Bush’s Baghdad Photo-op
By Mike Whitney
06/19/06 "Information
Clearing House' -- -- “Three years after ‘Mission Accomplished’,
the U.S. still does not control one inch of territory beyond the
Green Zone”. (Excerpt)
George Bush loves playing the war president. He loves strutting
across an aircraft carrier in a tight-fitting jump-suit or
dropping in on the new Iraqi Premier, al-Maliki for a few hours
of chummy bravado. He loves showing Papa-Bush that he can hang
in there when things get tough and that he won’t be pushed
around by those niggling nay-sayers in the Congress.
Unfortunately, things are quickly unraveling in Iraq and, by
many accounts, the war is already lost. Conservatives are
jumping off the bandwagon faster than liberals and Bush’s
approval ratings continue to plummet. Retired General William
Odom summarized the Iraq adventure best when he said, "It is the
greatest strategic disaster in US history."
Bush’s photo-op in Baghdad only proves the wisdom of Odom’s
judgment. What looked like a triumphant visit by the
Commander-in-Chief to the heart of a war zone, was actually a
desperate attempt to garner support for a failed mission.
The details of Bush’s Baghdad-junket are similar to his trip to
the UK last year, when he was surrounded by a phalanx of 3,500
fully-armed security guards who shadowed his every move from the
time he touched down until the final lift-off. All the while, a
squadron of Apache helicopters and F-16s kept circling overhead
to ensure the Dear Leader’s safety. Providing security in Iraq
has ben an equally daunting task.
Three years after “Mission Accomplished", the U.S. still does
not control one inch of territory beyond the pock-marked
parapets and block walls of their Baghdad fortress. Even inside
the Green Zone, security is so stretched that Bush had to be
spirited out of the country just 5 hours after arrival. What
does that tell the world about the magnitude of America’s
failure?
Bush would never have risked driving through the battered
landscape of downtown Baghdad. Instead, he limited his movements
to one small dot on the map in an ocean of resistance; Bush’s
citadel of "democracy".
"My message to the Iraqis is this," Bush boomed. “We’re going to
help you succeed. My message to the enemy is: Don’t count on us
leaving before we succeed. My message to our troops is: We
support you 100%. Keep doing what you’re doing. And my message
to the critics is: We listen very carefully and adjust, and
adjust when we need to adjust."
What gibberish. Bush’s promises are absurd given the enormity of
the catastrophe he has created. By every objective standard,
things were better under Saddam.
The media gobbled up Bush’s photo-op with their customary zeal.
The visit was yet another successful Rove-coup that probably
nudged Bush’s approval ratings upward, but achieved nothing
substantive. The pictures of smiley-faced politicians
glad-handing and chest-thumping appeared on the front pages of
every newspaper in the country. They added to the festive
atmosphere that began with the killing of terrorist-mastermind
Abu al Zarqawi. By all accounts, it was a good week for the Team
Bush.
But the war won’t be won by the White House public relations
team and people are increasingly suspicious of Bush’s
diversionary publicity stunts like his unannounced trip to
Baghdad. The long litany of war crimes is finally wearing away
at the fragile American psyche.
Haditha, Falluja, Abu Ghraib; these are the names that will
forever identified with Iraq and engraved in the public’s
consciousness. Their scars are bound to be felt long after the
war is over. Brand Bush is now irreversibly linked to criminal
renditions, abusive treatment of prisoners, and massive
slaughter. Nothing Rove does will remove the stain of those
atrocities from America’s reputation.
American elites are steadily abandoning their support for the
war. Madeleine Albright, Brent Scowcroft, William F Buckley,
Richard Holbrook are just some of the heavy-hitters who now see
the futility of pursuing the present policy. President Jimmie
Carter’s national security advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski has been
particularly outspoken in his criticism of the war and the
failure to provide even minimal security for the Iraqi people.
In an interview last week on the Jim Lehrer News Hour Brzezinski
said that the invasion "was not worth it" and that it was a
"major misadventure".
"This is worse than the bad days of Vietnam… We do not have a
free and democratic government that is functioning… The
authority we have installed is besieged and relatively helpless,
and a civil war is beginning to mushroom, under the occupation
which is unable to crush the insurgency, because it is a foreign
occupation….We no longer live in an age of colonialism. We no
longer have to assume the 'white man’s burden’ in order to
'civilize’ others."
Brzezinski finished the interview by offering a 4-step strategy
for withdrawing from Iraq; something that the Democratic
leadership should consider immediately.
1. Talk to the leadership about when to leave.
2. Set a date for withdrawal.
3. Let the government convene a conference of all Iraq’s Muslim
neighbors about stabilizing Iraq and helping it to stabilize.
4 "Convene a donor’s conference of interested countries in
Europe and the Far East who benefit from Iraqi oil on helping to
rehabilitate Iraq. This would allow us to leave and still say
that we basically achieved what we wanted—the removal of
Saddam—though not providing a secular, stable, united Iraq under
a perfect democracy."
Brzezinski poses realistic solutions for a situation that will
progressively deteriorate into anarchy. His analysis cannot be
easily dismissed. He is respected among his peers as a
hard-edged Machiavellian strategist who is not given to flights
of fancy. If he says the war is over, it is not because of some
heartfelt connection with the Iraqi people, but because it is "unwinnable"
and damaging to America’s long-term interests.
In an earlier interview, Brzezinski articulated his belief that
the war has been a "moral setback" for America overshadowing our
other activities in the world. He added that if we were
unwilling to commit 500,000 troops and $200 billion a year, for
an unspecified amount of time then victory would probably be
unachievable.
He said, "There comes a point in the life of a nation when such
sacrifices are not justified…and only time will tell if the
United States is facing a moment of wisdom, or is resigned to
cultural decay".
Brzezinski is right; America is at a crossroads. The moral
squalor of our political system has never been more evident, nor
the conduct of our leaders more vile. It’s no longer a matter of
simply extracting ourselves from Iraq. Now, we’re fighting to
salvage what’s left of our soul.
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