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12/02/05 "Lew
Rockwell"
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On the September 27th Charlie Rose Show,
interviewing New Yorker editor David
Remnick, Rose brought up the question of what
the United States should do in Iraq. Should we
"get out" – or, as Remnick so delicately put it,
should we "bolt"? Here was how Remnick ended
their discussion, while talking about those who
had written on Iraq for his magazine:
"There's Jon Lee Anderson and George Packer
and Sy Hersh and Rick [Hertzberg], they all
look at it from different angles. But I
think all of those people would agree – I
don't know about Sy – would agree that an
immediate American withdrawal just, you
know, just pick up your skirts and run,
would not lead to a happy situation in the
short term or the long."
Pick up your skirts and run. Forget the
Republicans, that more or less sums up the state
of mainstream liberal opinion on Iraq just two
months ago. Only that recently "withdrawal" was
still synonymous with cowardice, or, in a
classic phrase of the Vietnam era (that like so
many others has taken an extra bow in our own
moment), "cutting and running." Withdrawal from
Iraq was a subject for the margins and the
political Internet (as well as secret Pentagon
planning); certainly not something to be bandied
about in Congress or taken seriously by the
mainstream media. What a difference a few weeks
can make – a few weeks and one
hawkish congressman with heart (channeling
the views of a panicky military facing an
increasingly unwinnable war). When Congressman
John Murtha stood up – and there wasn't a
"skirt" in sight (not, at least, until
Republican Congresswoman Jean Schmidt
accused him, briefly, of cowardice on the floor
of the House of Representatives) – and suggested
a withdrawal of American ground troops from Iraq
on a six-month timetable, you could hear the
administration's angry heart thumping.
Then, Chicken Little, the sky began to fall and
withdrawal proposals, withdrawal trial balloons,
withdrawal op-eds, withdrawal hints, clues, and
suggestions of every sort suddenly rained down
on us like those cats and dogs of children's
books. It turns out that there was hardly a
major mainstream figure anywhere who didn't have
some kind of "withdrawal" proposal in his or her
hip pocket; or put another way, when Senators
Hillary Clinton and
Joe Biden come out with positions that fit,
however faintly, under the ever-widening label
of "withdrawal" and only good ol'
Joe Lieberman is left twisting, twisting in
the Presidential hot air of "progress" and
"victory," something is certainly afoot.
It gives one heart, really, to think about the
strange processes that sometimes suddenly unclog
the arteries of American discussion and debate,
turning the previously impermissible into a
topic quite suitable for the mainstream to take
possession of. Give us another two months and
who knows, maybe Judge Alito will actually go
down to a filibuster; give us a year and maybe
impeachment, just now
creeping out from the margins, will find
itself a topic
in Congress and on the editorial pages of
our papers. Like Charlie Rose, everybody knows
what the proper limits of conversation are…
until, of course, they unpredictably change.
Watch the Words
That said, this new withdrawal season of ours
will undoubtedly prove a difficult one to sort
out. With the President's speech at Annapolis,
after a huge hint from
Condoleezza Rice earlier in the week ("I do
not think that American forces need to be there
in the numbers that they are now because – for
very much longer – because Iraqis are stepping
up"), "withdrawal" or "pullout" or "draw-down"
is everybody's property. In some ways, it was
the Iraqis,
meeting in Cairo, who helped get the
withdrawal ball rolling by calling for a
withdrawal "timetable" – promptly rejected by
the Bush administration. Now, Bush officials and
military men are jumping on board in a
thoroughly confusing way. No surprise there,
since a lot of yesterday's non-withdrawal people
have a fair amount at stake in muddying the
waters today.
We've just entered a period where you won't be
able tell the players without a scorecard and,
unfortunately, nobody in the know is going to be
selling scorecards. In fact, as the public
withdrawal debate began, and the administration
first "lashed out" in anger at its suddenly
voluble opponents and then rushed to put forward
its own "plans," the news in our papers and on
TV promptly shifted into full-frontal anonymity
mode. Even Congressman Murtha spoke with, it
might be said, more than one tongue. After all,
as a key figure on the House Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee, he is known for his
closeness to the military brass; and, in laying
out his proposal, he offered some startling
figures (on soaring attacks on U.S. forces in
Iraq and on the 50,000 soldiers who are likely
to suffer from "battle fatigue") that clearly
came directly from the military. Here's how the
New Yorker's Seymour Hersh explained the
Murtha proposal in a recent interview with
Democracy Now's Amy Goodman:
"He's known for his closeness to the
four-stars. They come and they bleed on him…
So Murtha's message is a message… from a lot
of generals on active duty today. This is
what they think, at least a significant
percentage of them, I assure you. This is,
I'm not over-dramatizing this. It's a shot
across the bow. They don't think [the Iraq
war is] doable. You can't tell that to this
President. He doesn't want to hear it. But
you can say it to Murtha."
So when, for instance, you read in the press
about some general officially worrying that we
may "draw-down" too quickly, you have no way of
knowing whether at this point his real position
is the one Murtha articulated. Get the hell out
fast!
In a typical recent front-page piece on
"withdrawal," for instance (As
Calls for an Iraq Pullout Rise, 2 Political
Calendars Loom Large), David E. Sanger and
Thom Shanker of the New York Times start
with the "mounting calls to set a deadline to
begin a withdrawal from Iraq." By paragraph two,
however, that "withdrawal" has somehow been
pluralized: "But in private conversations
American officials are beginning to acknowledge
that a judgment about when withdrawals can
begin…" ("withdrawals" being, of course,
something less than "withdrawal"). By the fifth
paragraph (just after the jump to an inside
page), anonymous "White House aides" are saying
that the President "will begin examining the
timing of a draw-down after he sees the
outcome of the Dec. 15 election in Iraq."
So in five paragraphs and a headline, you have
pullout, withdrawal, withdrawals, draw-down… and
by then you've already met a plethora of
pluralized sources as well – not just those
"White House officials," but even vaguer
"American officials," and lest even that give
away too much, "several officials." They're soon
joined by a roiling mass of other obscurely
less-then-identified beings ("current and former
White House officials," "one former aide with
close ties to the National Security Council,"
"senior officers," plain old "officers," and
"senior Pentagon civilians and officers"). And
if that isn't murky enough for you, just throw
in the "ifs" that go with any story of this sort
and tend to negate even the best proposed plan:
"[O]fficials in the Bush White House were
already actively reviewing possible plans
under which 40,000 to 50,000 troops or more
could be recalled next year if ‘a
plausible case could be made' that a
significant number of Iraqi battalions could
hold their own."
Here, for instance, are typical phrases from
correspondent Rosiland Jordan's withdrawal story
on NBC national news last Sunday: "The debate is
focusing on how many and when… that depends on
how quiet the situation is… if conditions on the
ground allow it… provided the situation on the
ground improves." Or consider the following
quote from a Los Angeles Times piece:
"'It looks like things are headed in the right
direction to enable [a large drawdown of forces]
to happen in 2006,' said the official, who also
spoke on condition of anonymity. But he said
those hopes could be derailed if there were
setbacks." Or take this bit from the latest
report on Hillary Clinton's ponderously shifting
position: "…troops could be redeployed next year
if coming elections in Iraq go well." So our
news is now filled with posses of unidentifiable
officials offering limited "withdrawal plans,"
which are actually draw-down plans, which are so
provisionally linked to matters unlikely to
unfold as expected that they may, in a sense,
simply be meaningless.
The Return of Vietnamization
What then are the "plans" of those in power, as
best we can tell?
The realities of the moment are, in a sense,
simple and strange all at once. The grandiose
preparations for planetary military and energy
domination hatched by a group of utopian (or, if
you prefer, dystopian) thinkers in Washington,
aided and abetted by "native" dreamers and
schemers in exile, and meant to begin but hardly
end in Iraq, have by now run aground on the
shoals of reality. A modest-sized but fierce and
well-stocked insurgency, conducting a low-level
guerrilla war – Americans are basically killed
on roads on their way somewhere, seldom in
regular battles or on their bases – fueled by
our President's hubris, by an unquenchable urge
for national sovereignty, and by religious
fundamentalism as well as fanaticism, has driven
this administration from its emplacements.
Now, a second force has joined the fray, turning
this into one of the stranger two-front "wars"
in memory. Unlike in the Vietnam era, the second
front at home remains something of a specter.
Perhaps it's not so surprising though that a
President ever in fantasy-land and his utopian
followers (many now set out to pasture) are
being driven by publics that, at the moment,
exist largely as sets of poll-driven numbers.
The streets are seldom filled with
demonstrators; the universities are not up in
arms; and yet it's quite clear that some ghostly
form of popular pressure is indeed at work – in
combination with growing pressures from Special
Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald (think Watergate) and
a military command that, as in the Vietnam era,
fears, if something doesn't happen soon, the
wheels might truly start coming off the American
military machine. Still, it is fascinating that,
without a significant political opposition yet
in sight, we're witnessing what looks ever more
like an administration and Republican meltdown.
(For those of you who believe that the
Republicans have put all election victories
beyond anyone's grasp, rising Republican fears
about the 2006 congressional elections should
indicate that this is not yet so.)
In the eye of its own strange storm, the
administration is finally starting to put policy
back into the hands of
those who pass for "realists," as journalist
Jim Lobe of Inter Press Service has been
pointing out recently. For instance, the astute
and Machiavellian neocon Zalmay Khalilzad, our
former ambassador to Afghanistan and present-day
ambassador to the Green Zone of Iraq, has just
been given permission to negotiate with the
Iranians for help in Iraq and is,
according to Newsweek, beginning to
put American funds where they might actually
matter – into bribes to Sunni officials. In the
meantime – just a little straw in the gale –
Secretary of State Rice recently met for the
first time in who knows how long for a chat with
her former mentor, the elder Bush's National
Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft. (If Daddy's
men are ever actually called back in, then
you'll know for sure that the White House is in
humiliating "withdrawal" mode.)
In the meantime, we are once again seeing the
return of the repressed (that is, the Vietnam
era) to American consciousness. It's not just
the language of that moment – White House aides
"circling the wagons" and going into "bunker
mode," or Democratic Senator Jack Reed insisting
that the President has
a growing "credibility gap" – but the way
the White House is digging itself ever deeper
into the Big Muddy of that era's playbook.
As if on cue this month – in fact, it's hard to
believe it could have been happenstance –
Nixon's Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, the
man who claims he invented the term
"Vietnamization," has returned as if from the
dead (in an article
in Foreign Affairs magazine) to argue
that his policy actually worked, and so would
"Iraqification." Maybe Laird was simply called
back into existence when Dick Cheney denounced
those intent on "rewriting history," but now we
know from the horse's mouth that we coulda,
woulda, shoulda won – except for a pusillanimous
Congress! ("The truth about Vietnam that
revisionist historians conveniently forget is
that the United States had not lost when we
withdrew in 1973... I believed then and still
believe today that given enough outside
resources, South Vietnam was capable of
defending itself, just as I believe Iraq can do
the same now.")
The essence of Laird's Vietnamization policy was
a realization that, on the draft-era home front,
the Vietnam War was being driven by American
casualties and that the Army itself was in a
state of incipient revolt and disintegration. So
Nixon abolished the draft, began the
all-volunteer military, put an emphasis on
building up the South Vietnamese army, and
withdrew 500,000 American ground troops over a
three-year period. What he replaced them with
was a fiercely intensified air war over South
Vietnam (and neighboring countries). And this
policy was indeed successful in tamping down
protest at home, though (despite Laird's claims)
it created insuperable problems in South Vietnam
(as Iraqification will in Iraq). These led,
after much further bloodshed, to the collapse of
our allies in the south.
The Bush administration's new "plan," such as it
is, to draw-down our troops (while
pressing our shrinking set of allies not to
do the same) is clearly modeled on Laird's
Vietnamization experience – a failed strategy
being re-imagined as a successful one. By a
shift of tactical priorities, it is meant to
create the look of withdrawal before the 2006
congressional elections, and it, too, will
emphasize the mayhem of air power. On the
ground, American forces are to be slowly
withdrawn from Iraq's cities to their bases,
cutting down on both casualties and, for Iraqis,
that oppressive sense of being occupied by
foreigners.
In draw-down terms, the plan seems to go
something like this: While withdrawal was making
onto the public agenda, our actual force in Iraq
has risen in recent months from approximately
138,000 to about 160,000. So the first
"withdrawals" (plural) the administration will
be able to announce after the December 15
election – about 20,000 troops – will simply get
us back to the levels that Donald Rumsfeld and
his planners always meant us to be at.
General George Casey, U.S. commander in Iraq,
and others have been letting the news ooze out
for a while (despite rumors of presidential
slap-downs for doing so) that, if all
goes half-well, we will perhaps withdraw another
40,000 troops (the figures vary depending upon
the leak) in 2006, leaving us with just under
100,000 troops there. In 2007… well, who knows,
but the process, it's clear, is meant to be more
or less unending, and, mind you, that's
according to the Pentagon's
"moderately optimistic" scenario. (Seymour
Hersh claims that the administration's "most
ambitious" plans call for all troops designated
"combat," which is not all troops, to be
withdrawn by the summer of 2008.)
Nothing in the last two-and-a-half-plus years,
of course, should lead anyone to be "moderately
optimistic." If you want a little dose of
realism, just consider the latest report on the
new Iraqi army from the
Atlantic Monthly's James Fallows; or
visit the rare Iraqi unit that has been more or
less "stood up" with
Knight Ridder's Tom Lasseter and consider
what it's been stood up for (a Shiite revenge
war in Sunni neighborhoods); or check in with "two
senior Army analysts who in 2003 accurately
foretold the turmoil that would be unleashed by
the U.S. invasion of Iraq" and now claim it is
"no longer clear that the United States will be
able to create (Iraqi) military and police
forces that can secure the entire country no
matter how long U.S. forces remain"; or visit
with "the only non-American author on the U.S.
Army's list of required reading for officers,"
Hebrew University military historian
Martin Van Crevald, who recently called
George Bush's little Iraqi adventure "the most
foolish war since Emperor Augustus in 9 BC sent
his legions into Germany and lost them."
In perhaps the most important piece of reportage
of the year,
Up in the Air, the New Yorker's
Seymour Hersh dissects the sinews of the
administration's Iraqification strategy.
Unsurprisingly, while drawing-down troops (in
hopes of lessening American casualties), the
Pentagon is to intensify the air war, which
means, of course, loosing the U.S. Air Force on
Iraq's urban areas where the insurgency thrives
and undoubtedly increasing Iraqi casualties. Or
as Hersh puts it:
"A key element of the drawdown plans, not
mentioned in the President's public
statements, is that the departing American
troops will be replaced by American
airpower. Quick, deadly strikes by U.S.
warplanes are seen as a way to improve
dramatically the combat capability of even
the weakest Iraqi combat units. The danger,
military experts have told me, is that,
while the number of American casualties
would decrease as ground troops are
withdrawn, the over-all level of violence
and the number of Iraqi fatalities would
increase unless there are stringent controls
over who bombs what."
As Hersh essentially points out, what this is
likely to mean in practice – if combat is
significantly turned over to the new Iraqi Army
– is sending our Air Force against targets of
that army's choosing; that is, putting American
air power in service to a Shiite and Kurdish
revenge war against the Sunnis – not exactly a
recipe for a pacified Iraq.
The thinking behind such strategies is, in fact,
as recognizable to those of us who lived through
the Vietnam era as "Vietnamization." Here's what
I wrote about such "withdrawal" plans during the
Vietnam era in my book,
The End of Victory Culture, published
a distant decade ago. See if it doesn't have a
familiar ring to it:
"The idea of ‘withdrawing' from Vietnam was
there from the beginning, though never as an
actual plan. All real options for ending the
war were invariably linked to ‘cutting and
running,' or ‘dishonor,' or ‘surrender,' or
‘humiliation,' and so dismissed within the
councils of government more or less before
being raised. The attempt to prosecute the
war and to withdraw from it were never
separable, no less opposites. If anything,
withdrawal became a way to maintain or
intensify the war, while pacifying the
American public.
"'Withdrawal' involved not departure but all
sorts of departure-like maneuvers – from
bombing pauses that led to fiercer bombing
campaigns to negotiation offers never meant
to be taken up to a ‘Vietnamization' plan in
which ground troops would be pulled out as
the air war was intensified. Each gesture of
withdrawal allowed the war planners to fight
a little longer; but if withdrawal did not
withdraw the country from the war, the war's
prosecution never brought it close to a
victorious conclusion."
Clash of Languages
So now, having passed through much of the
Vietnam era's strategy and language in a mere
couple of years, we find ourselves in
the Vietnamization/Iraqification period.
Forgetting for a minute that, among other
differences with Vietnam, this seems
increasingly to be a war not for national
unification but for national disunification, we
seem finally, as in those distant years, to be
on the downhill slope of language and imagery.
To give but one example: Proud neocon
neocolonials like Paul Wolfowitz, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and the President
himself, regularly talked about bringing
"democracy" to Iraq in patronizingly parental
terms. They liked to say that they were trying
to figure out the moment to take
the "training wheels" off the Iraqi bike and
let the toddler wheel around the nearest corner
on his own. Now we find one of our many
anonymous generals quoted in a
Washington Post piece using that very image
no less patronizingly but far more fearfully in
military terms. "Another senior general likened
an accelerated withdrawal to ‘taking the
training wheels off of a bike too early.'"
Or here's another example: American "senior
officials" in the glory days of our Iraq
adventure spoke regularly and without shame
about the need to "put an Iraqi face" on Iraq.
This was a wonderfully grim phrase which, in a
strange way, expressed their deeper meaning
exactly; they wanted to put a comforting Iraqi
mask over the American face of the occupation.
Now, we find a military version of the same,
whose bluntness makes a certain sense of our
moment, as quoted in a mid-November piece from
Anton La Guardia, Diplomatic Editor of the
British Telegraph:
"Senior US military commanders have long argued
that the way to defeat the insurgency is to
reduce substantially the number of foreign
troops in order to ‘reduce the perception of
occupation' and draw Sunnis into the political
process."
To "reduce the perception of occupation," that's
a phrase to savor for its truth-telling essence.
It catches something of the administration's
policy now that it's actually on the run at
home.
In the meantime, our President, in the
first of several speeches he is to give on
Iraq before the December 15th elections, took a
roller-coaster ride through Iraqi Disneyland. As
Dan Froomkin of the Washington Post
commented, "President Bush's safety zone these
days doesn't appear to extend very far beyond
military bases, other federal installations and
Republican fundraisers."
Not exactly surprising, then, that his speech
should have been so la-la-(out) landish. For
instance,
as Paul Woodward of the War in Context
website pointed out, he promoted his "strategy
for victory in Iraq" by referring to "progress"
a mere 28 times before the assembled cadets of
the Naval Academy. And then there was "victory,"
once
quite hard to find in administration
documents that emphasized how we were in an
endless multi-generational struggle against
terrorism. Yet, at this desperate moment, the
President managed to mention "victory" 15 times
(and add another for the title of the speech) –
and not just victory but the fact that we would
not "accept anything less than complete
victory."
That had a ring not heard since Americans called
for total victory and unconditional surrender in
World War II, but then the President remains in
a World War II dream world, that thrilling place
he experienced in the movies of his childhood
where the Marines always advance; our grinning
native sidekicks are friendly and remarkably
willing to die in our place; the enemy is
destined to fall by their hundreds before our
fire; and total victory is an American
birthright. In fact, the President, who
mentioned no post-1945 war (except the Cold one)
– and there were so many to chose from – spoke
of World War II twice. You know, that war so
like the present one in which "free nations came
together to fight the ideology of fascism, and
freedom prevailed." (Just in case you've
forgotten, that was the war in which the other
side had the Guantánamos…)
Perhaps there's poetic justice in seeing a
President trapped in his fantasy world being
driven from pillar to post by a fantasy public,
while his generals and top officials do their
best to ignore him as they search desperately
for ways out, and his advisers (and political
supporters) hire lawyers.
How to Tell Withdrawal from Its Doppelgangers
If you pay attention not to the war of words or
the storm of confusing withdrawal proposals, but
to four bedrock matters, you'll have a far
better sense of where we're really heading.
These are air power, permanent bases, an
"American" Kurdistan, and oil; and, not
surprisingly, they coincide with the great
uncovered, or barely covered, stories of the
war. In the present flurry of withdrawal
discussions, only air power, thanks to Hersh, is
getting any attention. The others have so far
gone largely or totally unmentioned – and yet,
without them, none of this makes any sense at
all.
Air Power: It remains amazing to me that
Hersh's report is the first serious mainstream
piece since the invasion of Iraq to take up the
uses of air power in that country. It's a
subject
I've written about for the last two years.
After all, we've loosed our Air Force on heavily
populated urban Iraq, regularly bombing (and
sometimes destroying significant sections of)
Sunni cities and towns (and in 2004 Shiite ones
as well). There have been hundreds and hundreds
of reporters in Iraq, many embedded with the
military – and yet it's as if they simply never
look up. Figures on the use of air power are
almost impossible to come by, though Hersh tells
us in his Democracy Now interview that
the bombing has "gone up exponentially,
certainly in the last four or five months in the
Sunni Triangle." He adds, however, that "we
don't have reporters at the air bases. We don't
know what's going on with the air war." Here's
just one passage that gives a modest sense of
some of what the Bush administration has been
doing from the air: "Naval
efforts in Iraq include not only the Marine
Corps but also virtually every type of
deployable Naval asset in our inventory. Navy
and Marine carrier-based aircraft flew over
21,000 hours, dropped over 54,000 pounds of
ordnance and played a vital role in the fight
for Fallujah."
Add in another reality of America's Iraq: L.
Paul Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority,
in a burst of blind pride in 2003, disbanded the
Iraqi military. For well over a year or more,
Pentagon plans for rebuilding it called for a
future Iraqi military force (lite) of only
40,000 men with minimal armaments and
essentially no air force at all! This is the
Middle East, mind you. What that meant, simply
enough, was that the Bush administration
intended the American Army and Air Force to be
the Iraqi military for eons to come. Under the
pressure of the insurgency, the army part of
that plan was thrown out the window. But
"standing up" the Iraqi military has meant just
that. Standing on the ground. There is still
no real Iraqi air force. Iraq was never to
"fly," but to stay on that "bike" and under the
tutelage of Washington.
The actual use of American air power will
undoubtedly prove tricky indeed (without many
American ground troops around) and probably no
more successful in the long run than it was in
Iraq – except, of course, in terms of
devastating the country. But watch the Iraqi
skies as best you can. They will tell you
something.
Permanent Bases: We were to control
military-less Iraq and perhaps the region from a
small series of permanent bases, already
imagined and
on the drawing boards as the invasion began.
At the height of our base-building mania, we had
about
106 bases there, ranging from
multibillion-dollar Vietnam-era-sized
mega-structures like Camp Victory North (renamed
Camp Liberty) just outside of Baghdad to tiny
base camps in outlying parts of the country. We
now claim to be turning these over to the
Iraqis. Part of our draw-down plan, according to
Hersh, includes "heavily scripted
change-of-command ceremonies, complete with the
lowering of American flags at bases and the
raising of Iraqi ones" – one of these occurred,
conveniently enough, near the Syrian border the
day the President spoke.
We have so many of these bases that we can hand
them back one by one with appropriate special
ceremonies almost in perpetuity without ever
getting to the small core of
4-5 bases that the Pentagon planned on
permanently garrisoning as American troops first
crossed the Iraqi border. So here's what to
watch for: If any of these key bases are handed
back, with flags lowered and troops removed,
then you can begin to believe that an actual
withdrawal may be in the offing.
Kurdistan: You would largely not know
that the Kurdish parts of Iraq existed from most
daily news reports on the war. But one major
change from the Vietnam era is that we have
potential "sanctuaries" in the area to withdraw
to. Murtha suggested one of them, Kuwait, and it
is the focus of attention at the moment. But
Kurdistan, at present the quietest part of Iraq
(despite fierce tensions between the two main
Kurdish political parties and non-Kurdish
residents of the as-yet somewhat undefined
area), is also likely to be the most welcoming
to American forces "withdrawing" from "Iraq."
Present-day Kurdistan was created under the
American and British no-fly zones in the 1990s
and its future autonomy, no less independence,
would be at least temporarily guaranteed by the
presence of American troops there. Even the
Turks might prefer American forces in Kurdistan,
if they restrained local forces from any kind of
cross-border shenanigans in Kurdish regions of
Turkey. The sole reference I've seen to this
possibility was in a recent piece by veteran
reporter
Martin Walker who wrote: "There are other
ideas circulating in the Pentagon, including the
establishment of a major and possibly permanent
base in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq,
where U.S. troops are less controversial, and
would be welcomed by the neighboring Turks,
always worried at the prospect of an independent
Kurdistan becoming a magnet for their own
disaffected Kurdish minority."
Were the rest of Iraq to fall completely out of
our hands, it's easy to imagine an "American"
Kurdistan (conveniently near the Iranian
border), possibly expanded to include the oil
lands around the tinderbox city of Kirkuk, with
its own set of bases. Interestingly,
the Los Angeles Times has just
revealed that one of the Kurdish political
parties signed a private oil exploration deal
with a Norwegian company. Of course, the Kurdish
areas would have their own set of explosive
problems, but over the next year watch for
Kurdistan to surface as part of any American
draw-down which isn't actually a withdrawal.
Oil:
So here we are at another of the great, hardly
covered stories of the Iraq war. As
Mark LeVine has recently made so clear, the
Bush administration, with its former energy
industry execs and consultants, was thinking oil
– and Iraqi oil in particular – from literally
the first moments of its existence. "[T]he few
documents that have been made public from [Vice
President Cheney's] Energy Task Force… reveal
not only that industry executives met with
Cheney's staff [in February 2001] but that a map
of Iraq and an accompanying list of ‘Iraq oil
foreign suitors' were the center of discussion."
Hmmm… These were people who already had
"peak oil" on their minds. They entered
Iraq, a nation sitting on untold amounts of oil,
thinking about the global control of future
energy resources. They sent soldiers to guard
the Oil Ministry and the oil fields, while
allowing pretty much everything else to be
looted as the country fell to them. They have no
desire to abandon either their permanent bases
or that reservoir of "black gold" to others. But
beyond pious statements about preserving the
Iraqi "patrimony" (i.e. oil) in the early days
of the war, they never broached the subject
publicly and the media followed their lead. It's
rare today – though a perfectly obvious point to
make – for someone to say, as Ambassador
Khalilzad did recently, "You could have a
regional war that could go on for a very long
time, and affect the security of oil supplies."
Keep your eyes on this issue. It's what
separates Vietnam, which itself contained
nothing special for a foreign power, from Iraq.
In the end, ignore (if you can) the whirlwind of
withdrawal language that will turn all sorts of
non- or semi-withdrawal schemes into something
other than what they are, and try to keep your
eyes on those shoals of reality. This is not
Vietnam, which happened in slow-time. This war,
as the historian Marilyn Young claimed in its
first weeks so few years ago, is
"Vietnam on crack cocaine" and, whatever
anyone is saying now, it's a fair bet that
events will outpace all administration plans and
fantasies in the explosive year to come.
Tom Engelhardt [send
him mail] is editor of
TomDispatch.com, a project of the
Nation Institute.
He is the author of several books, including
The Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and
The End of Victory Culture. Robert
Dreyfuss is the author of
Devil's Game: How the United States Helped
Unleash Fundamentalist Islam. He covers
national security for Rolling Stone and writes
frequently for The American Prospect, Mother
Jones, and the Nation. He is also a regular
contributor to TomPaine.com, the Huffington
Post, and other sites, and writes the blog,
"The Dreyfuss Report," at his
web site. |