From Surge to
Purge to Dirge
By James Petras
General
Petraeus:
“President
Ahmadinejad and
other Iranian
leaders promised
to end their
support for the
special groups
but the
nefarious
activities of
the Quds Force
have continued.”
Senator Joseph
Lieberman: “Is
it fair to say
that the
Iranian-backed
special groups
are responsible
for the murder
of hundreds of
American
soldiers and
thousands of
Iraqi soldiers
and civilians?”
General Petraeus:
“It certainly
is…That is
correct.”
General
Petraeus
testimony to the
US Senate, April
8-9, 2008.
“The Israeli
flag is proudly
displayed above
the Sacred Ark
alongside the
American flag…”(
in an orthodox
synagogue in
wealthy
Georgetown,
Washington DC.
The entrance fee
to the synagogue
is $1000 for a
single holiday.)
“On each Sabbath
the prayers
include the
benediction for
the Israeli
Jewish soldiers
and the prayer
for the welfare
of the Israeli
government and
its officials.
Many Jewish
American
Administration
pray there. They
not only don’t
try to conceal
their religious
affiliation, but
go to great
lengths to
demonstrate
their Judaism
since it may
help their
careers greatly.
The enormous
Jewish influence
in Washington is
not limited to
the government.
In the
Washingtonian,
medias a very
significant part
of the most
important
personages and
of the
presenters of
the most popular
programs on the
TV are warm
Jews…and let us
not forget,in
this context,
the Jewish
predominance in
the
Washingtonian
academic
institutions.”
Avinoam Bar-Yosef (the Israeli daily newspaper) Ma’riv September 2, 1994 (translated by Israel Shahak)
05/05/08 ICH" -- - -
When President Bush appointed General David Petraeus Commander (head) of the Multinational Forces in
In theory and strategy, in pursuit of defeating the Iraqi resistance, General Petraeus was a disastrous failure, an outcome predictable form the very nature of his appointment and his flawed wartime reputation.
In the first
instance
Petraeus was
a political
appointment.
He was one
of the few
high
military
officials
who shared
Bush and the
Zioncons’
assessment
that the
‘war could
be won’.
Petraeus
argued that
his
experience
in
An analysis
and critique
of the
failure of
military-driven
imperialism
and its
militarily
dangerous
consequences
requires an
objective
critical
analysis of
Petraeus’
media-inflated
military
record prior
to taking
command.
Equally
important
Petraeus
close
ideological
and
political
linkages
with
Petraeus’
Phony
Success in
Northern
Iraq
Petraeus’
vaunted
military
successes in
Northern
Iraq –
especially
in Nineveh
province in
Northern
Iraq was
based on the
fact that it
is dominated
by the
Kurdish
warlord
tribal
leaders and
party bosses
eager to
carve an
independent
country.
The relative
stability of
the region
has little
or nothing
to do with
Petraeus’
counter-insurgency
theories or
policies and
more to do
with the
high degree
of Kurdish
‘independence’
or
‘separatism’
in the
region. Put
bluntly, the
Petraeus: Armchair Strategist
His
theory of
‘securing
and holding’
territory
presumes a
highly
motivated
and reliable
military
force
capable of
withstanding
hostility
from at
least eighty
percent of
the
colonized
population.
Petraeus,
like Bush
and the
Zionist
militarists
ignore the
fact that
the morale
of US
soldiers in
If the
General Petraeus could not count on his Iraqi troops, because scores were defecting and perhaps thousands will in the future. An empty drill field or worse a widespread barracks revolt is a credible scenario. The continued high casualty rates among US soldiers and Iraqi civilians, during his 18 months as Commander suggests that ‘holding and securing’ Baghdad failed to alter the overall situation.
While the
addition of
30,000
Petraeus
‘rule book’
prioritizes
“security
and task
sharing as a
means of
empowering
civilians
and
prompting
national
reconciliation.”
‘Security’
is elusive
because what
the
While the
death toll
of civilians
declined
from
‘hundreds a
day’ to
‘hundreds a
week’, it
demonstrated
Petraeus’
failure to
achieve his
most
elementary
goal. ‘Task
Sharing’ as
defined by
Petraeus and
his officers
is a
euphemism
for Iraqi
collaboration
in
‘administrating’
his
orders.
‘Sharing’
involves a
highly
asymmetrical
relation of
power: the
‘Empowering
civilians’,
another
prominent
concept in
Petraeus’
manual,
assumed that
those who
‘empower’
give up
power to the
‘others’.
In other
words, that
the
Petraeus’
goal of
‘national
reconciliation’
has been a
total
failure.
The Iraqi
regime is
paralyzed
into
squabbling
sects and
warlords.
Reconciliation
between
warring
parties is
not on the
horizon.
What
Petraeus
fails to
recognize,
but even his
puppet
allies
publicly
state, is
that
Former
Clintonite,
Sarah Sewall
(ex-Deputy
Assistant
Secretary of
Defense and
Harvard-based
‘foreign
affairs
expert’) was
ecstatic
over
Petraeus’
appointment.
Yet she
claimed the
‘inadequate
troop to
task ratio’
would
undermine
his strategy
(Guardian
March 6,
2007). The
‘troop to
task ratio’
forms the
entire basis
of Israel
and the
Zioncon
Democratic
Senators’
Hillary
Clinton and
Charles
Schumer’s’
‘critique’
of Bush’s
Iraq
policy.
Their
solution is
‘send more
troops’.
While
Petraeus did
increase the
troops with
the surge,
it is
militarily
and
politically
unable to
mobilize
500,000 more
to meet
Sewall’s
‘troop to
task
ratio’.
This
argument
begs the
question:
Inadequate
numbers of
troops
reflects the
massiveness
of popular
opposition
to the
Petraeus’
prescriptions
borrowed
heavily from
the Vietnam
War era,
especially
General
Creighton
Abram’s,
‘Clear and
Hold’
counter-insurgency
doctrine.
Abrams
ordered a
vast
campaign of
chemical
warfare
spraying of
thousands of
hectares
with the
deadly
‘Agent
Orange’ to
‘clear’
contested
terrain. He
approved of
the Phoenix
Plan – the
systematic
assassination
of 25,000
village
leaders to
‘clear’ out
local
insurgents.
Abrams
implemented
the program
of
‘strategic
hamlets’,
the forced
re-location
of millions
of
Vietnamese
peasants
into
concentration
camps. In
the end
Abram’s
plans to
‘clear and
hold’ failed
because each
measure
extended and
deepened
popular
hostility
and
increased
the number
of recruits
to the
Vietnamese
national
liberation
army.
Petraeus is
following
the Abrams-
Israeli
doctrine
with the
same
disastrous
civilian
casualties.
Large-scale
bombing of
densely
populated
Shia and
Sunni
neighborhoods
has taken
place since
he took
command.
Mass arrests
of suspected
local
leaders
accompanied
by the tight
military
encirclement
of entire
neighborhoods.
Arbitrary,
abusive
house-to-house
searches
turn the
poor sectors
of
Petraeus’
fundamental
(and false)
assumptions
are based on
the notion
that the
‘people’ and
the
‘insurgents’
are two
distinct and
opposing
groups. He
assumed that
his ground
forces and
Iraqi
mercenaries
could
distinguish
and exploit
this
divergence
and ‘clear
out’ the
insurgents
and ‘hold’
the people.
The
four-year
history of
the
Early
on General
Petraeus’
plan to
‘protect and
secure the
civilian
population’
was a
failure. He
flooded the
streets of
Petraeus’ attempt to play ‘Good Cop/Bad Cop’ in order to ‘divide and rule’ has been unable to weaken the opposition and has instead destabilized and fragmented the Maliki regime. While Petraeus was able to temporarily buy the loyalty of some Northern Sunni tribal leaders, their dubious loyalties depends on multi-million dollar weekly payoffs.
In theory
Petraeus
recognized
the broader
political
context of
the war:
“There is no
military
solution to
a problem
like that in
The gap between Petraeus’ ‘theoretical’ discourse on the centrality of politics and his practice of prioritizing military victory can be explained by his desire to please the Bush-Zioncons in Washington in order to advance his own military career (and future political ambitions). The result was an exceptionally mediocre military performance, underwritten by dismal political failures and the achievement of his personal ambitions.
In April
2008, the
Bush
Administration
named
Petraeus as
head of the
US Central
Command,
overseeing
the wars in
Petraeus reference to the “need to engage in talks with some groups of insurgents” fell on deaf ears. His proposal was seen by the insurgents as a continuation of the divide and conquer (or ‘salami’) tactics. The only ‘talks’ Petraeus secured were with tribal leaders who demanded millions of dollars up front. Otherwise he failed to attract any sector of the insurgency. Petraeus proved to be an armchair tactician, wise on public relations ‘techniques’, but mediocre in coming to grips with the ‘decolonization’ political framework in which tactics might work.
Petraeus Double Discourse
Commander
Petraeus was
quick to
grasp the
difficulty
of his
colonial
mission.
Just a month
after taking
command, he
engaged in
the same
sophistry
and double
discourse of
any colonial
general
confronted
with an
unwinable
war. To
keep the
flow of
funds and
troops from
From
the
beginning
Petraeus
gave himself
an
open-ended
mission
by extending
the time
frame to
secure
As
a military
intellectual
Petraeus
surely has
read George
Orwell’s ‘1984’
because he
was so
fluent in
double-speak.
In one
breath he
spoke of “no
immediate
need to
request more
US troops to
be sent to
Petraeus’
political
manipulation
of troop
numbers and
his blatant
lies about
the security
situation in
Petraeus Political Ambitions
The General
is a fine
master of
‘double
speak’. Yet
despite
superb media
performances
before his
colleagues
in the White
House and
Congress,
Petraeus’
military
strategy is
doomed to go
down the
same road of
political-military
defeat as
his
predecessors
in
Indo-China.
His military
police have
jailed tens
of thousands
of civilians
and killed
and injured
many more.
They were
interrogated,
tortured and
perhaps some
were
‘broken’.
But many
more took
their place
turning the
Green Zone
into a war
zone under
siege.
Petraeus
real
security
policy
through
intimidation
‘held’ only
as long as
the armored
cars
patrolled
each
neighborhood,
pointing
their
cannons at
every
building. That
proved to be
a temporary
solution.
As soon as
the troops
moved on,
the
insurgents
returned.
The
insurgents
re-emerge
after a week
because they
live and
work there,
whereas the
Marines do
not and
neither do
the Iraqi
collaborators
dare.
Petraeus ran
a costly
colonial
army, which
suffers
endless
casualties
and, which
is not
politically
sustainable.
Petraeus
knows that,
so he chose
a political
route upward
and out of
immediate
command in
General
Petraeus
realized his
long-term
political
ambitions
exceeded his
military
abilities.
Militarism
is a
stepping-stone
to a higher
post in
In his
Senate
testimony of
April 8-9,
2008,
Petraeus
lied to
Congress and
the American
people about
the
If the media uncritically swallowed Petraeus testimony, the public didn’t and a host of former generals and admirals were chagrined, embarrassed and outraged that he was advancing his career by sucking up to President Bush and Israel at the expense of the troops serving under him.
Petraeus Panders to Israel’s Fifth Column: The Iran Threat
By the
spring of
2008, as the
war turned
from bad to
worse, as
the
insurgency
grew in
power and
his
leadership
and strategy
was
transparently
a sham,
Petraeus
played his
last
formidable
political
card. To
sustain his
position and
cover up his
defeats in
In pointing
to
Even while
Petraeus was
covering up
his failure
by blaming
The only
organized
group, which
took up
Petraeus’,
campaign to
blame
General Petraeus, in his advance from Commander of US and ‘allied’ forces in Iraq to head of the US Central Command overseeing current US wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and overseeing future wars with Iran, Lebanon and Syria, has left behind a bitter legacy of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilian deaths, an unreliable Iraqi ‘quisling’ army, a failed client regime and a vast US bunker under constant attack. Every military official and most experts know that he was ‘Bush’s man’ and his advances were very much a product of the White House and its pro-Israel backers in the Congress.
Conclusion
The advance
of Petraeus
is a victory
of the
Zionist
Power
Configuration
in its quest
for American
military
leaders
willing to
pursue
It is
neither
military
honor, nor
patriotism,
which will
restrain
Petraeus
from
pursuing the
Zionist War
for
The US has degenerated into a sorry state of affairs when its future course depends on the political calculus of a feckless General, a failed counter-insurgency ‘expert’ and ambitious politician pandering to billionaire political contributors working for a foreign colonial power.
James Petras, a former Professor of Sociology at Binghamton University, New York, owns a 50-year membership in the class struggle, is an adviser to the landless and jobless in Brazil and Argentina, and is co-author of Globalization Unmasked (Zed Books). His latest book is "The Power of Israel in the United States" (Clarity Press, 2006).
