Sophist’s Guide to World War III
by Tom Mysiewicz
by Tom Mysiewicz
The sophists
of ancient Greece were known for their ability to prove that anything
– however demonstrably false – was true. Today’s equivalents are
the neoconservative prognosticators. Just look at their record in
the run-up to the Iraq war: from an imagined "mushroom cloud
over New York" to WMDs to a "cakewalk," then to "mission
accomplished" and Iraqis greeting U.S. troops with flowers.
Iraq turned
out to be anything but what these imagined experts said, and they
neglected the impact of a host of practical concerns: the Mideast
peace process (now in shambles); the Iran situation; and, how Iraq
could even be run without Sunnis participating (hence all the experts
needed to run the country were initially fired!). And this idiocy
may cost the U.S. in excess of $2 trillion, thousands of dead,
and over 50,000 disabled for life in varying degrees – to say nothing
of the horrors inflicted on Iraqi citizens.
Now these
same prognosticators are out with a new deadly variant. One hears
them on the airwaves intoning that history will look kindly on G.W.
Bush because he made the "right move" in invading Iraq.
That Iraq has become a "success" because "violence
is down." We have attained victory in Iraq and now, they tell
us, it is time to win a similar victory in Afghanistan…where we
had supposedly already won. And they blithely neglect a host of
concerns, like the spillover of the conflict into Pakistan, the
risk of further destabilizing Pakistan and a regional war involving
India, Iran, Turkey, Kurdistan, Syria and other powers, real nuclear
weapons and missiles (in the hands of India, Pakistan and Israel)
and the like. Further, the same people who thought we could occupy
Iraq with 50,000 troops, think we can do the same thing in Afghanistan
but fail to tell us how many it will take to occupy, say, Pakistan
and Iran as well.
Reading the
commentary "A Winnable War" by neoconservative Max Boot
in the Los Angeles Times of Feb. 15th, I am convinced
that the sophist school of philosophers is alive and well and trying
to "gin up" yet another war for a cabal of international
financiers and arms brokers, plus Israelis seeking to create a "greater
Mideast" aka Eretz Israel. (Boot, it should be remembered,
has at various times advocated seizing Saudi oilfields and favored
the Iraq invasion as beneficial to Israel.)
"For
years, opponents of the Iraq war claimed it was an unwinnable waste
of resources that wasn’t worth fighting anyway," Boot leads
off in his Times op-ed. The clear implication here is, firstly,
that something has been won. What? Close to a million Iraqis are
dead, yet their country is still a pale shadow of what it was even
during the deepest period of sanctions under Saddam Hussein. And
Iraqi oil – rather than flowing to America – remains largely bottled
up.
Not a waste
of resources? The U.S. faces virtual bankruptcy after collapse of
investment bubbles the government turned a blind eye to in order
to have sufficient liquidity for its multi-trillion dollar war.
One legislator recently estimated a $1-billion/day cost in interest
alone over the next four years for some of the bailout plans now
being foisted on taxpayers!
As a justification
for a "surge" troop buildup in Afghanistan, Boot cites
"heartening progress" allegedly produced by this strategy
in Iraq. In fact, I have seen little evidence that the "surge"
produced any result. Rather, Sunni factions that had initially been
excluded from government were brought in and paid to control the
situation. And Iran has been placed under extreme duress in order
to restrain the activities of Shiite factions believed to be under
its aegis. Further, U.S. forces have tended to stay within their
bases and function more as a reactive force, thereby lessening the
number of attacks they are subjected to. On the other hand, there
has been quite a spate of bloody civilian bombings.
"Is it
quixotic to try to build democracy in Afghanistan? The same thing
was said of Iraq," Boot continues. Once again, he implies that
what has been built in Iraq is a real democracy in the sense that
India has a democracy. And that the real goal of what has been done
in Iraq and Afghanistan is to "build democracy"! Iraq
was invaded because of alleged WMDs that turned out not to be there.
Afghanistan was allegedly invaded because it refused to surrender
Bin Laden (without any proof that he, a guest at the time, actually
had anything to do with the 9-11 terror attack). Further, the U.S.
funded the Taliban – one of the least democratic forces in the region
– with hundreds of millions of dollars virtually up to the time
it invaded Afghanistan.
And, in Iraq,
there have been numerous reports of election irregularities, including
the inability of voters hostile to the U.S.-supported government
to get to the polls. Does anyone seriously believe that Iraqi voters
would be allowed to vote for a government hostile to the U.S. or
Israel? Does anyone seriously believe an Iraqi government would
be allowed that called for immediate U.S. withdrawal?
In true sophist
fashion, Boot (a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
or CFR) ridicules calls to partition Afghanistan much as there were
once calls to partition Iraq. This is hypocritical as several CFR
members, years before the Iraq war, called for partitioning Iraq
(as a security benefit for Israel) and saw that as a major goal
of the then future war. Some of these have flip-flopped over the
years with members such as CFR President Emeritus Leslie Gelb (who
once advocated partition) now calling for decentralization into
multiple states under a federal system.
Boot asserts
(without substantiation) that, in Iraq, the "surge" was
"welcomed by a populace concerned above all by pervasive insecurity.
The same thing is likely to happen in Afghanistan as U.S. troop
numbers rise."
Actually,
in independent polls I have seen, Iraqis seem to favor immediate
withdrawal of U.S. troops – and have felt that way since they were
invaded. Probably because their "pervasive insecurity"
was caused by an unprovoked aggressive attack on their country and
the destruction of all vital services, including police and military
protection! Boot seems to imply that the populations of both countries
will readily forget the deaths of family members and close relatives
and years of misery and privation. The recent shoe-throwing incident
involving former-President Bush, I feel, is just the tip of the
iceberg.
Boot goes
on to downplay civilian casualties last year in Afghanistan saying
they were less than a tenth of 2006-2007 civilian casualties in
Iraq. But, since Afghanistan is spread out, has few population centers,
and has people more connected by clan structures than Iraq, even
Boot’s minimalist assessment means the casualty numbers are significant.
Furthermore, the U.S. is largely confined to areas around Kabul,
much as the Russians before them were, and relies on drones, airstrikes
and other technological mechanisms to wage war in the wider region.
In conclusion,
Boot attempts to put a ramrod up the backbone of President Obama,
who just upped troop strength there by 17,000: "But if President
Obama doesn’t lose his nerve, the odds are that a classic counterinsurgency
strategy, supported by adequate troop levels, can turn around another
failing war effort."
Boot, like
earlier prognosticators during the Vietnam War, feels he can see
"the light at the end of the tunnel"!
What Boot
doesn’t mention is that these tactics will increasingly bring nuclear-armed
Pakistan into the fighting since regions overlap and Afghani clans
and the Taliban live on both sides of the border. Pakistan, itself,
faces internal challenges and the threat of disintegration – to
say nothing of the potential for war with India – and could be destabilized
by these actions. Boot doesn’t mention the million troops that might
be necessary to stabilize Pakistan, occupy key military sites, and
protect Israel from the fallout of dimension to the conflict, as
well as fighting with Iran and Turkey vs. Kurdistan (Kurdish Iraq).
World War
I started from a very small beginning. Sophist Max Boot fails to
anticipate that his "winnable war" could turn out to be
the spark for World War III.
March
4, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Thomas G. Mysiewicz
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