Bush's 'New' Iraq Strategy Revealed: More Troops, More War
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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US
plans last big push in Iraq (Guardian)
Did anyone
really imagine it would be any different? The Guardian reports
that Bush has already decided on his "new" strategy for
Iraq, ahead of the recommendations of the "Iraq Study Group"
he appointed and ahead of the internal government review
of strategy which he ordered only this week. And what is the strategy?
More of the same. How could it be otherwise? The Decider-in-Chief
cannot admit, not even to himself, that any of his decisions have
ever been wrong. How can they be, when they are dictated by his
"gut," and his gut is guided by God Almighty?
Yet no man
rises to such a position even with the enormous, endless
help of his elitist family and friends without some animal
cunning. Bush knows that he cannot do what he would have to do to
"win" the war on his terms: send in hundreds of thousands
of more troops in a brutal, no-holds-barred campaign to eradicate
all active opposition to the imposition of a docile Iraqi regime
and the permanent installation of American bases. He knows there
is no political will, even among his own party and most of his "base,"
to take this route. (Barring, of course, another convenient terrorist
attack on American soil, this time blamed on the Iraqi insurgents.
Then there would be no limit to Bush's "justifiable retaliation."
This scenario, although unlikely at present, is certainly not to
be discounted altogether.)
And so he is
going to intensify the war as much as politically possible, push
the envelope of further brutality and repression as far as he can,
for as long as he can, and hope that this will finally do the trick.
It won't, of course, but as the Guardian notes, quoting a former
top Bush official, "He is in a state of denial about Iraq.
Nobody else is anymore. But he is." He believes that his willfully
ignorant "gut feelings" formed, of course, out
of the malevolent whisperings of his handlers, especially those
who most assiduously flatter his prejudices and his enormous, infantile
ego must be correct and will win through in the end.
Thus he is
now planning to send at least 20,000 more troops to Iraq, to "secure
Baghdad" and free up the U.S. forces currently tied down there
to spread out and "pacify" the rest of the country. There
will be a stab at securing "regional cooperation" for
the "successful rehabilitation" of Iraq. The Saudi and
Kuwaiti royal families longtime business partners of the
Bush Family will be hit up for "reconstruction"
money: more fodder for Bush-connected contractors and the bottomless
corruption of the Bush-backed Iraqi government. How then will this
be different from the epic of waste and corruption we have already
seen in the "reconstruction" process?
As for bringing
Syria and Iran to the cooperation table the fond, wan dream
of Bush's fellow lameducker, Tony Blair that is highly unlikely
to produce any results, if it even happens at all. Bush has already
rejected talking to Iran the only outside country that could
conceivably offer any realistic help at stabilizing the chaos in
Iraq until Tehran drops its nuclear power program, which
he knows they won't do.
Another part
of the "new" strategy which being drawn up by the
Pentagon brass who are "advising" the Iraq Study Group
involves "reviving the national reconciliation process."
How do the Bushists propose to do this? By "creating a credible
political framework." But isn't that what all the ballyhooed,
purple-fingered elections were about? Haven't we been told, over
and over, that Bush has "liberated" Iraqis into a "genuine
democracy"? What then can Bush change about the political framework
he's already created? Is he going to ban the Shiite parties that
were empowered by his framework? Is he going to install a strongman?
How will this "revive the national reconciliation process"?
The only possible way to achieve any kind of national reconciliation
at this point would be to bring the main insurgent groups into the
government. In other words, admit that the U.S. has lost the war
and must now treat with the enemy. Will Bush do that? Will the Shiite
leaders and their militias accept that?
It's obvious
that all the other prongs of the "new" strategy are non-starters;
they probably won't even be attempted. So there is only one actual
element to the new approach: more troops, more killing, more insurgent
reprisals, more sectarian terror, more chaos, more ruin, more suffering.
That is the sum total of Bush's "strategic rethink." That
is the plan.
Oh, but what
about the "Iraq Study Group"? What about the "blue-ribbon,
bipartisan" panel of the great and good, led by the greatest
and goodest of them all, the all-wise, omnicompetent James Baker?
Why, every savvy Beltway media insider knows that this dream team
of wise elders will lead us out of the wilderness into the promised
land of victorious peace and national unity. Unfortunately, as the
Guardian story makes clear or rather confirms what has been
evident all along the "Baker Group" is essentially
just a means of shifting responsibility of Bush's vast war crime
onto others, especially the congressional Democrats, who will be
expected to sign off on the group's "bipartisan consensus.
(That's why Rumsfeld had to do; there would be no way to package
the continuation of the present strategy as a "new bipartisan
plan" if Rumsfeld, the lightning rod and scapegoat for the
Establishment- approved war of aggression were still in charge
of it.)
The Baker Group
also serves as a talking shop for the American Establishment to
work out its differences over the nuances of the corporatist militarism
that has been the hallmark of American policy since World War II.
(See "Family
Feud" for more on this.) But what the Group will not do
and is not designed to do is to come up with some
genuinely fresh, non-partisan approaches toward extricating the
United States from the ungodly mess that Bush's gut has dragged
it into. As regards the specifics of Iraq policy, the Group exists
merely to put some PR dressing on whatever deal is hammered out
in the backroom between the Daddy wing and the Dubya wing of the
Bush Faction. The Guardian notes, ominously, that the Iraq Study
Group's "recommendations are expected to be built around"
the very Pentagon plans outlined above; the Pentagon is in fact
working with the Baker group to devise this "victory strategy."
What's more,
these plans, still in draft form, are being firmed up in "separate,
closed sessions with Mr. Baker and Vice President Dick Cheney."
Here we see the negotiations of the Daddy-Dubya wings in the flesh:
the Elder Bush's chief fixer with Little Dubya's chief malevolent
whisperer. Anyone who thinks this process is going to produce some
sort of breakthrough will be bitterly disappointed.
The fact is,
almost all of the principals involved know that the jig is up in
Iraq. They know that this last throw of the dice is almost certain
to fail. How can it not, being the same strategy that has already
failed so spectacularly? They know that in six months' time, or
a year, they will have to admit that this last heave-ho fell short;
and then the "phased withdrawals" or some other partial,
muddled disengagement will begin, or will begin to be talked about
seriously. But by that point, the debacle in Iraq can be written
off a bipartisan failure, a noble effort in which we all did our
best but simply couldn't prevail against intractable circumstances.
(Circumstances which will no doubt include "the inherent barbarity
of the Iraqi people, who simply couldn't handle the gift of democracy
we gave them." Indeed, this theme is already shopworn among
the chickenhawks of the Rightwing echo chamber.)
Knowing all
this, the Bushists, backed by the Establishment, will still keep
dragging out the war, month after month, year after year, in one
form or another. Thousands upon thousands of innocent Iraqis will
die, hundreds if not thousands more American soldiers will die,
Iraq will sink further into chaos, the United States will sink further
into bankruptcy.
(The latter,
of course, is a good thing for the Bushists; have they not openly
stated their desire to "shrink government down until we can
drown it in the bathtub?" Only bankruptcy can justify their
domestic agenda of crippling even the slightest mitigation of the
worst excesses of unregulated, unrestrained crony corporatism and
elitist predation. Already filthy rich, the Bushists will never
suffer the economic ravages and social decay produced by their policies.)
So that is
the plan. This is Bush's answer to the American people's obvious,
overwhelming desire for ending the war in Iraq. He is going to spit
in America's face. He is going to tell the American people to go
to hell, or perhaps borrowing the language that Dick Cheney used
in the United States Senate, to go fuck themselves. He is going
to say: let your sons and daughters die, you worthless peons: I
will never admit I was wrong.
November
17, 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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