Sadly, the Plural of "Fiasco" Requires No "E"
By Ray McGovern
08/01/06 "t
r u t h o u t " -- -- But the world desperately needs an
"E" for EXIT from the march of folly toward a wider Middle East war
that is increasingly likely to result from plural US foreign policy
fiascos - in Iraq, Israel and Lebanon, for starters; in Syria and
Iran for the next stage. Fortunately, Webster's does allow the
insertion of an "E" and that's precisely what we must now do. We
need to make a prompt exit from the endless string of fiascoes that
have the Middle East marching to calamity.
If we do not take a sober look beyond the carnage of the last few
weeks and weigh the reaction of still others in and outside the
region, I fear there will be no exit. Perhaps it would be wise to
start with a brief review: Who led our march into this modern-day
Valley of Death?
Ideologues and Amateurs
Let's begin with the new people and policies that President George
W. Bush brought in with him when he took office on January 20, 2001.
Who urged on him what Michael O'Hanlon of Brookings calls "the huge
mistake of giving Israel a blank check?" Who played the leading
roles in encouraging Bush to let slip the dogs of war on Iraq?
Honors for the leading role in the category of fiasco goes, ex aequo,
to Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
- the "Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal," as described by Colin Powell's chief
of staff at the State Department, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson (USA,
ret.). At an award ceremony, the cabal no doubt would offer copious
thanks to key members of the cast - first and foremost, ideologues
Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith. The Oscar for best actress in a
supporting role goes to Condoleezza Rice.
It was five and a half years ago that Rice was formally initiated
into the neo-conservative brotherhood as an auxiliary. Her most
important service was greasing the skids for the brothers to try to
shoehorn into reality their ambitious but naive dreams of using war
to ensure total US/Israeli domination of the Middle East. At the new
administration's first National Security Council meeting on January
30, 2001, then-national security adviser Rice stage-managed formal
approval of two profound changes in decades-long US policy toward
Israel-Palestine and Iraq. Thanks to Paul O'Neill, confirmed as
treasury secretary just hours before the NSC meeting, we have a
first-hand account.
The neo-cons had already gotten to the new president, for he began
with the abrupt announcement that he was ditching the policy of past
presidents who tried to honestly broker an end to the violence
between Palestinians and Israelis. Rather, the president said the US
would now tilt sharply toward Israel. Most importantly, Bush made it
clear that he would let then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
resolve the conflict as he saw fit. The US would no longer
"interfere."
Powell: Dead Man Walking
According to O'Neill, Secretary of State Colin Powell seemed
"startled," and warned that US disengagement would unleash Sharon
and the Israeli army. Bush shrugged dismissively, adding, "Sometimes
a show of strength by one side can really clarify things."
After his requiem for the decades of US sweat and blood expended on
the effort to work out a solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict,
the president turned immediately to Iraq. Rice led off by reciting
the received wisdom of the neo-cons (I still wonder how many of them
actually believed it...) that, "Iraq might be the key to reshaping
the entire region." Whereupon, at her request, then-CIA Director
George Tenet displayed a grainy overhead image of a factory in Iraq
that he happened to have with him. Tenet thought the factory "might"
be associated with a chemical or biological weapons program, but
that association could not be confirmed. No problem. The
conversation immediately turned from this typically Tenet-ative
"intelligence" to the question of which Iraqi targets to begin
bombing.
O'Neill, just inducted into the cabinet but not into the
neo-conservative brotherhood, was understandably nonplussed. He says
he found it all quite curious and left the meeting convinced that,
for reasons never fully explained, "getting Hussein was now the
administration's focus."
The twin decisions of (1) To "tilt" more decidedly toward Israel and
(2) to prepare to attack Iraq were right out of a blueprint drafted
in 1996 by a small group of Americans and Israelis, including
arch-neo-conservatives Richard Perle and Douglas Feith. Shortly
after the January 30 NSC meeting, the two were given influential
posts in the Department of Defense directly under Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz - Perle as chair of
the powerful Defense Policy Board and Feith as undersecretary of
defense for policy (#3 in the defense hierarchy). The policy's
prescriptive blueprint, titled, "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for
Securing the Realm," had been prepared originally for Israeli Prime
Minister Netanyahu, but it proved to be too extreme even for him. No
matter. As the new Bush administration took shape, Perle and Feith
retrieved the mothballed study, made an end-run around the hapless
Powell, and sold it to Vice President Dick Cheney, Rumsfeld and Bush
Dr. Rice Becomes Dr. No
There is a certain poetic justice in the fact that Rice, now
secretary of state, is reaping the whirlwind. She has been trapped
in the extremely awkward position of having to say "No" to a
cease-fire to stop the burgeoning violence, and then being mocked by
the Israelis who openly violated the cease-fire they had promised
her.
Still an innocent abroad, Rice has loyally played piano
accompaniment for the neo-con hit song, "Reshaping the Entire
Region." She has, for example, described the violence in Lebanon and
Israel as "the birth pangs of a new Middle East." On Friday,
President Bush declared, "This is a moment of intense conflict ...
yet our aim is to turn it into a moment of opportunity and a chance
for broader change in the region."
Bush's remark elicited uncharacteristically acerbic ridicule from
Richard Haass, who served under Bush as head of policy planning at
the State Department. (Yes, this is the same Haass who in July 2002
begged Rice for an appointment with the president, whom he wanted to
warn of the folly of invading Iraq. Rice reportedly told him, "The
decision's been made; don't waste your breath.") Referring to Bush's
remarks on Friday, Haass, now head of the Council on Foreign
Relations, laughed at the president's optimism, according to a
report by Peter Baker in yesterday's Washington Post. "That's the
funniest thing I've heard in a long time," said Haass. "If this is
an opportunity, what's Iraq? A once-in-a-lifetime chance?"
It is far from funny. Rather, it is amateur-hour again at the White
House, with Rice acting as the president's personal secretary under
instruction to do what Cheney, Rumsfeld, and the neo-cons tell her
to do. The results have been entirely predictable. Seldom before has
Washington been so widely seen to be joined at the hip to an Israel
on the rampage. Seldom has US stock in the region sunk to such
depths as it did last week, with civilian casualties in Lebanon
piling up (literally) and with Rice joining Israel in rejecting
appeals for an immediate cease-fire on grounds that it must be
"sustainable." Policy and performance alike have been myopic in the
extreme, and have resulted in an embarrassing US setback from which
it will take decades to recover. The ramifications are region-wide;
but looking at Lebanon alone, one of my former CIA colleagues
observed:
"The irony in all this is that Israel has an interest in a
multicultural Lebanon and not an Islamist Lebanon, and the high
hopes for the former are being dashed."
Meanwhile Back in Baghdad - More "Last Throes"
In terms of those killed, Iraq was even more violent than Lebanon
over the past week, but Western media put Iraqi developments on the
back burner.
-Last Tuesday, President Bush told the press, "Obviously, the
violence in Baghdad is still terrible, and therefore there needs to
be more troops." Bush observed that: "Conditions change inside a
country. And the question is: Are we going to be facile enough (sic)
to change with [them]." Some 4,000 US troops are being sent from
elsewhere in Iraq to reinforce Baghdad. Senator Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.)
noted on July 28 that this "reverses last month's decision to have
Iraqi forces take the lead in Baghdad ... and represents a dramatic
setback for the US and the Iraqi government." Highly respected
military analyst Anthony Cordesman has expressed the same view.
Secretary Rumsfeld approved General George Casey's request to extend
the Iraq tour of a 3,700-strong Stryker brigade, which had been
scheduled to return to the US this summer. And the Pentagon
announced that the number of US troops in Iraq rose last week to
132,000 - the highest level since May. In a command performance in
June, General Casey reportedly gave Bush a plan for withdrawing
7,000 troops before the mid-term elections - a plan that may now be
overtaken by events.
Whether he intended to or not, National Security Adviser Stephen
Hadley, also fielding questions from the press, virtually redefined
the mission of US troops. Addressing what he called the "new
challenge," Hadley said, "This isn't about insurgency. This isn't
about terror. This is about sectarian violence." The number of
sectarian killings has doubled since the start of the year. Press
reports indicate that many Sunnis are even afraid to go out to
retrieve the bodies of relatives in Baghdad's overflowing morgues,
lest they too become prey to Shia militia. The very large unanswered
question: Is that why our troops lie exposed in the middle - to stop
Iraqis from killing one another?
Richard Armitage, who was Secretary Colin Powell's deputy at the
State Department, warned that bringing in more troops at this late
stage may prove to be "too little too late, and that the US will
turn into a bystander in an Iraqi civil war it does not have
sufficient resources to prevent." Western press reports suggest that
this may already be the case; with virtually everyone below the rank
of general admitting that lack of troops is a major problem. At the
same time, it is universally recognized that requesting more troops
would sound the death knell for one's career.
One key Shia leader has objected to the deployment of additional US
forces to Baghdad, and Shia militias are increasingly clashing with
US troops. The Shia militias are also using more effective,
armor-piercing IUDs. US officers have expressed concern over what
the Shia might do in reaction to the US green light for Israeli
attacks on Lebanon. Colonel Patrick Lang (USA, ret.) has expressed
grave concern over the vulnerability of US supply lines from Kuwait
into the Iraqi heartland, and Iran's ability to stir up the Shia in
that area.
Former adviser to the US occupation authority in Iraq, Michael Rubin
of the American Enterprise Institute, has said, "The Shia-led
Interior Ministry is out of control." There is a strong move afoot
in the Iraqi Parliament to replace the interior minister. Otherwise,
all is going according to plan - or so the Bush administration and
FOX News Channel would have us believe. It has become increasingly
difficult to put a positive spin on all this. Now and again, out of
desperation, a PR person will reach for the all-too-familiar
chestnut: "We have not once been defeated in battle."
Many years ago, Army Colonel Harry Summers learned the hard way not
to use this one. At the end of the war in Vietnam, Summers received
orders to negotiate with North Vietnamese Army Colonel Tu the terms
of the withdrawal of US forces from Vietnam. Summers could not
resist reminding Tu, "You know you never beat us on the
battlefield." Colonel Tu paused for a moment: "That may be so," he
said. "But also irrelevant."
Many of us in Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)
have been writing and shouting for 33 months that this war is
UNWINNABLE. It is now time for Americans interested in justice,
sanity and peace to draw the appropriate conclusions and summon the
courage to stick our necks out. For it is simply not right to ask
our troops in Iraq to play referee between factions and "stay the
course" for us, on the off chance we might get lucky and "reshape
the entire region."
Ray McGovern is on the Steering Group of VIPS. He draws on his
experience as an Army infantry and intelligence officer and a
27-year career as a CIA analyst. He now works with Tell the Word,
the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in
Washington, DC.
This article was first published at
t r u t h o u t
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us