Catastrophe Still Awaits
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
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"The real
difficulty in changing any enterprise lies not in developing
new ideas, but in escaping from the old ones."
~
John Maynard Keynes
A ray of realism
appeared in the confirmation hearings for Secretary of Defense nominee
Robert Gates before the Senate Armed Services Committee. Gates himself
said that the US was not winning in Iraq, a statement with which
everyone agreed except the White House.
The US, however,
is not out of the woods. The question remains: what will be the
US government’s response to the lost war and the terrible calamity
that Bush has created in Iraq?
Many Americans
are still fighting the Vietnam war. They see Iraq through the lens
of the futile Vietnam misadventure and express their dismay that
America will lose another war because "the Democrats will cut and
run like they did in Vietnam." These Americans have forgotten that
it was a Republican administration that got the US out of Vietnam
and that it was the Democrats who committed the US to that conflict.
Moreover, Democrats are not showing a cut and run propensity.
For example,
Silvestre Reyes, the incoming Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee, says the US cannot withdraw from Iraq until it has dismantled
the militias. Reyes wants to put 30,000 more US troops into Iraq
to dismantle the militias. Reyes has forgotten that sending more
troops was the Democrats’ policy in Vietnam, a policy whose only
result was that more Americans lost sons, fathers, husbands, and
brothers.
Obviously,
sending more US troops will not succeed in dismantling the Iraqi
sectarian militias. However, a US attempt to dismantle the militias
will result in the militias joining the insurgency and turning on
the US troops. The situation would deteriorate, not improve. It
is frightening that the incoming chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee does not understand this.
The appearance
of a ray of realism about Iraq in the Senate Arms Services Committee
does not mean that the US will escape catastrophe. At the Armed
Services Committee hearing (Dec. 5), some senators said that US
troops must not be used in a civil war between Iraqis, but that
the troops have to stay until stability is created. Senators have
the idea that US troops can be shorn of their combat role, but remain
to train the Iraqi army so the Iraqi government can put down insurgency
and civil war.
However, in
civil war each side has a government and an army. Which side will
the US support? If the US sides with the Sunnis against the majority
Shiites, it will be throwing in its lot with the insurgency that
has been killing its troops and find itself arrayed against the
more numerous Shiites backed by Iran. If the US favors the Shiite
majority, the US will anger its Sunni allies in the Middle East.
Indeed, civil
war between Sunnis and Shiites, with or without US involvement,
could easily spread throughout the Middle East. Saddam Hussein’s
Iraq was not the only country where Sunnis hold political sway over
Shiites. By invading Iraq, stirring up extremism, and setting in
motion sectarian violence, the Bush regime may have opened Pandora’s
Box of civil war throughout the Middle East.
The neoconservative
Bush regime lacked the brains to understand that defeating Saddam
Hussein’s army would not give the US control over Iraq. Whatever
minimum control the US might once have had is gone. The US army
in Iraq has so little control that it cannot even provide sufficient
security for President Bush to meet in Iraq with Prime Minister
Maliki.
Since the US
army has no control, provides no security, and does not know who
it is fighting, US troops simply provide targets for insurgents.
They are accomplishing nothing positive and should be withdrawn.
US troops in Iraq serve one purpose: They are a provocation that
foments Islamic extremism and creates dangerous instability throughout
the Middle East.
The senators
and Robert Gates haven’t got this far in their comprehension. The
question is whether they will see the light before US troops are
forced to pay a higher price for their government’s stupidity.
A minority
of Americans still believe the US can defeat the Iraqi insurgency
if only the US would use enough force. Americans hear this from
neoconservatives and from the right-wing crazies of talk radio.
These are the same Americans who believe the US could have won the
Vietnam war by invading or nuking North Vietnam.
The US probably
could have defeated North Vietnam on a one-on-one basis. However,
just as General MacArthur’s invasion of North Korea brought in the
Chinese, a US invasion of North Vietnam would have been an extreme
provocation for the Soviet Union and China and could have ended
in nuclear war.
Many
Americans have the absurd notion that the only limit to US power
is the will to use it. This absurd idea provides the Israeli lobby
with a vocal American minority that is easy to exploit in behalf
of "standing tough" in the Middle East. Right-wing Israeli governments
suffer the same delusion as neoconservatives about limitless US
power. The US is likely to remain mired in Iraq until Israelis cast
out this delusion. No number of US invasions of Islamic countries
can win "the war on terror." As long as the US interferes in the
internal affairs of Muslim countries, the formula for calamity remains
in place.
December
8, 2006
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and testified before
Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 Creators Syndicate
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