Like Hitler and Brezhnev,
Bush is in denial
By Robert Fisk
12/01/06 "The
Independent" -- -- More than half a
million deaths, an army trapped in the largest military
debacle since Vietnam, a Middle East policy already
buried in the sands of Mesopotamia - and still George W
Bush is in denial. How does he do it? How does he
persuade himself - as he apparently did in Amman
yesterday - that the United States will stay in Iraq
"until the job is complete"? The "job" - Washington's
project to reshape the Middle East in its own and
Israel's image - is long dead, its very neoconservative
originators disavowing their hopeless political aims and
blaming Bush, along with the Iraqis of course, for their
disaster.
History's "deniers" are many - and all subject to the
same folly: faced with overwhelming evidence of
catastrophe, they take refuge in fantasy, dismissing
evidence of collapse as a symptom of some short-term
setback, clinging to the idea that as long as their
generals promise victory - or because they have
themselves so often promised victory - that fate will be
kind. George W Bush - or Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara for
that matter - need not feel alone. The Middle East has
produced these fantasists by the bucketful over past
decades.
In 1967, Egyptian president Gamel Abdul Nasser insisted
his country was winning the Six Day War hours after the
Israelis had destroyed the entire Egyptian air force on
the ground. President Carter was extolling the Shah's
Iran as "an island of stability in the region" only days
before Ayatollah Khomeini's Islamic revolution brought
down his regime. President Leonid Brezhnev declared a
Soviet victory in Afghanistan when Russian troops were
being driven from their fire bases in Nangahar and
Kandahar provinces by Osama bin Laden and his fighters.
And was it not Saddam Hussein who promised the "mother
of all battles" for Kuwait before the great Iraqi
retreat in 1991? And was it not Saddam again who
predicted a US defeat in the sands of Iraq in 2003?
Saddam's loyal acolyte, Mohamed el-Sahaf, would
fantasise about the number of American soldiers who
would die in the desert; George W Bush let it be known
that he sometimes slipped out of White House staff
meetings to watch Sahaf's preposterous performance and
laugh at the fantasies of Iraq's minister of
information.
So who is laughing at Bush now? Iraqi Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki, almost as loyal a retainer to Bush as
Sahaf was to Saddam, receives the same false praise from
the American president that Nasser and Brezhnev once
lavished upon their generals. "I appreciate the courage
you show during these difficult times as you lead your
country," Bush tells Maliki. "He's the right guy for
Iraq," he tells us. And the Iraqi Prime Minister who
hides in the US-fortified "Green Zone" - was ever a
crusader fortress so aptly named? - announces that
"there is no problem". Power must be more quickly
transferred to Maliki, we were informed yesterday. Why?
Because that will save Iraq? Or because this will allow
America to claim, as it did when it decided to allow the
South Vietnamese army to fight on its own against Hanoi,
that Washington is not to blame for the debacle that
follows? "One of his frustrations with me is that he
believes that we've been slow about giving him the tools
necessary to protect the Iraqi people." Or so Bush says.
"He doesn't have the capacity to respond. So we want to
accelerate that capacity." But how can Maliki have any
"capacity" at all when he rules only a few square miles
of central Baghdad and a clutch of rotting ex-Baathist
palaces?
About the only truthful statement uttered in Amman
yesterday was Bush's remark that "there's a lot of
speculation that these reports in Washington mean
there's going to be some kind of graceful exit out of
Iraq [but] this business about a graceful exit just
simply has no realism to it at all." Indeed, it has not.
There can be no graceful exit from Iraq, only a
terrifying, bloody collapse of military power. The
withdrawal of Shia ministers from Maliki's cabinet
mirror the withdrawal of Shia ministers from another
American-supported administration in Beirut - where the
Lebanese fear an equally appalling conflict over which
Washington has, in reality, no military or political
control.
Bush even appeared oblivious of the current sectarian
map of Iraq. "The Prime Minister made clear that
splitting his country into parts, as some have
suggested, is not what the Iraqi people want, and that
any partition of Iraq would only lead to an increase in
sectarian violence," he said. "I agree." But Iraq is
already "split into parts". The fracture of Iraq is
virtually complete, its chasms sucking in corpses at the
rate of up to a thousand a day.
Even Hitler must chuckle at this bloodbath, he who
claimed in April 1945 that Germany would still win the
Second World War, boasting that his enemy, Roosevelt,
had died - much as Bush boasted of Zarqawi's killing -
while demanding to know when General Wenck's mythical
army would rescue the people of Berlin. How many "Wencks"
are going to be summoned from the 82nd Airborne or the
Marine Corps to save Bush from Iraq in the coming weeks?
No, Bush is not Hitler. Like Blair, he once thought he
was Winston Churchill, a man who never - ever - lied to
his people about Britain's defeats in war. But fantasy
knows no bounds.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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