Why
We Still Fight
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
At
least 41 American troops have been killed in Iraq this month. Approximately
300 have been wounded. The "battle for Baghdad" is going
nowhere. A Marine friend just back from Ramadi said to me, "It
didn’t get any better while I was there, and it’s not going to get
better." Virtually everyone in Washington, except the people
in the White House, knows that is true for all of Iraq.
Actually,
I think the White House knows it too. Why then does it insist on
"staying the course" at a casualty rate of more than one
thousand Americans per month? The answer is breathtaking in its
cynicism: so the retreat from Iraq happens on the next President’s
watch. That is why we still fight.
Yep,
it’s now all about George. Anyone who thinks that is too low, too
mean, too despicable even for this bunch does not understand the
meaning of the adjective "Rovian." Would they let thousands
more young Americans get killed or wounded just so George W. does
not have to face the consequences of his own folly? In a heartbeat.
Not
that it’s going to help. When history finally lifts it leg on the
Bush administration, it will wash all such tricks away, leaving
only the hubris and the incompetence. Jeffrey Hart, who with Russell
Kirk gone is probably the top intellectual in the conservative movement,
has already written that George W. Bush is the worst President America
ever had. I think the honor still belongs to the sainted Woodrow,
but if Bush attacks Iran, he may yet earn the prize. That third
and final act in the Bush tragicomedy is waiting in the wings.
A
post-election Democratic House, Senate or both might in theory say
no to another war. But if the Bush administration’s cynicism is
boundless, the Democrats’ intellectual vacuity and moral cowardice
are equally so. You can’t beat something with nothing, but Democrats
have put forward nothing in the way of an alternative to Bush’s
defense and foreign policies. On Iran, the question is whether they
will be more scared of the Republicans or of the Israeli lobby.
Either way, they will hide under the bed, just as they have hidden
under the bed on the war in Iraq. It appears at the moment that
a Congressional demand for withdrawal from Iraq is more likely if
the Republicans keep the Senate and Senator John Warner of Virginia
remains Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee than if
the Democrats take over.
There
is a great deal of material available to the Democrats to offer
an alternative, much of it the product of the Military Reform Movement
of the 1970s and 80s. Gary Hart can tell them all about it. There
is even a somewhat graceful way out of Iraq, if the Dems will ask
themselves my favorite foreign policy question, WWBD What Would
Bismarck Do? He would transfer sufficient Swiss francs to interested
parties so that the current government of Iraq asks us to leave.
They, not we, would then hold the world’s ugliest baby, even though
it was America’s indiscretion that gave the bastard birth.
But
donkeys will think when pigs fly. A Democratic Congress will be
as stupid, cowardly and corrupt as its Republican predecessor; in
reality, both parties are one party, the party of successful career
politicians. The White House will continue a lost war in Iraq, solely
to dump the mess in the next President’s lap. America or Israel
will attack Iran, pulling what’s left of the temple down on our
heads. Congress will do nothing to stop either war.
By
2008, I may not be the only monarchist in America.
October
13, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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