This Is the Month
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
This is the
month of the reports. The Government Accountability Office has already
made its report on the war in Iraq; next comes a Marine general,
and then the big kahuna, Gen. David Petraeus. All of the reports
are predictable, and none of them will sway President Bush from
his stay-the-course policy. Nor will the Democrats find the courage
to stop the war.
The reports
can be summed up as we are making some progress here, not so much
there, and we need more time. And, of course, more money. The rhetoric
will be like the wind, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Keep in mind, too, that the Bush administration people lie like
a drunken fisherman.
The Bush technique
is to just repeat talking points, even when confronted with facts
that contradict them. Rep. Charles Boustany, a Republican congressman
from Louisiana, is typical of the Bush parrots. He tried to get
away with the talking point that sectarian deaths are down. CNN's
Wolf Blitzer pointed out that Iraqi Health Ministry counts show
that civilian deaths are increasing. The congressman then indicated
he meant sectarian attacks.
That might
be true, because there are very few Sunnis left in Baghdad for the
Shiite militias to murder. Practically all of the 2 million displaced
and refugees are Sunnis. Baghdad is now virtually all Shiite.
But the congressman
tried to get away with another talking point. "Well,"
he said, "I would have never thought that four members of Congress
would be able to walk through the streets of Fallujah."
"But
you had a lot of security," Blitzer said.
"A platoon
of Marines," Boustany said. The little weasel would never have
mentioned the Marines if Blitzer hadn't called him on it. He meant
to leave the misleading impression that four American congressmen
could safely take a stroll unescorted in Fallujah, which is not
so.
Besides having
been virtually destroyed, with most of its people killed, imprisoned
or driven out, in Fallujah all cars have been banned since May.
A Sheik Salim put it well when he said: "To say that Fallujah
is quiet is true. You can see it in the streets. The city is practically
dead, and the dead are quiet."
Bush, by the
way, really hacked off some of the Iraqi government officials by
spending his eight-hour visit on an American military base. He did
it to make the claim that al-Anbar province is pacified. That's
not true either. In July, citizens of Anbar killed 20 American soldiers.
The only thing that's happened is that the Sunni tribal leaders
have turned on al-Qaida and started killing its members.
Now the U.S.
is arming some of the Sunni militias, which infuriates the Shiite
militias. You tell me how we are going to reconcile arming Sunni
militias while demanding Shiite militias be disbanded. As usual,
American policy is a muddle of contradictions.
Congress needs
to throw the switch and cut off the money. There's enough in the
pipeline to safely evacuate American troops from Iraq. If Congress
doesn't do that, American troops will be in Iraq and dying for years
to come, because you can bet your cowboy boots that's exactly the
plan.
And
by the way, don't be fooled by this business of Bush claiming to
do what the generals want. That's a deliberate deception. It is
the generals who do and say what they think their
commander in chief wants them to do and say. Their careers are at
his mercy, and they know it.
As a rule
of thumb, don't believe anybody above the rank of lieutenant colonel.
That's the rank most warriors are forced to retire at. Most of the
rest are politicians in uniform.
September
11, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Charley
Reese Archives
|