Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Why Bush Cannot Leave Iraq

Sadly, America tasted victory in 1945 and has been fascinated since by war. The US won World War II but failed to learn the lessons of victory. And, again, in 1975, the US lost Viet Nam but failed to the learn the lessons of defeat.

We must not forget Korea, officially ending in stalemate in 1953. Since WWII, then, the US has played at war - Grenada, Panama - hoping recently to undo Viet Nam, hoping to recapture the magic of VE Day. Thomas Wolfe said it best: you can't go home again.

Wouldn't it be easier if Bush suddenly went sane and withdrew from Iraq? He cannot. He cannot do so for several reasons: his metastized ego and effeminate machismo among them. Most importantly, Bush cannot leave because he has not won. Bush cannot leave because the US cannot live with the political vacuum that will be left in its wake. For the same reasons, the US cannot stay.

Let's set the scene. In those halcyon days just prior to the collapse of the Third Reich, it was clear that victory would be complete if shared with Britain and the Soviet Union. The end of Hitler's Reich topped even Wagnerian opera for its Sturm und Drang. As a novel, it would have been over the top. As opera, it is tolerated. We might even have tolerated a thickly orchestrated score. But what of the libretto: a mad dictator holes up to commit suicide after having murdered several million people. What a log line! Who but a opera fan could believe it?

Like a noble Collie that develops a taste for sheep, America got a whiff of blood, a taste of war and liked it. Tragically, nothing since that time has bothered to follow script. Nothing about World War II prepared the US for Viet Nam. Nothing about Viet Nam prepared the US for Iraq.

Having supposedly learned the lessons of Viet Nam, the US would not repeat the mistakes. Bushies assured us that a civil war was unlikely, the US would be greeted as liberators, and, after drafting a Constitution, all would be well. Emperor Bush would wear an embarassingly ill-fitting flight suit.

But the real story in Iraq is one of Bush ineptitude and delusion. The Civil War did break out. We were greeted, eventually, by a resistance not as liberators but as occupiers. The drafting of a Constitution excluded the Sunnis and hardened the resistance. Moreover, if there were no terrorists in Iraq prior to the US invasion, Iraq is now a breeding ground for terrorists:

As the war against Iraq created a political vacuum, the nation has been busy sorting itself out along sectarian lines. Bush had not wanted to take sides but is, in fact, defending with his "surge" a Shi'ite regime against a Sunni insurgency. Thus, Bush has committed the biggest, the worst blunder that he could have made. A regional proxy war is not only a very real possibility, it is extremely likely.

Civil wars are hard to end. In my lifetime, the average length of a civil war has been some 10 years. Civil wars are primarily guerrilla wars or, in the lexicon of Viet Nam, asymetrical conflicts. They are fought by loosely organized resistance groups using tactics best described by Che Guevara (See: Fundamentals of Guerrilla Warfare). The US Civil war was a prominent exception consisting, as it did, of conventional armies and well-defined fronts. Modern conflicts resemble the more recent wars in Algeria, Viet Nam, Colombia, Sri Lanka, and Sudan.

It seems unavoidable at this point. As Juan Cole reports, a Saudi official recently admitted that Riyadh will intervene in Iraq if the US withdraws its troops. This will be the case if Sunnies believe themselves threatened by a US puppet, Shi'ite regime. But that's only part of the story. Iraqi Kurds have all but declared their independence. It is prudent to ask whether Turkey will invade what is now Kurdish territory. And what of Iran? It will most certainly ally with Iraqi Shi'ites.

I am inclined to say that Bush has no options. Events on the ground are completely out of his control. Anything done by Bush now will only confirm the disastrous nature of his decision to go to war. It illustrates the moral value of truth itself. Bush could only have gone to war, as he did, upon a pack of malicious, blackhearted, treasonous lies. A single truth would have prevented a human tragedy of biblical proportions.

But faced with ignominious and humiliating defeat, Bush will try to force the various parties to reach an accommodation. How is he to do this, having lost all credibility? In the weeks ahead, however, you can expect the Bush gang of liars to come up with yet another novel rationale for "staying the course". Withdrawing now, they will say, will divide Iraq. That is GOP-speak for we will have to negotiate with whomever gets the oil. The better alternative is an honest broker negotiating a peace along the lines of Northern Ireland or Lebanon. But it would require a statesman in the White House to pull that off. We haven't had such a man since Jimmy Carter.






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5 comments:

SadButTrue said...

"I am inclined to say that Bush has no options."

It doesn't appear that Bush wants to have any options, and when presented with any, he invariably rejects them out of hand. We have to parse carefully the phrase 'no exit strategy.' This is not just the lack of an exit strategy, it is a deliberate strategy that from the outset was designed to preclude any exit.

After shattering the Iraqi infrastructure and occupying the country, the first priority was not to rebuild that infrastructure, which at least would have had some small chance of winning some hearts and minds. The first priority was to start building permanent military bases and a palatial embassy in the Forbidden City known as the green zone. How could this not be perceived as imperialism by the Iraqis?

All of these repercussions could have easily been predicted beforehand, but Donald Rumsfeld threatened to fire anyone who even mentioned doing any post-invasion planning. Except perhaps by Condi Rice, so spectacularly lacking in foresight that her favorite sentence seems to begin with, 'who could have anticipated?'

I'm sure Cheney anticipated the outcome - last time I heard, hadn't his Halliburton holdings increased by 300%?

Unknown said...

SadButTrue said...

After shattering the Iraqi infrastructure and occupying the country, the first priority was not to rebuild that infrastructure, which at least would have had some small chance of winning some hearts and minds. The first priority was to start building permanent military bases and a palatial embassy in the Forbidden City known as the green zone. How could this not be perceived as imperialism by the Iraqis?

Indeed, Bush might abandon Iraq but he is not about to abandon those permanent bases. It is not only Iraqis who are alarmed at this blatant yankee imperialism. It is the entire region.

Condi Rice, so spectacularly lacking in foresight that her favorite sentence seems to begin with, 'who could have anticipated?'


Who could have foreseen that hijackers would use aircraft to crash skyscrapers, she asked. In fact, hundreds of people had foreseen just that.

Who could have foreseen civil war in Iraq, or at the very least, an urban struggle, a quagmire. Well...Bush Sr. for just one.

Whomever taught Condi the rejoinder "who could have anticipated...?" did her a great disservice. It doesn't get her or her stupid boss off the hook. It just makes the both of them look incredibly stupid, incompetent and inarticulate.

Unknown said...

Fuzzflash wrote:

The Imbecile and his Outfit can't leave Iraq because for Halliburton Blackwater & Allied:

That just about sums it up and it also illustrates the nature of Fascism, or as Mussolini called it: corporatism.

I suppose we should not have expected more. The American colonies, hence the US, were themselves the product of British Fascism --the driving force behind colonialism.

whig said...

I think Bill Richardson is the only man with the diplomatic skill to salvage this situation if he is elected president or made secretary of state in the next administration.

I have always had high hopes for Richardson. Let's hope for the best adn wish him well.

Kevitivity said...

It's not Bush's war, it's America's war.

Furthermore, Bush will be gone soon - even if a Dem gets in we won't be pulling out.

Your childish conspiracies are silly and boring.

Unknown said...

It's Bush's war. I want no part of it...nor do millions of other Americans. It's HIS tar baby. Now --are we absolutely SURE that Bush will be done soon?