How To End The War
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
George
W. Bush is a natural born liar. He lied us into a war, and now he
is lying to keep us there. In his October 6 self-congratulatory
speech at that neoconservative shrine, the National Endowment for
Democracy, the President of the United States said: "Today
there are more than 80 Iraqi army battalions fighting the insurgency
alongside our forces."
Eighty
Iraqi battalions makes it sound like the US is just lending Iraq
a helping hand. I wonder what Congress and the US commanders in
Iraq thought when they heard there were 80 Iraqi battalions that
American troops are helping to fight insurgents? Just a few days
prior to Bush’s speech, Generals Casey and Abizaid told Congress
that, as a matter of fact, there was only one Iraqi battalion able
to undertake operations against insurgents.
I
wonder, also, who noticed the great contradiction in Bush’s speech.
On the one hand, he claims steady progress toward freedom and democracy
in Iraq. On the other hand, he seeks the American public’s support
for open-ended war.
In
her Princeton speech, Condi Rice made it clear that Iraq is just
the beginning: "We have set out to help the people of the Middle
East transform their societies. Now is not the time to falter or
fade."
On
October 5 Vice President Cheney let us know how long this commitment
was to last: "Like other great duties in history, it will require
decades of patient effort."
Who’s
going to pay for these decades of war to which the Bush administration
is committing Americans? Already the US is spending $7 billion a
month on war in Iraq alone. The nonpartisan Congressional Research
Service says that if the Iraq war goes on another five years, it
will cost at least $570 billion by 2010.
Bush’s
war has already doubled the price of gasoline and home heating.
With
US forces bogged down in Afghanistan (invaded October 7, 2001) and
Iraq (invaded March 20, 2003), Bush is plotting regime change in
Syria and conspiring to set up Iran for attack.
Is
there a single person in the Office of Management and Budget, the
US Treasury, the Congressional Budget Office, or the Federal Reserve
who thinks the US, already drowning in red ink, has the resources
to fight wars for decades?
And
where will the troops come from? The US cannot replace the losses
in Iraq. We know about the 2,000 American troops killed, but we
do not hear about the large number of wounded. UPI correspondent
Martin Sieff reported on October 7 that US wounded jumped from 16.3
per day at the end of September to 28.5 per day at the beginning
of October. Multiply that daily rate by 30 days and you get 855
wounded per month. Approximately half of these are wounded too seriously
to return to combat.
Has
anyone in the administration pointed out to Bush, Cheney and Condi
Rice what decades of casualties at these rates mean?
Insurgents
are killing Iraqi security personnel who are collaborating with
the US occupation at the rate of two or three hundred per month.
The wounded numbers are much higher.
Last
month suicide bombers killed 481 Iraqis and wounded 1,074.
Has
anyone in the administration put these numbers in a decades long
context?
Apparently
not. Once these numbers are put on paper, not even Bush administration
speech writers can continue to pen rhetorical justifications for
war and more war.
The
neoconservative Bush administration prides itself on not being "reality
based." Facts get in the way of the administration’s illusions
and delusions. Bush’s "80 Iraqi battalions" are like Hitler’s
secret weapons. They don’t exist.
Iraqis
cannot afford to collaborate with the hated Americans or with the
puppet government that the US has put in place. Out of desperation,
some do, but their heart is not in it. Few Iraqis are willing to
die fighting for the United States.
When
the 2nd Iraq Battalion graduated from US training camp on January
6, 2004, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and US commander in Iraq, Gen.
Ricardo Sanchez, expressed "high expectations" that Iraqi
troops, in the general’s words, "would help us bring security
and stability back to the country."
Three
months later when the 2nd Battalion was brought up to support the
US invasion of Fallujah, the battalion refused to fight and returned
to its post. "We did not sign up to fight Iraqis," said
the troops.
Readers
write in frustration: "Tell us what we can do." On the
surface it doesn’t look like Bush can be stopped from trashing our
country.
The
congressional mid-term elections are a year away. Moreover, the
Democrats have failed as an opposition party and are compromised
by their support for the war. Bush has three more years in which
to mire America in wider war. If Bush succeeds in starting wars
throughout the Middle East, his successor will be stuck with them.
Congressional
Democrats and Republicans alike have made it clear that they are
going to ignore demonstrations and public opinion. The print and
TV media have made it clear that there will be no reporting that
will hold the Bush administration accountable for its deceit and
delusion.
There
still is a way to bring reality to the Bush administration. The
public has the Internet. Is the antiwar movement well enough organized
to collect via the Internet signatures on petitions for impeachment,
perhaps one petition for each state? Millions of signatures would
embarrass Bush before the world and embarrass our elected Representatives
for their failure to act.
If
no one in Congress acted on the petitions, all the rhetoric about
war for democracy would fall flat. It would be obvious that there
is no democracy in America.
If
the cloak of democracy is stripped away, Bush’s "wars for democracy"
begin to look like the foreign adventures of a megalomaniac. Remove
Bush’s rhetorical cover, and tolerance at home and abroad for Bush’s
war would evaporate. If Bush persisted, he would become a pariah.
Americans
may feel that they cannot undercut a president at war, in which
case Americans will become an embattled people consumed by decades
of conflict. Americans can boot out Bush or pay dearly in blood
and money.
October
11, 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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