Two More Years
By Paul Krugman
NY Times Op-Ed:
12/04/06"New
York Times" -- -- At a reception following
the midterm election, President Bush approached
Senator-elect James Webb.
"How's your boy?" asked Mr. Bush. "I'd like to get them
out of Iraq, Mr. President," replied Mr. Webb, whose
son, a Marine lance corporal, is risking his life in Mr.
Bush's war of choice.
"That's not what I asked you," the president snapped.
"How's your boy?"
"That's between me and my boy, Mr. President," said Mr.
Webb.
Good for him. We need people in Washington who are
willing to stand up to the bully in chief.
Unfortunately, and somewhat mysteriously, they're still
in short supply.
You can understand, if not condone, the way the
political and media establishment let itself be
browbeaten by Mr. Bush in his post-9/11 political prime.
What's amazing is the extent to which insiders still
cringe before a lame duck with a 60 percent disapproval
rating.
Look at what seems to have happened to the Iraq Study
Group, whose mission statement says that it would
provide an "independent assessment." If press reports
are correct, the group did nothing of the sort. Instead,
it watered down its conclusions and recommendations,
trying to come up with something Mr. Bush wouldn't
reject out of hand.
In particular, says Newsweek, the report "will set no
timetables or call for any troop reductions." All it
will do is "suggest that the president could, not
should, begin to withdraw forces in the vaguely defined
future."
And all this self-abasement is for naught. Senior Bush
aides, Newsweek tells us, are "dismissive, even
condescending" toward James Baker, the Bush family
consigliere who is the dominant force in the study
group, and the report. Of course they are. That's how
bullies always treat their hangers-on.
Even now, it seems, the wise men of Washington can't
bring themselves to face up to two glaringly obvious
truths.
The first is that Americans are fighting and dying in
Iraq for no reason.
It's true that terrible things will happen when U.S.
forces withdraw. Mr. Bush was attacking a straw man when
he mocked those who think we can make a "graceful exit"
from Iraq. Everyone I know realizes that the civil war
will get even worse after we're gone, and that there
will probably be a bloody bout of ethnic cleansing that
effectively partitions the country into hostile
segments.
But nobody - not even Donald Rumsfeld, it turns out -
thinks we're making progress in Iraq. So the same
terrible things that would happen if we withdrew soon
will still happen if we delay that withdrawal for two,
three or more years. The only difference is that we'll
sacrifice many more American lives along the way.
The second truth is that the war will go on all the
same, unless something or someone forces Mr. Bush to
change course.
During his recent trip to Vietnam, Mr. Bush was asked
whether there were any lessons from that conflict for
Iraq. His response: "We'll succeed unless we quit."
It was a bizarre answer given both the history of the
Vietnam War and the facts on the ground in Iraq, but it
makes perfect sense given what we know about Mr. Bush's
character. He has never been willing to own up to
mistakes, however trivial. If he were to accept the
failure of his adventure in Iraq, he would be admitting,
at least implicitly, to having made the mother of all
mistakes.
So Mr. Bush will keep sending other men's children off
to fight his war. And he'll always insist that Iraq
would have been a great victory if only his successors
had shared his steely determination.
Does this mean that we're doomed to at least two more
years of bloody futility? Not necessarily. Last month
the public delivered a huge vote of no confidence in Mr.
Bush and his war. He's still the commander in chief, but
the new majority in Congress can put a lot of pressure
on him to at least begin a withdrawal.
I'm worried, however, that Democrats may have counted on
the Iraq Study Group to provide them with political
cover. Now that the study group has apparently wimped
out, will the Democrats do the same?
Well, here's a question for those who might be tempted,
yet again, to shy away from a confrontation with Mr.
Bush over Iraq: How do you ask a man to be the last to
die for a bully's ego?
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.