-brained
brother-in-arms, Osama bin Laden.
Their chest-beating
pronouncements about "staying the course" and "seeing
it through" are just so much rag-chewing nonsense. The way
to rectify a crime is not to keep doing it or in John Kerry's
ludicrous formulations, to keep doing it in some different, "better"
way but simply to stop doing it. The illegal invasion
was a crime, the occupation is a crime, and if you would not be
a criminal, you must stop committing crimes.
At the time,
I admit I too entertained a fanciful notion that perhaps "a
United Nations force made up of troops from counties acceptable
to the Iraqis [could move in] to provide security and stability
while the Iraqis themselves reconstruct their society, hold elections,
etc. America and its war allies would have nothing to do with this
stabilization force, beyond helping to fund and supply it."
I noted even then that this was a very slim and tenuous hope
and of course it is a dead letter now. Under Bush's rule, Iraq has
been driven into ruin and chaos far beyond the remedy of such a
solution. Who would send "peacekeeping" troops there now?
And who in Iraq would now accept them?
However, one
other aspect of the immediate withdrawal scenario I envisioned could
still be and should still be implemented today, if
only to mitigate in some small measure the horror that America will
inevitably leave behind, no matter what happens:
The departing
Americans should then give the $18 billion slush fund now earmarked
for Bush's "reconstruction" bagmen to the Iraqi people,
as reparations for the Coalition's war crime. Iraq's foreign loans,
procured by Saddam Hussein from sugar daddies like George Bush
I, should be written off and all of Little Bush's imperial
edicts opening Iraq's economy for despoliation by his cronies
should be rescinded. The United States and Britain should also
be prepared to take in the vast horde of refugees who will flee
the hardline Islamic regime that will doubtless be created in
the ruins Bush has made of the once-secular state.
Here too, I
fell short of present reality. America owes the Iraqis far more
than $18 billion in reparations for Bush's war crime of aggression.
Of course, they will get nothing of the sort not one thin
dime from either Republicans or Democrats. Nor will there
be any move from either party toward letting more dusky immigrants
into the country, no matter how imperative our moral obligation
to do so.
And so immediate
withdrawal, while still the "best" option on the table,
is far worse now than it would have been a year ago, two years ago,
three years ago. Again, this is the reality. This is what we can't
escape. There is no good way out. There is no good way forward.
Tonight, tomorrow night, and for nights uncounted to come, some
innocent will die in agony because of what we've done.
November
15, 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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