Playing the Soviet Part
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
Once
upon a time in a mountainous land far away, a superpower came to
the aid of a government that shared its political philosophy. No
one dreamed that an insurgency made up of Muslims could possibly
prevail against the military superpower.
Yet that's what happened in Afghanistan, and it produced several
results: It created a cadre of Muslim fighters who called themselves
mujahideen; it created the mythology surrounding Osama bin Laden
and his organization, al-Qaida; and it made the United States, which
had helped recruit and arm the mujahideen, feel it had paid back
the Soviet Union for its help to the Vietnamese.
It's too bad that Washington is a city in which nobody seems to
have any long-term memory. If someone did, it might occur to him
that we are in Iraq playing the role the Soviet Union played in
Afghanistan. We are the invading superpower and are every day providing
on-the-job training for terrorists and jihadists who want to take
a shot at us. And, for that matter, they haven't stopped shooting
at us in Afghanistan either.
No other large power so far is providing money and
weapons to the insurgents, at least none that we know of. Iraq was
an open-air ammo dump, and one of the gross blunders we made was
not blowing all that stuff up. The insurgents seem to have plenty
of ammunition and plenty of money. Given the Bush administration's
preference for belligerency over diplomacy, it's not hard to imagine
in the future help coming to the insurgents from Iran and North
Korea, and possibly even China.
Five times in his recent speech, Mr. Bush tried to tie the war in
Iraq to the attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
What is deceptive about that is that prior to our invasion of Iraq,
there were no connections whatsoever between Saddam Hussein and
the attacks on us. But, like Afghanistan, Iraq will play a role
in future attacks because we are training a whole new generation
of terrorists.
While Vice President Dick Cheney insists the insurgency is in its
last throes, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said the insurgency
could last 12 years. The Bush administration cannot seem to get
its story straight. At any rate, the facts don't back up Mr. Cheney.
To use the same time span the president used to talk about progress,
last year attacks averaged 40 a day; they are now averaging 70 a
day. Since we turned over sovereignty (remember how that was supposed
to knock the wind out of the insurgents?), 885 Americans have been
killed, 74 coalition soldiers have died, and 482 car bombs have
killed 2,176 people and wounded another 5,500. All told, at least
12,000 Iraqis have died and 1,735 Americans have been killed since
we arrived in Iraq.
I remember the neoconservatives saying not to worry, that Iraqi
oil revenues would pay for the invasion and occupation. Don't worry,
they said, we will be welcomed with flowers and candy. It's no wonder
Washington prefers to operate in the Alzheimer's mode, because memory
would cause some people to be held accountable for their mistakes
and bad advice.
The really sad thing about the president is that he seems to believe
that a democratic government in Iraq is nirvana and that once achieved,
its brilliant light will spread over the Middle East and, like a
genie's magic, change the hearts and minds of 200 million people.
He seems not to know that Iran has a democratically elected government
and it still doesn't like us. Even if a democratic government in
Iraq survives, which I predict it will not, it will not solve any
of the other problems in the Middle East.
In
the meantime, I'm sure little ads are appearing on the Internet
saying: "If you aspire to be a terrorist or a jihadist, come
to Iraq and get on-the-job training at killing Americans. No need
to hurry. They will be here a long time."
July
4, 2005
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years. Write to
Charley Reese at P.O. Box 2446, Orlando, FL 32802.
©
2005 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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