January 28, 2008
Iraq War Surge’s “Success” is Just a Myth
Andrew J. Bacevich, The Washington Post, January 28, 2008
As the fifth anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom nears, the fabulists are again trying to weave their own version of the war. The latest myth is that the “surge” is working.
In President Bush’s pithy formulation, the United States is now “kicking a–” in Iraq. The gallant Gen. David Petraeus, having been given the right tools, has performed miracles, redeeming a situation that once appeared hopeless. Sen. John McCain has gone so far as to declare that “we are winning in Iraq.” While few others express themselves quite so categorically, McCain’s remark captures the essence of the emerging story line: Events have (yet again) reached a turning point. There, at the far end of the tunnel, light flickers. Despite the hand-wringing of the defeatists and naysayers, victory beckons.
From the hallowed halls of the American Enterprise Institute waft facile assurances that all will come out well. AEI’s Reuel Marc Gerecht assures us that the moment to acknowledge “democracy’s success in Iraq” has arrived. To his colleague Michael Ledeen, the explanation for the turnaround couldn’t be clearer: “We were the stronger horse, and the Iraqis recognized it.” In an essay titled “Mission Accomplished” that is being touted by the AEI crowd, Bartle Bull, the foreign editor of the British magazine Prospect, instructs us that “Iraq’s biggest questions have been resolved.” Violence there “has ceased being political.” As a result, whatever mayhem still lingers is “no longer nearly as important as it was.” Meanwhile, Frederick W. Kagan, an AEI resident scholar and the arch-advocate of the surge, announces that the “credibility of the prophets of doom” has reached “a low ebb.”
Presumably Kagan and his comrades would have us believe that recent events vindicate the prophets who in 2002-03 were promoting preventive war as a key instrument of U.S. policy. By shifting the conversation to tactics, they seek to divert attention from flagrant failures of basic strategy. Yet what exactly has the surge wrought? In substantive terms, the answer is: Not much.
The Tattlesnake – Bush’s Real State of the Union: Recession, Depression and Deeply in Debt Edition
“Knees knocked last week from sea to shining sea as the shape-shifting monster of economic reality cut a swathe of destruction through the markets and financial ranks. The exact nature of this giant beast still remained largely concealed in a fog of accounting gambits, policy blusters, and reporting dodges, but a few intrepid scouts who glimpsed the behemoth up close said it looked like Godzilla with Herbert Hoover’s face.” […]“That crashing sound out there is the armature of confidence needed to support an economy based on faith that borrowed money will be paid back. It’s as simple as that. (Doesn’t seem so exciting now, does it?)”– James Howard Kunstler, “Fullblown Panic,” Jan. 21, 2008.
It really doesn’t matter what George W. Bush says in his final State of the Union speech January 28th (at least we hope it’s final), no one in their right mind believes him anymore, and it will no doubt be the usual glib ghostwritten grab-bag of slippery evasions, eye-rolling distortions, promises that will never be kept, and stomach-turning mendacity that have been the hallmark of his previous annual appearances before Congress. Count on hearing we are making progress in Iraq and Afghanistan and blah, blah, zippity-doo-dah with a cherry on top.
“That’s not true!” whine your beloved leaders. – Grimgold
I have been hearing that you democratics have become all upset because the republicanics have had all the ideas for the last few years.
“That’s not true!” whine your beloved leaders.
And historically the repubs are supposed to be the evil rich, in bed with the captains of industry, while the dems care for the poor and homeless, the working man, and the elderly. You people on this web log aren’t stupid. As a matter of fact, I was pleasantly surprised at all the brains that were actually on and humming. But the emphasis has been on attacking GW and his administration; pissing away time and effort that could otherwise be saying and doing good.
How to do good? (more…)