Category Archives: Iraq

It’s Time to Be Rude

I’ve written before that while I prefer to see public debate conducted politely and decorously, there do come times — bad wars in particular — when other things are more important. (See When Bad Taste is Acceptable.)

It’s in that spirit that I bring you this long quote from Atrios,

Eschaton: I know regulars understand this, but for those coming in late and wondering what all the discussion of Friedman Units of time is about, it began with FAIR pointing out that Friedman was forever labeling the next six months in Iraq as a critical, decisive time. But the real issue isn’t about prognostication, but about the perpetual punting of The Iraq Question to a future date. It allows the pundit, or politician, to seem Real Concerned About The War without actually bothering to take it seriously.

George Bush is president. He is incompetent and a bit nuts. He is in charge of running the war. One half an F.U. or a full F.U. or even four F.U.s from now things in Iraq will be pretty much as they are, only a bit worse. If you are concerned about things in Iraq you’ll stop furrowing your brow while pontificating about how we’re, once again, At A Really Critical Moment, and start accepting the fact that the only thing which could possibly improve things is new leadership. This involves, at the very least: the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld and his replacement by a competent person, the resgination of Condi Rice and her replacement by a competent person, the permanent relegation of Dick Cheney to an undisclosed location far away from any actual power to make decisions, the replacement of the current military leadership who have been chosen for their loyalty to their incompetent civilian leaders, and the election of Democrats to Congress who can hopefully engage in some of the meaningful oversight that the Republicans have shown no interest in having in order to force some of these changes.

I didn’t back this war, but those who did have an extra moral responsibility to the troops they sent there, their families, and the people of Iraq to prevent President Bush from continuing his incompetent leadership there. But most of them don’t. They continue to punt the issue one F.U. at a time, while their little sociopathic brains dream of ponies.

One F.U. from now, what are you going to suggest we do differently? If you don’t have a realistic answer to that, then I politely suggest you S.T.F.U.

Not that it’s an easy question. But we should stop running away from it while our fellow citizens, and other fellow beings, are being killed by the dozen daily.

Posted in Iraq | 3 Comments

Must Read: Retired Military Officers On Rumsfeld, Iraq (and Congress)

True patriots howling in pain.

AlterNet: Blogs has a partial video and full text.

Here’s a tiny sample:

My name is [Maj. Gen.] John Batiste. I left the military on principle on November 1, 2005, after more than 31 years of service. I walked away from promotion and a promising future serving our country. I hung up my uniform because I came to the gut-wrenching realization that I could do more good for my soldiers and their families out of uniform. I am a West Point graduate, the son and son-in-law of veteran career soldiers, a two-time combat veteran with extensive service in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Iraq, and a life-long Republican. Bottom line, our nation is in peril, our Department of Defense’s leadership is extraordinarily bad, and our Congress is only today, more than five years into this war, beginning to exercise its oversight responsibilities.

There is so much more.

Update–Full videos:

Posted in Iraq, Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 1 Comment

Progress in Iraq

The war may not be going well, but the scapegoating exercise just took a major leap forward.

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The Toll

More Americans have now died in Iraq than died on 9/11.

And it is getting worse:

July appears to have been the deadliest month of the war for Iraqi civilians, according to figures from the Health Ministry and the Baghdad morgue, reinforcing criticism that the Baghdad security plan started in June by the new government has failed.

An average of more than 110 Iraqis were killed each day in July, according to the figures. The total number of civilian deaths that month, 3,438, is a 9 percent increase over the tally in June and nearly double the toll in January.

The rising numbers suggested that sectarian violence is spiraling out of control, and seemed to bolster an assertion many senior Iraqi officials and American military analysts have made in recent months: that the country is already embroiled in a civil war, not just slipping toward one, and that the American-led forces are caught between Sunni Arab guerrillas and Shiite militias.

And, even when they tell you some part of it is getting better

Aug 31 … On Monday, U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell said the murder rate in Baghdad had fallen by 46 percent from July to August and “we are actually seeing progress out there.”

The decline in Iraqi deaths has not been matched by a drop in American casualties. At least 62 U.S. service members died in Iraq in August, compared with 43 in July.

…they’re probably lying:

Sept 7 — Baghdad’s morgue almost tripled its count for violent deaths in Iraq’s capital during August from 550 to 1,536, authorities said Thursday, appearing to erase most of what U.S. generals and Iraqi leaders had touted as evidence of progress in a major security operation to restore order in the capital.

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Political Stalemate in the Iraq Endgame

George Bush yesterday:

The safety of America depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad

Does anyone really believe this stuff anymore? Except, of course, in the sense that the sooner we pull out, the sooner we can rebuild the Army, and the fewer nationalist Arabs we will drive into fanatical hatred of the USA…

As far as I can tell, there is no longer any plan for ‘victory’ however defined in Iraq, not even of the Potemkin village variety. The military itself has begun to admit that the US has suffered a political defeat, even if it remains undefeated militarily:

The chief of intelligence for the Marine Corps in Iraq recently filed an unusual secret report concluding that the prospects for securing that country’s western Anbar province are dim and that there is almost nothing the U.S. military can do to improve the political and social situation there, said several military officers and intelligence officials familiar with its contents.

If there is not in fact any credible strategy for victory (and there are basically no more troops to send), then staying the course is reduced to the Mr. Micawber strategy of trusting that ‘something will turn up’ — or of holding on in a death grip so that the next administration must make the hard choices.

“It’s hard to be optimistic right now,” said one Army general who has served in Iraq. “There’s a sort of critical mass of tough news,” he said, with intensifying violence from the insurgency and between Sunnis and Shiites, a lack of effective Iraqi government and a growing concern that Iraq may be falling apart.

Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. The US involvement in Iraq has now taken on the look of that kind of insanity.

“In the analytical world, there is a real pall of gloom descending,” said Jeffrey White, a former analyst of Middle Eastern militaries for the Defense Intelligence Agency, who also had been told about the pessimistic Marine report.

Certainly the public has lost patience. And the media, smelling blood, show signs of waking from their torpor. I suspect that the political elites in DC who have not lost their minds now believe that retreat from Iraq is inevitable, but they are afraid to say so before an election. There are scenarios in which this retreat is accomplished with more or less loss of life, more or less loss of face. But if there is a realistic victory strategy, its proponents are being unusually modest. Do not mistake: this is the key. Even when the public comes to believe, as it seems to be doing, that the invasion of Iraq was both a fraud on the US public and a strategic error of historic proportions, most people will find it hard to support withdrawal so long as they can persuade themselves that victory is attainable. The problem for the war party is that any such claims look increasingly threadbare. And once it decides we are spending lives for nothing, the sleeping giant of US public opinion will lash out.

The Iraq debacle has harmed and will harm the United States (and let’s not forget it’s not so great for all those dead Iraqis either). Retreat seals the deal; at that point it is no longer possible to pretend that things will get better. For the people responsible, that means they must either shoulder the blame or find someone to pass it to — and the most obvious candidate is those who call for withdrawal. The tendency to run with the ‘stabbed in the back’ line feeds in to a common confusion in which the withdrawal itself is blamed for the entire war’s damage to the national interest. But in fact, if the situation is really hopeless, then withdrawal only staunches the self-inflicted wound caused by an unnecessary invasion, poorly planned, under-resourced, badly executed, and characterized by war profiteering and outright theft on a scale unimagined in either the Vietnam or Korean conflicts.

Indeed, we are less safe because of the battle in the streets in Baghdad — and in Ambar province. If there truly is no plan for victory more subtle than continuing to lose ground bit by bit, then it’s high time to bring our men and women home.

And yet, I don’t expect it to happen soon. One of the truer maxims in politics is that you cannot beat something with nothing. Sadly, both sides in the largely subterranean debate over Iraq offer what amounts to nothing: the war party offers the daily dose of casualties, the retreat to Baghdad, the bunker strategy amidst civil war. The light at the end of the tunnel is going out, but inertia remains the policy.

The other side, however, has little concrete to propose. Like the war party, it knows the end-state it desires, but not how to achieve it. There is not at present any serious plan for withdrawal on the table; partly that is because the most competent planners in the military cannot (if they are even allowed to contemplate it) discuss it. And partly, I suspect, it is because any plan for withdrawal, even a slow one, would leave chaos in its wake, a poor departure gift indeed. If leaving would create a vacuum filled by disaster, and thus seem to cause it, it may seem the better part of political valor to wait for the disaster to mature fully before leaving.

And thus our current gridlock: the public now wants us out of Iraq by an almost two to one majority. Yet the large majority of both our pro and anti war political leaders agree to temporize, wasting blood and treasure.

Like Vietnam, the most critical questions in Iraq are political, not military. Arguably the political war in Vietnam may have been lost in Dien Bien Phu, but it was undoubtedly over by the end of the Tet offensive in 1969 — a political disaster despite a military defeat for the North. The costly endgame lasted four years and ended ignominiously.

Are we condemned to repeat it?

Posted in Iraq | 3 Comments

‘The Best War Ever’ Publicity Video

The publicity video for ‘The Best War Ever’



Much more accurate than P2911.

Posted in Iraq | 1 Comment