Fallacy of the Mirror Image
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
The trouble
with the war in Iraq is the same as the trouble with the war in
Vietnam a generation ago. Washington completely misunderstood the
Iraqi people, just as an earlier generation misunderstood the Vietnamese.
American policymakers
frequently make the mistake I call the "fallacy of the mirror
image." They assume that other people are a mirror image of
ourselves and will therefore react as we would. This is rarely true.
I used this
example before, but it's very telling. We all know how Americans
would react to the accidental death of a loved one. They'd be on
the phone to a lawyer, wanting to sue and put a dollar figure on
the death of the loved one. But early in the war, when an American
officer showed up at the door of an Iraqi family whose son had been
killed by mistake and asked the father what compensation he wanted,
the Iraqi replied, "Ten dead Americans."
Then there
was the boy in the early days of the war who lost his family and
his arms and legs. Valiant efforts were made to save his life, and
he eventually was flown to England and fitted with prosthetics.
The Western press made the kid a big deal, probably because they
thought it reflected well on the West. But when the boy was finally
well enough to hold a press conference, what did say? Thank you?
No, he said he hoped and prayed the men who wiped out his family
were burned alive. The press instantly lost interest in him.
Our culture
puts about the highest value on money and therefore tends to view
negatively any conditions that might hinder the making of money.
While the Arab culture has no objection to making money, personal
honor, family and tribal loyalties and vengeance all three
of which are largely absent in our culture rank very high
in theirs.
Therefore,
on what basis do any of the self-appointed experts in Washington
suppose that the Iraqi Shiites, battered and persecuted and murdered
for generations by their Sunni overlords, are going to forgive them?
We set up a system that empowered the Shiites, and now we're saying,
"Hey, guys, let bygones be bygones."
In fact, Washington
defines victory in Iraq as reconciliation between the Shiites, the
Sunnis and the Kurds. That is, instead, a definition of failure,
because it is not going to happen. To say that if we leave there
will be a blood bath is to say we will never leave. There is a reason
why all Iraqi governments have been powerful central governments
long on coercion and short on democracy. The reason is, it's the
only way a nation with a divided population can be ruled.
Not only do
the factions hate each other, about the only thing that unites them
is hatred of us.
The Bush administration
should give up, admit it made a colossal blunder and bring the American
troops home. It has stupidly created an Islamic government, which
will be a natural ally of the Iranians. There is no way to undo
it short of finding another Saddam Hussein and installing him as
a dictator.
Washington
seems to have an infinite capacity for self-delusion. The essential
question regarding the surge and new security plan has yet to be
asked. What will happen when the U.S. soldiers leave? The violence
will resume, of course. It's kindergarten-level knowledge that insurgents
make themselves scarce when conventional military forces move in.
So, of course, there will be a temporary reduction in violence,
but how long do you want Americans living in Baghdad? Forever?
Someone
should tell our child president that he is more likely to find a
real Easter Bunny than he is those secular, liberal democrats he
seems to believe are in Iraq and Iran. They don't exist in that
part of the world.
April
9, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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