Can Congressional Republicans Save Bush?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
If
President Bush has competent advisors, he must know that his Iraqi
war has become a liability for him and for the Republican Party
and might easily become a catastrophe.
The
latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finds that 45% of
Americans doubt President Bush’s veracity compared to 41% who regard
him as honest.
The
poll also finds that a majority of Americans regard Iraq as a more
important issue than the lack of jobs and that more Americans now
disapprove of Bush’s performance than approve.
This
is not good news for a president whose war is going badly. On June
27, General George Casey, US commander of the multinational coalition
in Iraq, told morning TV audiences that the Iraq conflict "will
not be settled on the battlefield." The Iraq conflict, Gen.
Casey said, "will ultimately be settled by negotiation."
Instead
of firing Gen. Casey, as he would have done in the past, Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld backed him up. Rumsfeld also told TV audiences
that "coalition forces are not going to repress the insurgency,"
which might "go on five, six, eight, 10, 12 years."
That
was not what Americans promised a 3-week war wanted to hear. Even
inattentive Americans could discern that if the Bush administration
could be so far wrong on the duration of the war, it could also
be very wrong on the reasons for the war.
The
poll showing the sharp drop in belief in Bush’s credibility was
conducted during July 811 and released on July 13. The poll
reflects the public’s new awareness of the interminable conflict.
With about 15,000 American casualties (dead and wounded), the cost
of the war is starting to come home.
The
outcome of the invasion is far removed from the Bush administration’s
promise of a cakewalk strewn with flowers. The war has also proven
to be extremely expensive at a time when Americans are hearing that
Social Security and Medicare are running out of money. Americans
want to know why Bush is investing $300 billion in a training ground
for al Qaeda when America’s elderly cannot pay their prescription
bills.
On
top of this comes the Karl Rove problem. Famous as Bush’s principal
advisor, Rove has apparently been fingered as the administration
official who committed the felony of leaking the identity of an
undercover CIA agent in retaliation for her husband exposing the
neoconservative lie that Iraq had purchased nuclear material from
Niger.
For
Bush, the Rove problem brings back the issue of how we got ourselves
at war in the first place.
The
US military and the Republican establishment have done a good job
of sticking by Bush even though they now understand that he misled
them and put them at risk in a gratuitous war.
A
retired general, Barry R. McCaffrey, recently told the House Armed
Services Committee that "the Army and Marine Corps are at risk
of experiencing a disaster during the coming three years. There
is little reserve or surge capability to respond to new challenges."
McCaffrey,
in effect, told the Armed Services Committee that the civilians
in the Pentagon were out to lunch. The civilians’ war-fighting strategy
downplays the need for troops and relies on firepower and high-tech
weapons.
General
McCaffrey, currently a professor at West Point, told the Armed Services
Committee that America simply lacks the troops to deal with Iraq.
The general also said that even if the Pentagon could be weaned
away from its high-tech fantasies, most recruitment goals are not
being met. The US military is shrinking during wartime.
The
reason, of course, is that most Americans don’t any longer see the
point of the war. We were all for war when we heard our vice president
Cheney and national security advisor Condi Rice, now secretary of
state, tell us that Iraq had a mushroom cloud in store for American
cities. But when we found out that this was all drivel, we started
wondering why John Jones’s son, an all-state quarterback, got his
arms and legs blown off in Iraq.
The
American people noticed when the CIA said that the US invasion of
Iraq has turned that country into a training ground for terrorists
and al Qaeda supporters. The last thing the US needs to be doing
is subsidizing Osama bin Laden, and that is exactly what the Bush
administration is doing in Iraq.
Hope
for Bush and for America is at hand. US Representative Walter B.
Jones, (R, NC) has introduced a resolution the Homeward Bound Resolution that
requires President Bush "to announce, not later than December
31, 2005, a plan for the withdrawal of all United States Armed Forces
from Iraq. "
The
Congressional Research Service has taken a close look at the Resolution
and has advised that the Resolution is "advisory in nature
rather than mandatory. It appears to leave a great deal of discretion
with the President for setting a timetable for the withdrawal of
troops."
Walter
B. Jones is a six-term member of the House Armed Services Committee.
He is the member of Congress who required congressional dining rooms
to rename French fries "freedom fries." When patriots
such as Jones realize that we have made a mistake, it is time for
us all to realize it.
Many
Americans are so incensed at Bush for fabricating the reasons for
invading Iraq that they think they prefer for his ill-fated war
adventure to continue until it produces enough rope to hang him
and his administration.
I
understand their anger at being deceived over life and death matters.
However, the longer this war continues, the more Americans there
will be without arms, legs, eyes, and lives; the more terrorists
will spring from Iraqi deaths; the more threatened Israel will become;
and the stronger bin Laden and his successors will be in the Middle
East.
In
my opinion Bush deserves to be impeached. However, the goal is to
stop the carnage that is turning the US into a pariah and placing
our economic future into the hands of our Asian bankers.
Who
wants another American soldier killed or maimed for nothing other
than a neoconservative agenda based on lies, ignorance and hubris?
Walter
B. Jones is an American hero. He has provided cover for President
Bush to comply with the will of Congress and withdraw from Iraq.
Every American of good will should support the Homeward Bound Resolution.
Let history deal with George W. Bush and his war.
The
Homeward Bound Resolution and its supporters will be America’s redemption.
July
18, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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