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Bush Still Telling Us Stories About Iraq
Five years ago, as he was preparing to invade Iraq, President Bush told tales of how Saddam Hussein was inches away from nuclear weapons, and how the Iraqi regime had vague but threatening ties with Al-Qaida, and how his strategies were all about responding to 9/11. It was as terrifying as any ghost story, and the fact that his evidence was as insubstantial as any ghost didn't slow its repeated telling around the campfire of prime time.
Four years ago, on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln, he told the story of "Mission Accomplished," saying: "Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed. And now our coalition is engaged in securing and reconstructing that country."
It was the story of a new, entirely different kind of war, a war in which, "With new tactics and precision weapons, we can achieve military objectives without directing violence against civilians."
It's a story that's gotten harder to tell, and certainly to listen to, as it keeps getting repeated.
Tuesday afternoon, issuing his veto of the emergency war funding bill that included deadlines for cutting back the U.S. presence in Iraq, Bush told his story of how the surge came to be.
This surge, he declared, was the recommendation of military leaders, and any limitations on it from Congress was a matter of politicians trying to take the war over from the professionals. "Members of the House and the Senate," he said sadly, "passed a bill that substitutes the opinions of politicians for the judgment of our military commanders ... .
"That means America's commanders in the middle of a combat zone would have to take fighting directions from politicians 6,000 miles away in Washington, D.C."
Outside the lines of the president's favorite narrative, this war from the beginning -- even more than most American wars -- has been a war designed by politicians with limited interest in military opinion. Generals who suggested that it was all going to be harder and take more time and men than the president's story included were downgraded and ignored.
Because the president and Vice President Dick Cheney and then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld -- three politicians who designed everything about the war -- insisted that it would be a short story, the military was never prepared for the length of the struggle, and lacked the equipment and armor and manpower that would be needed. While Bush now tells a story of military direction, in reality this has been a war of civilian planning and military improvisation.
"The real tragedy in Iraq," said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., "is that it was the politicians in Washington, not the generals, who set our strategy in Iraq."
The military was left to deal with the results.
Now Bush tells the story of a surge generated by the military, a surge that he calls "Gen. [David] Petraeus' plan" and insists "Congress ought to give Gen. Petraeus' plan a chance to work."
And because the president can have his stories told by many tongues, Republican politicians like Rep. David Dreier, R-Calif., insisted after Bush's speech, "This isn't the president's plan. This is Gen. Petraeus' plan. This is his plan we're talking about."
Yet the surge plan was devised in Washington, D.C., by civilians, guided not by military necessity but by calculations of how many additional troops could possibly be available. (The Iraq Study Group, whose consideration of a surge on the way to departure is frequently invoked by the administration and congressional Republicans, consisted entirely of civilians.) Petraeus was then brought in to try to make it work.
If Petraeus had suggested that what the plan really needed was 100,000 more troops, it would have been made pretty clear whose plan it was.
Yet Bush, the politician fundamentally responsible for the operation of this war, now weaves a story of military planning to be protected from politicians' interference.
It's one of a series of stories that George W. Bush has told us to make sense of our situation in Iraq.
So far, none has had a happy ending.




15 Comments so far
Show AllYup! There's hope on the horizon. It's called impeachment. And we're starting with Cheney. Call, write, and email Pelosi ( AmericanVoices@mail.house.gov ) and your Congressional "representative" to support Articles of Impeachment of Richard Chaney (HR333) introduced by Kucinich on April 24th. This bill has already picked up two co-signers. With your addded pressure, there will be more. This thing is starting to look like it may have legs. At some point, even the MSM will no longer be able to ignore impeachment.
So, let the good times roll, and help the ball get rolling!
The problem is the system that continues to allow Bush to get away with his crimes in the name of the American people. The system that allows this to continue is an elected government that is in bed with the corporations and the Pentagon. That's what has to stop if America is to save itself.
Hoa Binh
thank you david, for putting the emphasis in this ongoing charade of who is making the crucial decisions squarely on the shoulders bush and company. as congress prepares to send the next appropriations bill to the white house amid sputterings of "let the generals be the ones who decide what is needed to get the job done," it should be obvious to anyone with half a brain who has created the policy. and members of congress have every right to fight that policy.
If the President can veto that put forward by those elected to represent the people, does this make America a democrocy or a dictatorship? The representatives are apparently redundant, what are they there for??
Just wondering what has happened to the shining city on the hill. Sadly.
What else can we expect from an alcoholic, chemically dependent person? He's in a constant state of denial and is always willing to blame others for his mistakes. I've seen it in my own family. The story changes from day to day and from person to person. Just as with O.J., he believes that the more he tells a story, the more people will believe him.
"That means America's commanders in the middle of a combat zone would have to take fighting directions from politicians 6,000 miles away in Washington, D.C."
Like they are used to micro management by now? I quote Homer Simpson : D'Oh. He's lying again, as his real issue is that someone else is trying to micro manage HIS war instead of himself.
Let's list a few more truths about the Iraq War. It is still continuing and our mission wasn't accomplished. The real mission wasn't simply to remove Saddam from power, eliminate weapons of mass destruction and eliminate an Al Qaeda sanctuary. It was the Iraqi oil fields, and permanent military bases to secure our access to mideast oil as in the neo con blueprint for the invasion of Iraq developed in Dick Cheney's neo con think tank PNAC. Because Bush is essentially a military industrial complex - oil corporation employee, we will be maxed out in our military effort in Iraq up to the artificial time line of January 20, 2009 - Bush's last day in office. If the surge doesn't work, Petraeus will be forced out like the last military leadership team in Iraq, after General Tommy Franks retired after his successful invasion due to the micro management from civilian leadership, and after General Anthony Zinni in 2003 was forced into retirement for giving Bush absolutely correct feedback that more troops were needed in the reconstruction phase to secure Baghdad and secure the borders. The truth is the surge (more boots on the ground) is Zinni's plan four years too late.
And the bottom line truth is that no one knows how an occupying army can resolve the conflict between Sunnis and Shi'ite Muslims that started hundreds of years ago when Shia Islam was founded and declared blasphemy by the Sunnis clerics. The bottom line truth is that resolving sectarian conflicts is not the job description of the military.
At this point, I'm very much afraid that America is beyond redemption. It's patently clear that George Bush Jr. is nothing more than a figurehead, the real power is in the Vice President's office with Dick Cheney. It seems all too clear to thinking people. Yet the media continues the charade of pretending that Bush has any power, any sway, any input at all in what decisions are being made. The "surge" is surely the brain-child of Rove and Cheney, Bush merely mouths (badly) other people's thoughts.
It shames me to know that we have a puppet dictator in power in the United States. Worse still, 30% of Americans still think that he's doing a great job. Meanwhile, the media would have us believe that things aren't so bad, they're doing the best job they can.
As the pompous fools in Washington run their mouths about the war good men still die. Is there to be no reckoning for these cowards?
I will never forget! -- 2009 and out of sight will not do. The murder of our children demands justice. What trite "God" message will these lice try to use excusing themselves from the responsiblity of deliberate murder? If there were any of the children of these priveleged lice at the pointy end of things this travesty would have been over five years ago.
With the Prime Minister of Israel now having the support of less than 2% of the electorate and still refusing to resign, George Bush must think he is a national hero on 30%.It would be interesting to see a composite picture of these supporters.Maybe the group in the bar scene of "Star Wars" movie would come pretty close.
Rebel Farmer I want to believe. I've been on the impeachment bandwagon ever since the little wimp launched this illegal war. But I have lost faith. The louder we scream for impeachment the more insistent our corrupt "professional" politicians pretend that they can't hear us.
And so it will go: An unmistakable and catastrophic military defeat, a popular homeland uprising, the loosing of a well-coordinated secret military/police gestapo, and then we may begin again to find out just who we are and what we (together) really believe is important.
And even that distant(?) eventuality does not bode well. The current state of affairs cannot be maintained, and will not last much longer.
In other words is the same old BS it's always been! Keep telling the lie different every time and eventually you will confuse your advesary! How this bunch can have an ounce of crediability even with Republican's only boggles the mind. It really makes you wonder what this country has come to? When people are capable of ignoring such a corrupt dysfunctional President! If we are ever going to survive this fascist President and his ilk!
I'll bet that Moron Bush doesn't know that his approvable rating is 28 to 30 percent.His criminal staff only tell him what he want's to hear so he probably thinks he is in to 80s or 90s.It will take year's and year's to bring this country back even if we get an honest administration which isn't likely
Every country gets the leaders it deserves. That is why the American people are sufficiently ignorant to ignore the impression that they will end up as a failed state.
Vince
Don't give up now! When I write my rep, who didn't vote for the war and is a true progressive, I get a form letter that continues to support the narrative that impeachment is off the table. So, I write him again and tell him that his answer isn't good enough. I tell him I want him to co-sponsor HR333! Then, when he doen't answer, I write him again. Same thing with Pelosi.
You just have to keep doing it over and over again. Eventually they wake up to realize that their platitudes and "canned" responses are not working. The impeachment train is gathering steam. STAY ON BOARD!!
Rebel Farmer:
You keep impressing me with that determination of yours. It's the indispensable ingredient, followed closely by your ability to provide simple, actionable, specific instructions, like "Contact your rep, and demand they support HR333".
"Never, never, ever, give up". -Winston Churchill
I respectfully request every sentient being here in America to contact their U.S. Representative, and demand that they support HR333.