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Has Baghdad Captured Petraeus?
When top British general Sir William Howe marched his powerful professional army of Redcoats, American Loyalists, and German mercenaries into Philadelphia in 1777 it appeared the American Revolutionary War was over.
At least Howe and King George III were convinced the American revolutionaries were defeated, their Congress forced to flee the city and General George Washington's army apparently shocked and awed from the battlefield. The king's troops entered Philadelphia in triumph and settled down for a comfortable winter in this, the British Empire's second largest city, with its many Loyalists and their pretty ladies. To Parliament back in London, Howe's capture of Philadelphia seemed a brilliant move - politically, at least: Howe had shown the hitherto unconvinced British population that a military solution to the American colonial uprising might be possible.
American revolutionary leaders were not, however, about to give up the fight. And as for Howe's occupation of Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin described it another way:
"Howe has not captured Philadelphia. Philadelphia has captured Howe."
The most powerful military force in North America - one of Britain's best field armies - was actually bottled up far from its main supply base at New York. Howe was in Philadelphia, but what was he to do next if the revolutionaries continued to fight? And fighting was precisely Washington's intention. He stepped up training at Valley Forge, and his army's morale rose. Further, France, with its powerful navy, entered the war on the side of the revolutionaries. It became apparent that the revolution was not defeated, and the British army in Philadelphia could be cut off by land and sea.
Howe, a brilliant general, became the scapegoat for misguided British colonial policies and was compelled to resign his command - all this for taking Philadelphia! By springtime, Howe's replacement, General Henry Clinton, had to abandon the city. Clinton began a fighting withdrawal, marching his troops back to New York.
On a hot and steamy June day at Monmouth, New Jersey, the Americans fought Howe's best troops to a standstill, inflicting heavy losses. A formerly ragtag revolutionary force was now a formidable and confident field army. Now, the American Revolution could not be defeated.
The revolutionaries might not win by pitched battle, but time was on their side. They were fighting for their own homeland, on their own soil. It was a classic insurgent scenario, to be replayed many times in the following centuries, from Napoleon's failed invasion of Russia to Hitler's failed occupation of Europe and America's failed campaigns in Indochina. The Revolutionary War dragged on another five years, but the result was total victory for the uprising. In the future, many of the best British regiments would mention little about the "American War" in their otherwise glorified regimental histories.
Is there a comparison to be made between Howe's proud army and the tens of thousands of American troops now "occupying" Baghdad under the command of the much-admired General David Petraeus? Well, there is always a comparison in cases of military folly.
With Petraeus's troops scattered in company-sized units planted in vulnerable outposts throughout the city's ever-dangerous neighborhoods, the American army is being made captive. Captive to the teeming, violent city of Baghdad. Captive to the anti-occupation insurgents, who now have the initiative to strike when and where they choose. Captive, also, to the whims of American domestic politics, wherever they might lead. Captive to the arrogance of political and military leaders who said the seizure of Iraq would be a "cakewalk" and are now desperate for any victory, anything that might be described as victory, at whatever cost, in the coming few months.
Have President George Bush and the "Neoconservatives" and our leading military commanders walked into a trap of their own making in Baghdad? Just like Sir Billy Howe in Philadelphia?
More important, more crucial: What if the Iraqi puppet government collapses, and with it go the army and police - essential allies in any block-by-block contest? And if the Iraqi insurgents make it too costly in terms of truck drivers' lives and helicopters to supply those thousands of duty-bound soldiers in their scattered outposts, how do we extricate them? As with Howe in 1777, the main American supply bases are far away - mostly to the south, in Kuwait and other client states. Vital American supply lines are vulnerable to being cut by roadside bombs and calculated, determined insurgent attacks.
An "exit strategy" from Iraq that depends on fighting rather than political agreements will wash Baghdad's streets in blood this summer. Much of it American blood.
What then, as the question goes, are we fighting for?
To avoid a humiliating and bloody retreat from Baghdad? Is this what our soldiers are killing and dying for? Or to prevent a defeat that has been brought on by corrupt leadership at the highest level of our government? Or to prop up an incompetent administration in Washington until the next election?
Historically, the result of such misguided policies is always the same: Dead fighters on both sides. Many more dead civilians. And humiliation for the invaders, no matter how brave or patriotic they might be.
Now is the time, before it is too late, to lay the groundwork for all parties concerned with the destiny of Iraq to forge a truce that will permit General Petraeus and his army to leave Baghdad with some semblance of military honor. Otherwise, so many American soldiers will be stationed in vulnerable posts throughout the city that it could be said Baghdad has captured General Petraeus.
Just as Philadelphia once captured General Howe.
Stuart A.P. Murray, author of thirty five books, specializes in American history.



21 Comments so far
Show AllIndeed, the English sent their ships up the Hudson River to fire their cannons to make a display to shock and awe the colonists.
However, while the colonists were insurgents because they were English citizens or at least had recognized the authority of the crown at one time, the people who fight against the U.S. in Iraq are not insurgents because they are not U.S. citizens who have rebelled. You might call them Iraqi forces fighting the U.S., freedom fighters, or something else other than insurgents. But insurgents is incorrectt.
What then, as the question goes, are we fighting [and dying] for?
Corporate profits, oil prices and the stock market at all time highs, and Cheney is enjoying his new three million dollar house paid for with Halliburton dividends. They have not died in vain.
The British Empire survived the loss of its American colonies and went on to conquer other lands--there is never shortage of 'enemies' when a profit can be made.
Indeed, Don, the British Empire survived and conquered new lands. But eventually, it ran out of steam. It has taken our British cousins two generations to figure out a place in the world that makes sense for a large island off the coast of Europe (and the Scots and Welsh aren't quite done reassessing things). To say that the readjustment was painful is an understatement for those of us who actually survived the Thatcher years. America is storing up much the same fate for itself if it doesn't stop building permanent bases and secret prisons in foreign lands.
"War is a racket", by Smedley Butler
http://www.lexrex.com/enlightened/articles/warisaracket.htm
Petraeus is doing the job set for him by Wall Street and US corporations - he is attempting to pacify Iraq so that Big Oil, the IMF and the World Bank can come in and take over the country.
They're trying to do this using a very standard plan, the very same one that put Saddam Hussein in power in the first place - find a local puppet/strongman who will follow orders and oppress the population, and leave US troops behind to ensure that the puppet doesn't go off the reservation, like Saddam did.
This was a standard colonial practice of European empires for centuries - the British did the same thing in Inda and the Middle East. No mention is made of this in the corporate American press because it is at direct odds with most American's image of their country as an anti-empire bastion of freedom.
The fundamental fact that American citizens are mostly anti-empire and still remember the revolution against the British empire with pride is the sole reason for hope in this mess - but the fact is, the US is running a foriegn colonial empire - and some of the extracted wealth props up retirement systems for a lot of American citizens.
What will the aging baby boomers do when they realize that their retirement portfolios are propped up by a vicious foreign empire? Perhaps Rumsfeld was right when he lost his temper and shouted "The American People can't handle the truth".
This is what decades of imperialism and 'globalization' have done to America - gutted our domestic economy and made us dependent on foreign cash flows. Where is the manufacturing sector? In China and South America, right? Where are our energy supplies? Under the sands of the Middle East and in Africa?
The truth is hard and unpleasant.
The Iraqi army and police are already lost, and have been for a long time. Almost from the moment they were reassembled by the American military, they were widely and irretrievably infiltrated with insurgents. Police and army uniforms have been sold openly in markets for years.
Add to that the megatons of weapons and munitions that the Americans failed to secure or destroy, and you have the biggest, most practical reason why the United States "lost" this war a long time ago.
And yet, mealy-mouthed Democrats still cower at the prospect of being accused of not "funding the troops" and Republicans still talk about "winning," while people like Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich are pilloried for pointing out the obvious.
So many people I talk to are ignorant of "The Bush Agenda". This excellent book answers why Bush and Cheney have done what appears to be "blunders" all the time acting as If they just dont get it. (Slow to pull out of Iraq,etc. Trust me they "Get It"! They are securing the oil fields of IRAQ for EXXON, We didn't liberate Iraq we pilfered it!! Corporate Globlization is the Bush Agenda and it's working. Read "The Bush Agenda" by Antonia Juhasz. A totally intriguing eye opening book. I highly recommend it to anyone who still thinks that Bush is dumb as dirt. Evil YES!! dumb NO!!
Sorry, Doug, no one is going to convince me that Dubya is not dumb as a post. Evil, undoubtedly. But stupid as well - I mean, listen to the man speak! Cheney is the power and the brains behind the neocon's agenda - Bush is the merely the front man, as Cheney's menacing visage would scare away even the most hardened base Republican. Cheney's men are undoubtedly writing Petraeus's glowing report of the success of "the Surge" even now, so a wimpass compliant congress can give Chimpy another $100 billion come September.
"Now is the time, before it is too late, to lay the groundwork for all parties concerned with the destiny of Iraq to forge a truce that will permit General Petraeus and his army to leave Baghdad with some semblance of military honor."
haven't we heard this peace w/honor crap before? whose interest does this "honor" serve? the individual soldiers? the average american citizen? no, the warmongering elites who want to be able to project power w/impunity, and who refuse to admit the military is getting kicked in the teeth over and over in iraq.
there is nothing honorable about this war. nothing but shame, grief, mourning, terrible loss, lies & hypocrisy.
WCdevins, go to Youtube and look you Bush. You will find a clip of him at a Debate while Gov of Texas. He speaks just fine. This is either an act or he really has some serious Dementia problems.
I am concerned that in the past what, month or so there have been 3 bridges taken out. Our guys use those bridges for supplies an manuvers. They could easily get caught in Bagdad.
Americans are such reactionaries. There was no "American Revolution" - only a successful secession from England. Your so called founders, most of whom did not involve themselves in the hardships of the field, immediately set about creating a new Imperial Government with limited means of popular participation - that's why you have your moribund "two" party system and a clique with dictatorial powers running things. "Americans" don't trust anyone but the privileged class to rule them anyway - only the upper 10,000 - any man of the people rocking the boat gets shot by a "lone assassin" . America's actions in Mesopotamia are consistent with its MO - steal everything it needs through military conquest and plunder. It started with the Indians, then Mexico, Spain, Italy, Germany, Japan attempts in Indochina, Korea, etc.The only countries safe, so far, are China and Russia - just too big and mean to be plundered - but America is considering taking Russia down with its brazen missile systems being deployed in Eastern Europe.
I'm pretty sure that the President knows that Baghdad has captured him already for a long time, however, knowing that he has to leave the office by 2009 he will soldier on disregarding the human loss on both sides, but that does not count for him or his neo-conservative friends. As soon as 4-star general Col. Powell left the office as Secr. of State it was clear for everyone who wanted to listen that this war against the Iraq was illegal, ill-conceived and a hopeless case. How can you win 3 wars at the same time (Afghan., Iraq and arab.Palestine/Syria (together with Israel))?
"...permit General Petraeus and his army to leave Baghdad with some semblance of military honor."
These words are firmly appended to one of the darkest and most blood-stained notions in human history. It is unfortunate and disappointing that Mr. Murray chose to make them his own.
Wars are started by corrupt leaders, are motivated by corporate profits, are justified by religious rhetoric, and are fought by men and women too foolish to question their government.
Just billions, after billions, after billions, down the drain..... FOR NOTHING!
THE WRITER RESPONDS.
To those who criticized my statement: "…permit General Petraeus and his army to leave Baghdad with some semblance of military honor."
Please note, I nowhere said, "peace with honor," that notorious phrase used by Nixon and Kissinger to rationalize prolonging the Vietnam War.
This evil conflict in Iraq can never have a peace with honor. America will be forever disgraced by what we have done to that country.
Military honor is something different.
It exists in a world of sworn duty to your country and your commanders, and -- even more demanding -- responsibility for your comrades. Military honor is a complex concept, not to be dismissed lightly, or self-righteously characterized in simple terms of right and wrong.
We are all the Universal Soldier, and we really are to blame.
I hope one day soon to see our military leaving Baghdad and Iraq with flags flying and bands playing instead of guns blazing and bombs dropping.
Remember how we left Lebanon in the 1980s after our marines were blown up in their barracks? As our fleet was departing, its guns fired indiscriminately on Beruit in revenge. And we planted a bomb in front of a mosque and blew up a lot of innocent people. Again, revenge -- although we did not know who perpetrated the barracks bombing.
I want the Americans now serving in Baghdad to leave the city with a sense of having done their military duty. With military honor. I want none to leave with the memory of having indiscriminately killed Iraqis.
After our seizure of Iraq, peace with honor has never been possible. A truce, however, is essential. Immediately.
Stuart Murray
THE WRITER RESPONDS.
To those who criticized my statement: "…permit General Petraeus and his army to leave Baghdad with some semblance of military honor."
Please note, I nowhere said, "peace with honor," that notorious phrase used by Nixon and Kissinger to rationalize prolonging the Vietnam War.
This evil conflict in Iraq can never have a peace with honor. America will be forever disgraced by what we have done to that country.
Military honor is something different.
It exists in a world of sworn duty to your country and your commanders, and -- even more demanding -- responsibility for your comrades. Military honor is a complex concept, not to be dismissed lightly, or self-righteously characterized in simple terms of right and wrong.
We are all the Universal Soldier, and we really are to blame.
I hope one day soon to see our military leaving Baghdad and Iraq with flags flying and bands playing instead of guns blazing and bombs dropping.
Remember how we left Lebanon in the 1980s after our marines were blown up in their barracks? As our fleet was departing, its guns fired indiscriminately on Beirut in revenge. And we planted a bomb in front of a mosque and blew up a lot of innocent people. Again, revenge -- although we did not know who perpetrated the barracks bombing.
I want the Americans now serving in Baghdad to leave the city with a sense of having done their military duty. With military honor. I want none to leave with the memory of having indiscriminately killed Iraqis.
After our seizure of Iraq, peace with honor has never been possible. A truce, however, is essential. Immediately.
Stuart Murray
Goals for the invasion of Iraq include:
Bush's vanity. He wanted to show he wasn't the failure he'd seemed to be most of his life. Speed up the return of Jesus. Bush is a Fundamentalist, and most Fundamentalists expect Jesus to return soon after a series of Middle East wars. Satisfy Bush's (and other's) sadistic impulses. Torture at G'mo was probably planned from the beginning. Steal the oil. Get rich from war profits. Excuse grabbing autocratic powers ("unitary executive"). Messianic nationalism. All the reasons are bad, and "immanentizing the eschaton" ought to be remembered more often.
For a man who's written 30 books, Murray is quite naive. The firepower the U.S. brings to bear in the world today utterly dwarfs any comparison to Howe in Phila. It now appears that the strategy is to blame Iran for smuggling arms into the conflict as a pretext(along with their nuclear program) for massive destruction of that country- and as with Iraq, the appallingly inhumane form of retaliation will involve with destruction of their infrastructure,using purely military justification: their power grid, telecommunications, sewer and water services, etc. "Collateral damage", even if hundreds of thousands civilians die- just too bad.
And Murray talks about Iraq- or Iran- having us just where they want us. Only a sadist thinks that way.
I've never understood all the feverish attention to Gen. Petraeus. He was rotated into this post because someone else was rotated out of it ... someone probably no more or less skilled or competent. And Petraeus in turn will be either kicked upstairs or retired. The point is, in this totally senseless exercise, it hardly matters who serves - keep using the same brand of tire, you get the same ride: regardless of how many flats you have to fix.
In other words, the Iraqi Resistance has done to the US armed forces, exactly what the US armed forces did to the Imperial Japanese during the Second World War - let them wither after their supply lines went down.
All of which doesn't affect the crims known as "civilian contractors", does it? I seriously doubt the US will have any "military honour" once they finally get out of Iraq. Once the full horrors of US misrule in Iraq become known, I have no doubt that it will become very difficult to find nations to partner with in war games, etc. Ditto for people willing to fund the US military-industrial over-complex.
And guess what, Japan is considering taking over the US role in patrolling the Pacific and Indian Oceans! I guess that once the US Navy is so criminally stupid as to follow presidential/vice-presidential orders and start attacking Iran, there won't be much of a US Navy any more. Following such orders, with the full knowledge of the consequences, should be a punishable-by-death court-martialling offense.
At least the British had one united country to fight. We, on the other hand, have to try to fight 3 different groups who hate us and hate each other. We are already captured in a no win situation and the only way out is for our government to accept that they made a colossal mistake (many actually) and leave. Terrorist won't follow us home. That's ridiculous. They can come here now if they want to. Heck, they're already here. But we will never admit mistakes because we are the big, mighty, bully, always right America. If leaving makes the men and women in the Military feel bad about themselves, so be it. Better to feel bad than be dead. I don't know why it would, however. They are not the ones who made the decisions to start this mess. America needs another revolution where the people rise up and demand that our government change its ways. We've done it before at the grassroots. Why don't we do it now? Where is the outrage? Maybe it's happening slowly, slowly. Meanwhile, more and more people die for nothing!