Deck
Chairs on the Titanic?
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
DIGG THIS
Recently, the
phrase "rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic"
has been used to describe the American Congress and its "activity"
on the questions of Iraq, and by extension, on the question of our
imperial presidency.
The Sunday
Washington Post features an article on those who warned in
2002 that this all-Bush, all-the-time yet strangely Clintonesque
adventure in war for democracy, and invasion for humanitarianism
would fail miserably. In
the article, retired U.S. Generals Bill Odom and Tony Zinni
are asked about how they feel knowing they were correct about Iraq,
and that no one in Congress, in the administration, or in America
listened to them. Now they are asked for their advice on what to
do. They give it clearly, and in some detail. They say bring the
troops home!
One wonders
why this article is delegated to the Style section. We should
not. Rearrangement of deck chairs on a sinking ship makes for damn
fine news reporting. Particularly when the ship is filled with colorful
images of the rich and powerful and the impoverished, desperate,
and hopeless all joined in the same disaster, and most but not
all destined for a horrible death.
Incidentally
those saving themselves are highlighted in the front page of the
same paper. Seems as if two
million Iraqis have fled their country since 2003. These survivors
and their families had the intelligence, education, capital, international
connections and risk-tolerance that made them the backbone of the
Iraqi entrepreneurial class.
These were
the guys and gals in that formerly secular country of Iraq that
we were going to "let" rebuild a Saddam-free Iraq.
Two million
survivors many without a home at all and facing life at least
as difficult as that left to the remaining twenty some million Iraqis
who couldn't leave, are already dead or injured, locked up, or just
can't leave yet.
Imagine if
you will, our own country suffering a three-year emigration of 26
million of our best-educated, most-skilled and wealthiest Americans
with all of their know-how, their money and economic skills, and
their networks. Twenty-six million. This is the number of veterans
who had their personal information placed at risk with
last years' VA computer mishap. This is more than the number
of Americans
who have diabetes. Not impressed yet? It is more than the 20
million aliens said to be living and working illegally in this country.
That upsets some people. OK, it is more than three times the number
of cats and dogs we euthanize each year. Heartbreaking, isn't it?
The administration
often invokes our own American efforts to become a Republic when
it tries to explain Iraq. Yet in the late 1700s, we had the best
and brightest on our side, and in our cities, and in our countryside.
Not only were they not leaving, they were leading.
Rearranging
deck chairs is certainly more entertaining and more fun than the
reality of a country we hastily and rudely destroyed, and now won't
let recover. It is ugly to think that we remain to pick at the wounds,
tearing dead flesh like the oil-hungry vultures we are accused of
channeling.
Foreign
Policy published a short essay last week, entitled "Insurgencies
Rarely Win And Iraq Won't Be Any Different (Maybe)." Naval
War College professor Don Stoker suggests that insurgencies
don't win because historically, they can't govern. The article
intended to support the idea that a few more American troops can
somehow "win" in Iraq struck me as kind of funny, in a
sad, small way. This article was published in defense of the administration's
infamous "surge," already begun even as Congress putters
over its legality.
The author's
description of the reasons for the insurgency's weakness and failure
are instructive. He writes, "They lack governmental authority,
established training areas, and secure supply lines." Sounds
like us, and the Iraqis we've been trying to train to be politicians,
policemen and soldiers, rather than the 95% of Iraqis who can't
escape our mistakes and want us to simply leave fast!
Just as useful
is the author's praise for the Soviet established puppet government
in Afghanistan, circa 1989. Here he writes, "In fact, the regime
the Soviets established in Afghanistan was so formidable that it
managed to survive for three years after the Red Army left."
Now there's
a standard to shoot for, literally. Yeah, Americans, let's do that
in Iraq! Er, I mean, keep trying to do that....
Misplaced faith
in the power of military might and centralized bureaucracies to
"make things right" or "bring freedom," or to
foster "democracy" and "economic fulfillment"
is a disorder that afflicts many Americans. It is for this reason
that we are indeed happy to rearrange deck chairs in our foreign
policy, enjoying the entertainment provided by doomed musicians
like Stoker. We avoid the gaze and the wisdom of those who understand
the design limitations of force, of centralized, authoritarian,
and expensive governments at home, or in foreign countries we covet.
It was blind
faith in the Titanic, that massive monument to human engineering
and genius, that led to a devaluing and disregard of human intuition
and alertness. It was this lack of care and this abundance of arrogance
that brought us that disaster of epic and famous proportions.
In slow motion,
we watch the same disaster unfold in Iraq. We can't be blamed for
thinking about the order and placement of deck chairs it is apt.
And we will only truly understand what we have done wrong after
the ship sinks. Contrary to the strange optimism found in some corners,
the sinking of the American ship won't take much longer in Iraq.
This article
originally appeared on MilitaryWeek.com.
February
6, 2007
Karen
Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send her
mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on defense
issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosted the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
Archives of her American Forum radio program can be accessed here
and here. To receive
automatic announcements of new articles, click
here.
Copyright ©
2007 Karen Kwiatkowski
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