Twelve Whiffs of Failure
by John Liechty
by
John Liechty
DIGG THIS
Americans are
notoriously good at moving on, which tends to amount to turning
our backs on the messes we’ve made, and averting our noses from
the stench of what our government likes to call foreign policy.
Currently that government is taking pains to assure us that the
mess in Iraq is improving, and hinting heavily that we lend our
attention to the fresh hydra’s head of Iran. Time to move on. The
President’s troop "surge" is doing the trick, Eden is
just around the corner, the war really was the grand idea it was
always billed to be. The decider, our war President, our own little
Churchill, the brush-clearing virtuoso of the age is back on the
case, ready to lead us to glory in Iran. Tempting as it is to think
that the best thing for America to do at this point is bomb the
Persians, let’s turn our eyes and noses back to Iraq for a moment.
There’s enough rot there to turn the stomach of a blind man devoid
of a sense of smell.
1. America’s
good intentions, if it ever had them, are meaningless. Its motives
have never been clear to either side. Why did we do it – from
a burning desire to liberate the Iraqi people, a burning desire
to burn oil, or just a tacky impulse to trash a place because we
could? Americans and Iraqis alike go on wondering whether the planners
of this war were primarily ignorant or primarily evil. Many of the
war’s boosters have been playing the good intentions card, meanwhile.
(If only we’d known then what we know today… Jonah Goldberg, Richard
Perle, et al.) Whatever the reasons given for things not working
out, they warrant that we meant well. Did we? "O Lord, deliver
me from the man of excellent intention and impure heart," T.S.
Eliot wrote, "for the heart is deceitful above all things,
and desperately wicked." In the excellent Night
Draws Near, Anthony Shadid notes that even those Iraqis
who trusted our intentions and welcomed our war were soon left pondering
whether the ensuing calamity was the result of "malicious inattention
or inattentive malice." Was the wreckage deliberate? Were the
architects of the invasion primarily stupid or primarily wicked?
The questions won’t go away and there have been no satisfactory
answers.
2. The U.S.
government’s evident lack of concern for the Iraqi people is matched
by its evident lack of concern for the American people. Are
the Iraqi people better off after two American wars and the years
of sanctions? Are the American people better off after the two wars
waged on Iraq? Since the invasion, millions of Iraqis have fled
their homes if not their country, and a recent study estimates that
1.2 million have been killed. Most Iraqis despised Saddam Hussein;
it is hard to imagine an event that could make many of them nostalgic
for the Saddam years. The occupation of Iraq has been such an event.
To Americans, the war has brought debt, grief, and an inevitable
sense of shame, whether we acknowledge it or not. It is hard to
imagine an event that might make one nostalgic for the Vietnam years.
The Iraq War is such an event.
3. The Bush
Administration seems to be banking on a sequel to September 11,
turning a national catastrophe into its golden calf. One would
have thought that after the events of that day, the overwhelming
response of a responsible government would be to do everything in
its power to ensure that such events would not happen again. Why
is it that one cannot shake the feeling that this government viewed
September 11 as more of an opportunity than a tragedy? Why is it
that one cannot shake the feeling that Bushworld’s response to that
day has done more to ensure a repeat performance than to prevent
one? Iraq had nothing to do with the last September 11. It might
have something to do with the next one. The folly of occupation
has helped see to that.
4. Inaction
WAS an option. The Iraq War didn’t have to happen. Our leaders
made it happen. There were plenty of informed, intelligent objections
to the decision to go into Iraq. The Administration didn’t listen
and didn’t so much as try. Bushworld insisted that action (meaning
of course violent action) was the only way to solve a problem like
Saddam. Even Jesus, the President’s favorite philosopher, couldn’t
gain his ear, let alone Lao Tzu, who said: "The Way takes no
action, but leaves nothing undone…. To conquer the world, accomplish
nothing; if you must accomplish something the world remains beyond
conquest…. He who acts, spoils; He who grasps, loses." The
right kind of inaction was an option for Bush all along. All along
he insisted on the wrong kind of action.
5. The United
States made war on a country that couldn’t fight back, that posed
less of a military threat to it than Cuba. Make that Andorra.
There was "nothing truly epic" about America’s quick advance
and entry into Baghdad notes Shadid, quoting Anthony C. Zinni’s
analogy: "Ohio State beat Slippery Rock sixty-two to nothing.
No shit." Our war President was clearly banking on a flag-waving
quickie, as his premature "Mission Accomplished" ejaculation
made clear. The Administration got its sixty-two to nothing rout
all right; then it got something more. Had it listened to military
men like Anthony Zinni or Eric Shinseki, and made a few post-game
plans, or not insisted on playing the ill-starred match in the first
place…. But it didn’t listen. The romp was fun for a few weeks,
less fun four years later.
6. Washington’s
interest in democracy is mainly in its resilience as a catchword.
Similarly, it approves of freedom when this seems to serve the narrow
political agenda referred to by our leaders as the national interest.
Beyond that, it distrusts freedom or outright despises it. When
countries whose affairs our leaders have fiddled with in the name
of democracy vote for someone they don’t like, they fiddle further.
When people we fiddle with in the name of freedom say or think things
we don’t like, we fiddle further. Rome burns, meanwhile, as surely
as Iraq.
7. The war’s
architects perpetually knew best. They have yet to make a mistake.
They seem incapable of shame. The best Donald Rumsfeld could
manage in response to the plundering of Baghdad while American troops
looked on was the infamous: "Stuff happens. Freedom is messy."
And while Rumsfeld seemed distressed when the Abu Ghreib scandal
broke, the distress was clearly more in response to the fact that
it broke than to the fact that it occurred. The war’s sponsors didn’t
do shame. Nor did they ever bother much to try to understand the
people they’d selected to be the enemy. True, they came to a series
of superficial conclusions of the "Aggression is All the Arabs
Understand" stripe, but they were remarkably, consistently
ignorant of the people they’d pledged to liberate, and remarkably,
consistently unconcerned about their ignorance.
8. Bushworld
has turned lying from an occasional piece of political craftwork
into an institutional torrent of cheap assembly-line fabrication.
The Iraq War rests on a series of cheap, deliberate, bald-faced
lies. Even the Administration’s occasional flirtations with
truth haven’t come over well. As Blake said, "A truth that’s
told with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent." Is
it any wonder this government is so often accused of running a rigged
game?
9. The "privileges"
our leaders have shown such passion to acquire are indicative. Since
September 11, the Bush League’s wish-list has read: "Please,
can we do preemptive strikes? Ignore the Geneva Conventions? Intimidate
and mislead the press? Use nukes, just little ones? Torture? Spy?
Fire people who aren’t as compassionately conservative as we are?
Promote people who are, however incompetent? Invade and occupy other
countries? Spend your money digging ourselves into a hole? Please,
pretty please?"
10. The
Administration has done for religion what the people it terms Islamo-fascists
have done for it. The President’s suggestion that the Iraq
War is the fruit of collaborations with a "Higher Father"
or "Favorite Philosopher" deserve to be greeted with skepticism,
if not nausea. "I’ve got God’s shoulder to cry on, and I cry
a lot," Bush has recently been quoted as saying. "I’ll
bet I’ve shed more tears than you can count." It’s a safe bet
that we all (including God) have shed more tears than the President
can count.
11. The
preeminence some of our leaders boast of feels more like decadence.
There’s a smell of decay about America, and the occupation of Iraq
has made it sharper. If we’re really the brightest and best and
freest and finest people on the planet, we’ll give off talking about
it and start proving it. Keeping this putrescent administration
out of Iran would be a worthy start.
12. Washington
casts the blame for what is in large part its own irresponsible,
provocative behavior at everyone’s feet but its own. Our leaders
are models of decency, tirelessly promoting peace, democracy, freedom,
and economic growth. That they in fact end up promoting an indecent
amount of ill will and bad faith is exclusively the fault of the
Chinese, the French, the Arabs, Islam, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Osama,
Fidel, Old Europe, the Rogue States, the Axis of Evil, the liberal
press, Satan, and sometimes Canada.
Saddam Hussein
was a despicable leader, and dislodging him by force perhaps seemed
an honestly noble pursuit to some, an idealistic effort to "tackle
a darkness." However, it does not appear to have been a wise
pursuit, or an efficient one. And in all too many respects, it does
not appear to have been an honest or noble one. What were America’s
intentions? To liberate or to conquer? The words of Marlow in Joseph
Conrad’s Heart
of Darkness are depressingly relevant: "They [the colonial
presence in the Belgian Congo] were conquerors, and for that you
want only brute force – nothing to boast of, when you have it, since
your strength is just an accident arising from the weakness of others.
They grabbed what they could get for the sake of what was to be
got. It was just robbery with violence, aggravated murder on a great
scale, and men going at it blind – as is very proper for those who
tackle a darkness. The conquest of the earth, which mostly means
the taking it away from those who have a different complexion or
slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing when
you look into it too much."
Robbery with
violence, aggravated murder on a great scale, men going at it blind?
It is disheartening to consider to what extent the "They"
in this passage sounds like the "Us" in Iraq. But Americans
better consider it as their President attempts to move on to Iran.
If America’s motives in Iraq have been unclear from the start, one
thing is sure: the Iraq War is "not a pretty thing if you look
into it too much." This is not the time to be debating whether
"the surge" is working or not. It is not the time to be
debating whether we should be attacking another country or not.
It is a time to be acknowledging that the Iraq Project was a failure
before it started, to end it as quickly and graciously as possible,
and to forbid an Iran Project from following suit. It is a time
to consider the words of T.S. Eliot in East Coker: "The
only wisdom we can hope to acquire is the wisdom of humility."
That is the best we can move on to at this point. But another thing
is sure: there is no reason under the sun to expect our government
to help us get there. We’d better help ourselves.
September
20, 2007
John
Liechty [send him mail]
currently teaches in Muscat, Oman.
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© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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