Iraq Fantasy
Clashing with Reality
By
Robert Scheer
3.03.06 HuntingtonPost.com
March 14, 2006, 2:06 PM EST
What is he thinking? On a day when Shiite vigilantes conducted hangings
in Sadr City in reprisal for the killing of scores of their co-religionists
in a market bombing, President Bush continued to insist that progress
in Iraq justified staying the course.
"By their response over the past two weeks, Iraqis have shown
the world that they want a future of freedom and peace," he said
Monday. "We're helping Iraqis build a strong democracy so that
old resentments will be eased and the insurgency marginalized."
Contrast that fantasy with the same day's harsh news: "In Sadr
City, the Shiite section in Baghdad where the terrorist suspects were
executed, government forces vanished," reported the New York Times.
"The streets are ruled by aggressive teenagers with shiny soccer
jerseys and machine guns. They set up roadblocks and poke their heads
into cars and detain whomever they want. Mosques blare warnings on loudspeakers
for American troops to stay out. Increasingly, the Americans have been
doing just that."
The next day, 87 corpses, all male, were found scattered throughout
the city, shot or strangled after being bound and blindfolded. This,
in turn, was in apparent reprisal for a series of bombings on Sunday
targeting Shiite civilians which killed 58 and wounded 300, according
to Iraq's Health Ministry.
Of course, the drip-drip of American troop deaths continues, as Lance
Cpl. Bunny Long, 22, of Modesto, Calif., will be coming home in a flag-draped
casket after being killed Friday by a suicide, vehicle-borne, IED.
If such constant mayhem is taken as a sign of progress, three years
after the U.S. invasion, then Bush surely will be thrilled by what the
future holds. The British, on the other hand, have seen the handwriting
on the wall and once again have begun to flee an imperial disappointment
in Mesopotamia, announcing they are reducing their forces by 10 percent.
Clearly, London has grasped what Bush cannot: The three-year occupation
by Western armies is an incitement to guerrilla violence, not an impediment.
Of course, Bush would have us believe this expanding civil war is the
work of insidious foreigners rather than of competing agendas arising
from within an Iraq society long stunted by colonialism and dictatorship.
It does not occur to him that he is the foreigner who the majority of
Iraqis hold responsible for the country's despair, and whose occupation
immeasurably strengthens the hand of extremists on all sides. Bush's
neoconservative Svengalis apparently failed to alert him to the possibility
that religious, ethnic and nationalist sentiments might trump his plans
for a Western-imposed "democracy," subservient to U.S. interests.
Or that U.S.-engineered elections would be won by allies and disciples
of the radical Shiite government in the "evil axis" capital
of Tehran.
Such bright contradictions were on display in Bush's latest strategically
bankrupt "plan" for victory: Spending $3.3 billion to fight
the improvised explosive devices (IEDs) Bush now claims Iran is smuggling
into Iraq -- to the very Shiite forces that won the U.S.-engineered
election and are positioned to form the first real post-Hussein government.
The IEDs, mentioned a whopping 26 times in the speech, have obviously
come to replace that nonexistent WMD threat as the centerpiece of Bush's
Iraq policy. We will stop them, he says, by bumping anti-IED-related
spending by a factor of 22, from %$150 million in 2004 to $3.3 billion.
"We're putting the best minds in America to work on this effort,"
Bush said.
Why not put a few of them to work on figuring how to extract the U.S.
military from Iraq instead? After all, that is where all the IEDs happen
to be exploding.
But, of course, this alternative, to stop making U.S. troops targets
in the midst of a raging civil war in a Muslim country that the United
States has no business occupying, was summarily dismissed by our president.
"[M]y decisions on troop levels will be made based upon the conditions
on the ground and on the recommendations of our military commanders,
not artificial timetables set by politicians here in Washington, D.C.,"
he said.
Has the president never read our Constitution, which mandates civilian
control over the military? Does he not grasp that he is himself a Washington
politician? How can you effectively sell democracy to the world when
you mock it so contemptuously at home?
You can't. Not until the public and its representatives force this
administration to change its disastrous course can we begin to restore
international respect for the American political system that Bush has
so masterfully subverted.
Robert Scheer is editor of truthdig.com.
Links:
Peace
Action Caught Up in Bush's Spying and Lying
The
Power of Nightmares
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