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Benchmarking Iraq For Disaster
Under the headline, "A War We Just Might Win," the New York Times on Monday published an op-ed by Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution and Kenneth Pollack, both referred to as critics of the way the Bush Administration has "handled" the war in Iraq. (Pollack had, in fact, been a major cheerleader for the Bush administration's invasion in 2003.) After eight days in Iraq "meeting with American and Iraqi military and civilian personnel," the two claimed "the debate in Washington was surreal," and that "[w]e are finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms."
The President's surge plan, as carried out by General David Petraeus, was, they added, working. Their carefully cobbled together formula for where it might take American forces went like this: It had "the potential to produce not necessarily 'victory' but a sustainable stability that both we and the Iraqis could live with." They concluded: "[T]here is enough good happening on the battlefields of Iraq today that Congress should plan on sustaining the effort at least into 2008." Of course, O'Hanlon's and Pollack's ideas about what "Iraqis could live with" and Iraqi ideas on the subject may turn out to differ somewhat.
Be that as it may, the Bush Administration--even though characterized in the piece as having "lost essentially all credibility"--was desperate enough to treat the event as a glowing ray of sunlight in the gloom of night. According to Martha Raddatz of ABC News,
"The White House was thrilled with the op-ed piece because it concentrated on military progress and didn't say very much about the lack of political progress. This is what the President has been trying to push. The White House sent this op-ed piece out to the press corps, anybody that would read it today. They are hoping this buys them more time on the Hill for the surge to continue, but they've been hoping that for a long time."
On that very day, the Iraqi Parliament adjourned for a more than month-long vacation without having passed a single major "benchmark" urged on its legislators by either the Bush Administration or Congress ("'We do not have anything to discuss in the parliament, no laws or constitutional amendments, nothing from the government. Differences between the political factions have delayed the laws,' Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman told Reuters."); the major Sunni faction in Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government was threatening to withdraw; and the Prime Minister himself was reportedly under challenge and in some danger of being ousted by members of his own party.
And that was just the accompanying political news. On the day of the O'Hanlon/Pollack op-ed, a summary report on the humanitarian situation in Iraq by the international aid group Oxfam and about eighty other aid agencies, gave the concept of "sustainable stability" some grim meaning. In fact, the report--which the Administration did not rush to pass out to a single reporter--added up to a functional definition of Iraq as a land in a state of unsustainable instability, a "nation" in which an estimated 1 million families are now headed by widows. From child malnutrition to "absolute poverty," large-scale unemployment to an almost blanket lack of effective sanitation, the Iraqis O'Hanlon and Pollack didn't meet with are in a hell on Earth. The Oxfam report estimates that almost one-third of the Iraqi population is "in need of emergency aid."
In fact, while Pollack and O'Hanlon met with the "known knowns" in the equivalent of Green Zone Iraq, a brave French reporter, Anne Nivat, spent two weeks living as an Iraqi in a Shiite neighborhood in "Red Zone" Baghdad. ("Only my contacts knew that I was a foreigner and a reporter.") She even went from Red Zone to Green Zone Iraq once to--like Pollack and O'Hanlon--have a meeting with General Petraeus. ("He met me in full combat gear. Between the first checkpoint and the parking lot of the U.S. Embassy, still based in Saddam Hussein's Republican Palace, a distance of about a mile, I was checked six times. I had come from the "red zone.")
From Nivat, you get a very different picture of "sustainable" Iraq, a place, it turns out, where you're lucky to get one or two hours of electricity delivered a day, while the temperatures soar to 130 degrees. Those with small generators that can make electricity are "the most powerful people in every district." In one of the more upbeat aspects of her tale, Nivat describes the rise of a new job category, a "new breed of real-estate agents." They broker house or apartment exchanges between Sunnis and Shiites being ethnically cleansed from their present neighborhoods. The parties agree to exchange abodes "until the situation improves." The Shiite man, who took Nivat around for her two weeks in Baghdad, in one of the more devastating quotes to come out of the capital in recent times, told her: "My uncles and cousins were murdered by Saddam's regime. I wanted desperately to get rid of him. But today, if Saddam's feet appeared in front of me, I would fall to my knees and kiss them!"
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5 Comments so far
Show AllLatest hit from that new group, 'The Surge':
ROCKIN' THE CASBAH REDUX
Bombs rock Baghdad as unity government crumbles
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070801/ts_afp/iraq_070801181540;_ylt=AjKlluPzYC1sOS5sg4wYW3uFOrgF
Bush is playing the benchmarks game masterfully, and with great success. If it wasn't clear that the game was set-up so he could never lose, then you are naive. No matter what is done in Iraq, no matter how many die or what a few aging generals say, evidence will be produced to show the surge is working quite well, and congress will joyfully give the man whatever he asks. He is after all, the Great Decider, and he already has decided our fate.
It is the same thing I heard the cheerleaders and hopefuls saying on the Diane Rheem Show on PBS- that we are winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi's little by little. Fortunately there was a guest who pointed out that what they were talking about was the Green Zone and those Iraqis who share military bonding with U.S. soldiers- not the wider general population that is hammered every day and in fear of their family's lives.
For every Iraqi that seem pleased to Pollack and O'Hanlon there are 100,000 more who are very unhappy and pissed off as they should be. No amount of half-full bullshit can make amends for the damage, murder and disruption we have done to that country and its people. O'Hanlon and Pollack shamelessly ignore the before and after comparison, and as Englehardt points out, have a notoriously skewed view of what acceptable sustainability is for the Iraqis.
Thank you for pointing out the short sightedness and hypocracy of these two writers. May they be assigned to live in the Red Zone under the conditions they seem to think are acceptable.
Until the US populace gets the courage to take to the streets and follow the example of Gandhi's non-violent marches and demonstrations nothing will change. The people have got to WANT the Constitution restored enough to ACT accordingly. If there is no such desire, there will will be no more US Constitution (except in name only).
What a shame to let cowardice bring down such a noble experiment of human governance!!
Those dang Iraqis could have done things the easy way-complete surrender and silence as the US filled the power vacuum it created with a few good pro-western men and the powerful western business interests allocated Iraq's not inconsiderable resources to themselves. It looks like the neocon plan B is "stay the course" until there isn't an able-bodied Iraqi left to resist then give plan A another chance. Shampoo, rinse and repeat. If anyone else had done this they'd have been expelled from the UN, placed under harsh sanctions, resolutions to cease, desist and vacate passed, reparations ordered etc. (Common) dream on.