No Cheney News
by
Jim Lobe
by Jim Lobe
Readers
of the Pentagon's "Early Bird" news file, a daily compilation
of around 50 stories circulated throughout the U.S. national security
bureaucracy, could be forgiven Monday for reaching for the Rolaids,
a popular over-the-counter medication for queasy stomachs.
As
with the June 10 edition, the file's lead stories all dealt with
Iraq. Indeed, news about Iraq, which faded to the inside pages after
the Jan. 30 elections and well into the spring, has made a surprisingly
strong comeback in the Early Bird of late, just like the Iraqi insurgency
itself.
Monday's
first story, from USA Today and headlined "Poll: USA
Is Losing Patience on Iraq," concerned the most recent Gallup
survey, which found that nearly 60 percent of the public now favors
a partial or complete withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq in what
the newspaper called "the most downbeat view of the war since
it began in 2003."
Item
number two, "Officers, Military Can't End Insurgency,"
published in the Philadelphia Inquirer, began: "A growing
number of senior American military officers in Iraq have concluded
there is no long-term military solution to an insurgency that has
killed thousands of Iraqis and more than 1,300 U.S. troops in the
last two years."
Despite
Vice President Dick Cheney's confident assertion two weeks ago that
the insurgency was in its "last throes," the story featured
one particularly telling observation from a U.S. officer who works
with the task force overseeing training of Iraqi troops, regarding
how easy it was for the insurgency to replenish its forces. "We
can't kill them," he said. "When I kill one, I create
three."
The
third story, from the New York Times, seemed designed to
play on the tension created in the first story. "As Iraqi Army
Trains, Word in the Field Is It May Take Years" ran the headline.
It was followed by text that noted that top generals who four months
ago predicted that Washington could begin withdrawing its 140,000
troops by the end of this year now say "it could be two years,
perhaps longer."
That
message was positively upbeat compared to the lead story in the
June 10 Early Bird, headlined "Building Iraq's Army: Mission
Improbable," co-written by the only fluent Arab-speaker in
the mainstream U.S. press, Anthony Shadid.
That
nearly 3,000-word Washington Post article, which one Pentagon
official called "devastating," concerned the enormous
political and cultural gaps that divided U.S. troops from the Sunni
Arab soldiers with whom they are paired in northern Iraq where the
insurgency is strongest. While one reporter was embedded with the
U.S. troops, Shadid stayed with the counterpart Iraqi unit over
three days.
Aside
from documenting the pervasive sense of distrust and contempt that
the two groups of soldiers had for each other, as well as the vastly
superior equipment, protection, housing, and technology available
to the U.S. troops, the story also recounted incidents of outright
insubordination by the Iraqi unit.
"The
journey revealed fundamental, perhaps irreconcilable differences
over everything from the reluctance of Muslim soldiers to search
mosques and homes to basic questions of lifestyle," according
to the story, which quoted one U.S. reserve officer mocking official
White House and Pentagon predictions that Iraqi security forces
will be able to ready to soon fight the insurgency on their own.
"[F]rom
the ground, I can say with certainty they won't be ready before
I leave," Lt. Kenrick Cato told the Post. "And
I know I'll be back in Iraq, probably in three or four years. And
I don't think they'll be ready then."
Other
lead stories from last week offered little comfort to Early Bird
readers. The second story, "Militia Backed by Iraqi Leaders
Accused in Attacks" from the Philadelphia Inquirer,
started: "A militant Shi'ite Muslim group with close ties to
Iran has gained enormous power since Iraq's January election and
now is accused of conducting a terror campaign against Iraq's Sunni
Muslim minority that includes kidnappings and murders."
The
third story, "Insurgency Seen Forcing Change in Iraq Strategy"
from the Boston Globe, offered no relief, noting, "Two
years after the toppling of Saddam Hussein, the Iraq conflict has
evolved into a classic guerrilla war
."
It
also noted that, despite U.S. estimates that it has killed or captured
1,000 to 3,000 insurgents a month, the number of daily attacks have
doubled to 70 as have the number of suicide attacks
in just the past four months, and that the current death toll for
U.S. soldiers is running at about two a day.
The
Globe also wrote about a recent internal poll that found
that nearly 45 percent of the Iraqi population supports the insurgent
attacks, while only 15 percent of those polled said they strongly
supported the U.S.-led coalition. So much for the notion, so eagerly
embraced by senior administration officials, that an elected government
would automatically translate into opposition to the insurgency.
Indeed,
it now appears that whatever political gains were made as a result
of the election have now been largely squandered as a result of
the growing alienation of the Sunni population, which is why another
New York Times story about efforts to bring Sunnis into the
constitution-writing process, "Sunni-Shi'ite Quarrel Edges
Closer to Political Stalemate," offered no relief to the growing
pessimism. It was also given prominence in Monday's Early Bird.
As
reflected in USA Today's poll story, all of these stories
have affected public opinion, which, aside from a brief spurt of
optimism after the January elections, has become steadily more negative
since February.
Indeed,
last week, a Washington Post-ABC News poll showed that for
the first time since the war began, more than half of the public
believes that the U.S. invasion of Iraq had not made the U.S. more
safe, and nearly 40 percent described the situation there now as
analogous to the Vietnam War.
"The
steady drip of negative news from Iraq is significantly undermining
support for the U.S. military operation there," noted Andy
Kohout, director of the Pew Research Center for the People &
the Press, which released its own latest findings.
The
Pew poll also found an all-time high of 46 percent of the public
favoring a withdrawal from Iraq, although, unlike the Gallup poll,
it didn't distinguish between a partial and a complete pullout.
The
fear that Iraq could turn out to be similar to Vietnam has also
gained traction, according to Kohout, whose latest poll showed that
35 percent of the public, including a disproportionate number of
citizens who say they follow Iraq news particularly closely, believes
that the situation will turn out like Vietnam, while 47 percent
still believe the U.S. can stabilize the situation.
Stephen
Kull of the University of Maryland's Program on International Policy
Attitudes (PIPA) believes the latest polling data do not indicate
a "tipping point" where the Bush administration may be
forced to withdraw, in part because no credible leader has stepped
forward with an alternative plan that can assure the public that
withdrawal would not make the situation worse.
"But
it does create a clear political problem for the president as it
affects his own favorability rating, and then Congress doesn't feel
it has to be as responsive to him," said Kull.
Indications
that this is indeed beginning to happen, however, are becoming more
plentiful. Two weeks ago, the House of Representatives voted 300-128
to defeat a resolution that would have required the president to
present a plan for withdrawal from Iraq, but a 122-79 majority of
Democrats voted for it, along with five Republicans, including three
who had supported the original decision to go to war.
In
fact, Congress appears to be lagging behind the public on the issue.
Some 72 percent of Democrats, 65 percent of independents, and 41
percent of Republicans say they favor a partial or complete withdrawal,
according to the Gallup poll.
June
14, 2005
Jim
Lobe [send him mail]
is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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