Iraq Progress Report: A Time to Assess and Reflect
By Stephen Lendman
08/21/07 "ICH" -- -- The Bush administration
is required to submit three progress reports on Iraq
to Congress in September after it returns from its
August recess. The US Comptroller General will issue
one around September 1 on how well so-called
congressional benchmarks have been met. Near the end
of the month, the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) conservative think tank
will report on "The readiness of the Iraqi Security
Forces (ISF) to assume responsibility for
maintaining the territorial integrity of Iraq,
denying international terrorists a safe haven,
bringing greater security to Iraq's 18 provinces in
the next 12 to 18 months, and bringing an end to
sectarian violence to achieve national
reconciliation."
Then, on or about September 15, General David
Petraeus, US "Multi-National Force" - Iraq (MNF-I)
commander will submit his assessment of progress
before multi-billions more funding are released for
a war the Pentagon and most others in Washington
know is unwinnable and lost. No matter, his report
(and the others) will state progress has been made
and the "surge" is working even though details will
be sketchy in what's expected to be a vaguely worded
deceptive snapshot of contrived positive trends.
It'll fool no one, but Congress will be asked to
accept it (and the others) on faith that more time,
money, sustained troop levels and patience are
needed.
That's assured from friendly Democrats and
Republicans alike. They continue turning a blind eye
to the daily nationwide out-of-control carnage like
the August 14 Kurdish area truck bombings local
Nineveh province officials report killed at least
500 (far above initial reports), seriously wounded
hundreds more, and destroyed over 30 homes in the
northwest Yazidi communities.
No matter, and who in Washington is watching and
counting. The generalissimo's wishes are all that
matter, and he'll have a list of them prepared for
him by his bosses and handlers in "the White House,
with inputs from officials throughout the
government,"according to an August 15 report in the
Los Angeles Times. All Petraeus has to do is
transcribe them to his letterhead, sign them, and
return them to Washington in the enclosed
stamp-addressed envelope.
The generalissimo knows what's expected of him which
is why he was picked for the top Iraq job. He's also
an image-maker's creation portrayed by the White
House and dominant media as aggressive in nature, an
innovative thinker on counterinsurgency warfare, a
talisman, a white knight, a do-or-die competitive
legend, and a man able to turn defeat into victory.
Those of us old enough don't remember adulation that
strong for Eisenhower or MacArthur. Nor did we read
about it for John Pershing in the earlier war or for
George Washington either, for that matter. As for
heaping it on Petraeus, borrowing a quote from a
past article - "Phew."
The generalissimo has now been in Iraq six months,
and despite claims of progress, conditions are worse
than ever and heading south under his stewardship.
Still, the commander's hope springs eternal and
won't likely wane (at least publicly) lest he risk
another 4-star aspirant stepping in to replace him.
With upper lip stiffened and reciting his prepared
lines, he tells a New York Times reporter "we're
going to try (to) win
(this war, but)....it's likely to muddle along for
quite a long time."
The boy emperor "commander-in-chief" back home has
his ideas, too. He plans to continue the "surge"
well into next year, all the while claiming "our new
strategy is delivering good results, and our
commanders recently reported more good news." Army
Chief of Staff George Casey (who got bumped in
February for Petraeus) was part of the amen chorus
August 14 after a weekend visit to Iraq. "Our guys
are seeing progress on the security front," he
claimed. "From the time I was there, there was
progress....every day....and there continues to be
progress....We will succeed....if we demonstrate
patience and will." More hype still came from an
August 10 White House document citing positive
reports from "several unexpected (unidentified)
sources" and a recent uptick in polling numbers any
able pollster can produce.
It's all part of a careful Washington-scripted
scheme to band-aid-over an unfixable gaping wound.
It includes dispatching hordes of congressmen,
senators, friendly journalists and assorted think
tank types to a series of staged events and meetings
in Iraq, far removed from what's, in fact, happening
on the ground. Their mission is to get it all down
and tell it to the home folks on return, and that's
what's happening.
Some of it comes from two on-off-and on again
war-supporting flacks, Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth
Pollack. It was in their New York Times July 30 op
ed piece titled "A War We Just Might Win." Neither
one is credible, and that status earned them
prominent space in "the newspaper of record" to pile
on more hype for a failed and illegal enterprise.
Both men supported (illegally) attacking Iraq in the
run-up to war when a quick victory looked easy. When
it failed, they became harsh critics of
administration bumbling until now. After being
whisked to Iraq as part of the thinly veiled PR
scheme, they returned after eight days of dog and
pony show theater claiming the following: "the
political debate in Washington is surreal (with its)
critics unaware of....significant changes taking
place (in Iraq.) We are finally (making progress),
at least in military terms....In previous
trips....American troops were angry and
frustrated....Today, morale is high....they see real
results." This over-the-top assessment stopped just
short of claiming the troops are so elated they
can't wait to come back for another tour when their
current one ends.
After four and a half years of failure in a war
longer in duration than WW I or II, and likely to
exceed the latter one in inflation-adjusted cost
before it ends, it's hard believing Congress would
swallow any assessment ignoring reality. But you can
bet it will on both sides of the aisle even though
the generalissimo says success depends on a
long-term US presence likely to be at least "9 or 10
years." In plain English, that means permanent
occupation and turning a blind eye to defeat until
the pain gets so great we give it up and leave.
That's not imminent as the administration-friendly
horde descended on Iraq for an advance taste of
what's coming next month straight from the
generalissimo's mouth. They heard progress is slow
but being made in places like Al Anbar province
where Sunni tribal leaders have been armed and
enlisted to help in an act of desperation likely to
backfire. These same men are former and almost
certain future resistance fighters. They turned
against fellow Iraqis (called Al Queda as standard
hot button Pavlovian scare talk) because their views
and actions got too extreme. That will change when
American duplicity again is seen as the main threat.
At that point, these same tribal leaders will rejoin
the fight to liberate their country from a hostile
occupier they and other Iraqi fighters won't
tolerate.
The present detente will prove short-lived when they
become as disillusioned as the main Sunni Accordance
Front 44 seat bloc that left the Shia-dominated
power-sharing government August 1 because their
demands were ignored. A week later, five more
ministers joined them by announcing a boycott of
cabinet meetings. There's now no Sunni
representation in the al-Makiki government causing
fissures in it big enough to drive an M1A1 tank
through, and all the Pentagon and Bush
administration can do is blame it on Iranian
meddling and al-Maliki's inability to contain it. It
makes as much sense as a 1960s pop song blaming a
magic spell of love on the bossa nova, but that
Latin beat hasn't been cited yet for any of Iraq's
problems.
In a sign of desperation, al-Maliki assembled top
Iraqi political leaders August 13 to prepare for an
August 14 summit of sorts to end the current crisis
and restore unity. "Everything (he said would) be on
the table," to resolve the impasse that may be
unresolvable. Major contentious issues remain, and
one of the biggest is Big Oil's drafted grand theft
oil law unacceptable to most Iraqis and still to be
legislatively settled one way or another. Nothing
permanent will be settled, however, until a real
Iraqi government is in place after the occupation
ends, and the puppet one is gone. How pathetic it is
showed when the "crisis summit" met. Like previous
efforts, it produced nothing, and the largest Sunni
bloc leader, Adnan Dulaimi, said there were no
negotiations, nothing political was discussed, but
it was a nice lunch.
It's more evidence claims of progress are pure
fantasy, and despite the hype, the so-called "surge"
is a bust. All that's "surging" is the number of:
-- daily attacks played down in the major media;
-- deaths that a Just Foreign Policy report
calculates at over 1 million since March, 2003 based
on updating an earlier Lancet study estimating
655,000 or more deaths through July, 2006;
-- uncontrollable violence throughout the country;
-- refugees fleeing for safety; the International
Rescue Committee and UNHCR estimate the number at
around four million including the internally
displaced with a further 40,000 Iraqis fleeing their
homes each month; and
-- a near-total breakdown of essential services like
electricity, drinking water, sanitation, medical
care, education, security and even food compounded
by mass unemployment and extreme poverty; the result
is a crisis level humanitarian disaster of epic
proportions that continues to worsen.
A July 30, 2007 Oxfam International and NCCI network
of aid organizations report had grim findings. It
estimates:
-- eight million Iraqis need emergency aid -
one-third of the population;
-- four million can't buy enough to eat;
-- 70% of Iraqis have no adequate water supply;
-- 80% lack adequate sanitation;
-- 28% of children are malnourished;
-- the rate of underweight baby births has tripled;
-- 92% of Iraqi children suffer learning problems
due to fear; and
-- there's been a mass exodus of around 80% of
doctors, nurses, teaching staff at schools and
hospitals and other vitally needed professionals.
This writer observed back in February and earlier
that conditions would continue to deteriorate, and
the greater number of US forces there are on the
ground, the worse things will get. That's the
current situation, but it's not being reported. Nor
do we hear about Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral
Michael G. Mullen's end of July assessment that "no
amount of troops in no amount of time will make much
of a difference," agreeing with other military
analysts with similar views going back decades.
Instead, spin begets super-spin in an effort to keep
defeat from becoming Armageddon or at least dampen
or conceal it until a new President takes office and
then it's his or her problem to sort out and
explain. So far, it doesn't look promising according
to accurate reports, some of which are Department of
Defense (DOD) ones hushed up.
DOD notes the average number of daily attacks peaked
in June at a level higher than any month since May,
2003, right after the invasion. Other independent
reports note Baghdad is an out-of-control battle
zone looking hopeless, conditions are nearly as bad
in other parts of the country, and dead bodies are
everywhere in numbers too great to keep accurate
count. Morgues can't handle the volume and don't
even try. To conceal the true toll, journalists
aren't allowed at bombing site scenes and are kept
out of hospitals and wherever else they can document
carnage. The Bush administration calls it progress,
and the hyperventilating media play along with
people denied the truth unless they rely on
unembedded independent journalists as growing
numbers are doing.
Few parts of the country have escaped turmoil that's
even in the Kurdish North as the August 14 bombings
there proved. It's also hitting the British-occupied
South around Basra that was never spared violence
but once got much less than in American-controlled
areas. Now it's pretty intense forcing the Brown
government to consider heeding the recommendation of
its senior military commanders that "nothing more
can be accomplished" in Iraq and the remaining 5500
British troops should be withdrawn "without further
delay," according to an August 19 report in the
London Independent.
An earlier August 7 Washington Post report said
"Shiite militias there have escalated a violent
battle against each other for political supremacy
and control over oil revenues" or maybe for other
reasons the Post ignored. The report continued
stating "Three major Shiite political groups are
locked in a bloody conflict that has left (Basra) in
the hands of militias and criminal gangs, whose
control extends to municipal offices and
neighborhood streets." Their main goal, in fact, may
be no different than other resistance groups - to
drive out a repressive occupier
(the British in the South in their case) and reclaim
their sovereignty. Afterwards they can sort out how
to run their country.
Things are little different in Afghanistan according
to an August 19 London Guardian report revealing a
shocking human toll on British forces (likely
affecting Americans, too) that may signal a future
withdrawal there as well as from Iraq. It cites
military figures showing nearly "half of frontline
troops have required significant medical treatment
during this summer's fighting....in southern Helmand
province (that) offered some of the most intense
fighting (British troops had been engaged in) for 50
years." One soldier on the ground said "You could be
in the army for decades and you will never get
anything like that again." It's so intense, many
British soldiers intend to leave the military when
their duty tours end - if they survive them.
Back Home It's Politics As Usual
Bush-supportive Republican and Democrat hopefuls
have their own issues to deal with and getting
reelected
(or elected President) tops them. They're stuck with
the Iraq quagmire they backed from the start, know
America is in Iraq to stay, but have to appeal to
their base with soothing rhetoric even knowing
expecting victory is pure fantasy. Billions spent on
huge super-bases, an extensive base infrastructure
and the largest US embassy in the world dispel talk
of withdrawal with proof on the ground. So while
pledging to end the war and bring home the troops,
all major Democrat and Republican candidates say it
will take years to accomplish and America must stay
engaged for the duration. They mean forever.
The reasons given are pathetic and the usual kind of
campaigning blather by aspirants trying to have it
both ways - withdraw, but leave enough there to
prevent:
-- Iraqi genocide,
-- civil war,
-- violence from spilling into other countries,
-- out-of-control lawlessness and the country
becoming a breeding ground and staging area for
broad-based "terrorist" attacks anywhere - that, in
fact, the occupation incites,
-- instability only our presence can contain (that,
in fact, causes). We also must:
-- protect American personnel (who shouldn't be
there) and Iraqis (we're "killing" with our
"kindness"),
-- train Iraqis (who can run their own country quite
nicely without us),
-- contend with all other possibilities, and more.
Rhetoric goes even further with Hillary Clinton
citing the need to fight "terrorism" and stabilize
the Kurdish North, never mentioning the serious
threat Turkey may invade in force and ignite a whole
new war with untold consequences if it happens.
The logistical problem of troop withdrawal then
comes up. Candidates claim it'll take a year or more
to accomplish when, if fact, the only issue is the
will to do it. Iraqis will be delighted to help.
Candidates like flexible options, however, so it's
easy saying future policy depends on conditions at
the time that now look "uncertain" at best.
Hillary Clinton is a metaphor for the times by her
pious comment that if George Bush doesn't end this
war, she will if elected. She won't say when, and in
a turnaround states her real view that America has
"remaining vital national security issues in Iraq"
(spelled O-I-L) requiring our permanent presence in
the country. So for her and other hopefuls,
withdrawal is nice-sounding rhetoric, but when it
gets down to policy, America is in Iraq to stay, so
get over it.
Her leading opponent, Barak Obama feels no different
with high-minded speechifying that "It is time to
bring our troops home because it has made us less
safe" (never mentioning the toll on Iraqis). He then
admits away from supportive crowds he supports a
permanent military presence in the country for the
usual phony reasons hiding the real ones.
Dick Cheney's hidden ones just surfaced in a 1994
video explaining why he advocated leaving Iraq after
the Gulf war. When asked then if US or UN forces
should have occupied Baghdad, he answered "no"
because it would become "a quagmire if you go that
far and try to take over (the country)." He then
highlighted the issue of casualties stating "how
many additional dead Americans is Saddam worth? Our
judgment was, not very many, and I think we got it
right." Indeed he did, yet he ended up doing in 2003
what he thought foolhardy nine years earlier. So
much for leadership, let alone honor and respect for
the rule of law and rights of people everywhere to
be sovereign and free.
Honor, public service and respect for sovereign
freedom aren't parts of the New York Times agenda
either, nor was it ever going back decades. A recent
example was its August 13 editorial titled "Wrong
Way Out of Iraq" in which it argues for a permanent
US military presence in the country and against a
significant troop drawdown. The Times position is
pathetic but typical of its kind of reporting and
editorial positions. It pledges allegiance to the US
empire and the corporate giants for which it
stands....with liberty and justice for them alone.
Wars of aggression, scorn for the law, massive human
suffering and deprivation are just business as usual
for "the newspaper of record," indifferent to it
all.
The editorial bluntly stated "The United States
cannot walk away from the new international
terrorist front it created in Iraq" while never
admitting our presence causes violence that won't
end while the occupation continues. It then added
"there should be no illusions about trying to
continue the war on a reduced scale. It is folly to
expect a smaller American force to do in a short
time what a much larger" one couldn't do over a
longer period.
From the start, the Times was in the lead (with
Judith Miller its chief front page voice) supporting
the Bush war agenda to establish imperial control
over the part of the world with two-thirds of all
proved oil reserves. Look for more "stay the course"
editorials and front page features in the run-up to
Petraeus' mid-September "progress" report calling
for continued patience, no troop drawdown, and lots
more funding indefinitely. Democrats and Republicans
alike are supportive with the Times out in front as
lead cheerleader.
Unmentioned is that the war is unwinnable and Dick
Cheney's 1994 prediction proved accurate. Those
factors likely played into Karl Rove's August 13
resignation, but he didn't let on why beyond the
usual stuff they all say about wanting more time
with his family. Nonsense, but shed no tears for a
man who may have outsmarted himself, yet isn't going
away. Rove may move out of the spotlight, but he's
not out of the game. He's sure to continue as a
master-manipulator elsewhere, for another right wing
scheme, or perhaps for the entire Republican party
behind the scenes in some reengineering or new
strategizing capacity if anyone wants him. Later on
they'll be lucrative book deal and lecture circuit
fees sweet enough to keep any fallen politico living
happily ever after.
In the end, however, the record will show Bush's
Svengali failed to pull off his greatest scheme -
solidifying the Republican base, building a
generation-long super-party majority in Congress,
and assuring a Republican gets elected President in
2008. His bungled post-9/11 strategy also resulted
in the
2006 mid-term election defeat with things looking
even bleaker as 2008 approaches.
Rove may also be leaving for another reason that at
this point is pure conjecture. It may involve
avoiding further congressional scrutiny. It's not
off the table, but soon may be as part of a White
House deal with Democrats softening in return for
something its leaders want. That's how business is
done in Washington where the criminal class is
bipartisan and one favor begets another. Expect
anything ahead in the dirtiest game around for the
highest stakes with the public left out, in the
dark, and nowhere in sight.
Looking Ahead in Iraq
In his August 10 AntiWar.com article titled
"Mechanistic Destruction: American Foreign Policy at
Point Zero," distinguished historian Gabriel Kolko
notes the US rarely ever "lost any conventional
military battle since at least 1950. Nor has
it....ever won a war." In all its wars since Korea,
it failed to win a single victory. It's good at
overthrowing governments, but the political fallout
often ends up "far, far more tenuous. In a word, in
international affairs it bumbles very badly" making
an "unstable world far more precarious" than if it
left well enough alone. "All this is very well
known," Kolko states. "The real issue is why the US
makes the identical mistakes over and over again and
never learns from its errors."
We're now "losing two wars and creating a vast arc
of profound strategic and political instability from
the Mediterranean Sea to South Asia." In addition,
we reignited the arms race in Europe, turned a
friendly Russia into a foe, and are heading the
country toward possible bankruptcy through reckless
fiscal policy. In sum, "this administration has been
at least as bad as any (in the nation's history and
perhaps it's) "the worst" ever.
By its record (with plenty of Capitol Hill help),
it's fair to compare Washington to an asylum with
members of both parties the inmates. An outside
observer would have to conclude the inmates were in
charge, and it shows by what's happening. It also
brings to mind the Wile E. Coyote cartoon character
as a way to explain it. Bush's political agenda has
been disastrous, yet both parties continue
supporting the same mistakes expecting a different
outcome.
Impossible, according to Kolko, saying the nation is
"at point zero in the application of American power
in the world." We can't win two "extremely expensive
adventures nor will (we) abstain from policies"
hurting other nations and our own. Myopia,
self-interest and a lot of arrogance have led us to
this "impasse," and Kolko isn't optimistic. He's
also a noted expert on the Vietnam war having
written the seminal work on its history he says was
"purchased by many base libraries, (and) military
journals (treat) it in detail and very
respectfully."
With that in mind, it's fitting to draw parallels to
that earlier time. They're striking even though
marked differences exist as well. By the late 1960s,
victory in Southeast Asia was considered
unattainable and a new strategy was needed, even
though it developed slowly. It was called
Vietnamization combined with duplicitous and
delaying diplomacy orchestrated by Nixon's Svengali,
Henry Kissinger. He also ended discredited with Karl
Rove his Bush administration equivalent for domestic
policy in the role of former Deputy Chief of Staff
to the President as of August
31.
The Pentagon has a current version of the Vietnam
era plan. It's been arming and training Iraqi
Security Forces (ISF) as our enforcer hoping US
troops eventually can stay hunkered down in
super-bases as backup. In the early to mid-1970s,
Vietnamization failed because, as Kolko explained,
victory isn't just about tactics, weapons and
winning battles. Economic, social, political and
morale factors come into play. The same holds true
today in Iraq.
In Vietnam, the revolution was a powerful defense
against a foreign invader. An emboldened North used
it, was more committed, and had majority popular
support on its side. They had enough of the Japanese
earlier followed by the French and Americans making
any alternative an improvement as long as it meant
peace with their own leaders in charge.
Those leaders didn't resist the Japanese and then
fight a 30 year war to give it up in the end a
foreign occupier and its imperial ambitions. At
least that's how it was then. Vietnam kept its
territory but, in the end, surrendered its economic
sovereignty to the lord and master of the universe
it could outlast on the battlefield but not in the
marketplace.
Iraq one day may be no different turning a future
resistance victory into eventual economic defeat
somewhere down the road. The country has enormous
untapped oil reserves thought by some analysts to be
potentially greater than Saudi Arabia's they believe
are overstated. Iraq's remained undeveloped because
of almost continuous war preventing any since
September,
1980, or for nearly 27 years.
Even so, it has around 10% of proved world reserves
that will be far greater when all potential deposits
come online. Whoever controls them will have an
economic bonanza worth many trillions of dollars. It
may entice a future Iraqi government to partner with
the US-led West, and by so doing let America win in
the marketplace what it can't achieve in battle. In
the end, Iraq may surrender as Vietnam did and lose
everything now being fought for. How this plays out
will only be known in the fullness of time. Millions
of Iraqis hope equity and justice will triumph over
greed and are betting their lives on it. May their
struggle not end up in vain.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached
at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com
and listen to The Steve Lendman News and Information
Hour on TheMicroEffect.com Saturdays at noon US
central time and now archived for easy listening.
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