Dividends of Mendacity: Bush's 'Way Forward'
They bought it. The press bought it. Number 1 goes on TV and says he's beginning a pull-back, and they buy it. He says he's withdrawing 5,700 troops by December, and they call it "gradual troop cuts" in the Times, and "Bush tells nation he will begin 'surge' rollback" in the Post. He says the build-up will stay in place until at least next March but for those 5,700 troops, and they call it a gradual troop cut.
Let me tell you about that "rollback" of 5,700 troops: It happens every month. It's part of the mechanics of rotating troops in and out. From February to March 2005, there was a troop cut of 5,000. Did the president go on the air to announce it? Of course not. It was just a brigade coming home. The next month, troops were "rolled back" by a further 8,000. Did Number 1 go on TV? Obviously not, although the Pentagon is fond of saying "we don't announce troop movements," and of court-martialling soldiers who do. Then there was a "surge," from September to November 2005, troop levels going from 138,000 to 160,000. Then a decrease from 160,000 to 136,000 in January 2006. And on and on: virtually every month, fluctuations up and down of 5,000 to 10,000 or more, because troops have to be rotated, because you can only extend their incarceration in Iraq so long. (See the whole chart of month-by-month deployment: go here and scroll to page 28.)
And he called it a "return on success."
Here's how we called it in this morning's edit:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was right to cut off President Bush in their White House meeting earlier this week. Somebody has to. Bush was beginning to describe how he's about to pull back some American troops in Iraq. "No you're not," Pelosi corrected him. "You're just going back to the pre-surge level." Of course he is. That's not a pull-back. It's a resumption of business as usual. If you can call a reduction of 5,700 troops by year's end a reduction. Troop levels fluctuate more than that month-over-month regardless.
Too bad somebody couldn't interrupt the president on national television last night, the eighth time in four years that he's taken to the national airwaves to defend an indefensible war and ask the nation to trust his-what? Besides his hazardous gut, there's little left to trust.
We summed up the "draw-down" calculation shenanigans and noted one of the many things Bush never would: "What the "surge" masked, what President Bush never spoke about, is the hemorrhage that coalition troops have suffered since January 2005. The Ukraine, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands: They've all pulled out their troops. Britain is reducing its contingent. From a high of 25,600, non-American coalition troops are down to 11,700. Half the "surge" was merely replacement personnel." And there was this, from an AP story in August: "The Army's 38 available combat units are deployed, just returning home or already tapped to go to Iraq, Afghanistan or elsewhere, leaving no fresh troops to replace five extra brigades that President Bush sent to Baghdad this year, according to interviews and military documents." In other words, the military is broken. More from the editorial:
Progress in Iraq? Only if you believe the numbers Bush and Gen. David Petraeus have been peddling around this week. But those numbers of allegedly decreasing violence don't track significant Sunni-Sunni violence or Shiite-Shiite violence. The Government Accountability Office also found that the White House's claim of decreasing sectarian violence could not be verified. And the overall death toll continues to rise. The presence of American troops is supposedly preventing an outright civil war. It's equally possible that it's inflaming violence by giving various militias and insurgent groups cover for their violent agendas.
Bush's perspective is even more deceitful for centering on American concerns. Here's the consequence of Bush's war that Iraqis are contending with. Today, despite the surge, up to 2.4 million Iraqis are refugees abroad, and 1.1 million are internal refugees, forcibly displaced from their homes. That's 13 percent of the nation's population, including 40 percent of its professional class-uprooted or gone. Baghdad residents get an average of six hours of electricity per day (down from 16 to 24 before the war). Residents elsewhere get an average of 10.3 hours (up from four to eight hours in 2003). Unemployment is as high as 40 percent. Inflation is running at 50 percent. Just 30 percent of Iraq's school-age students are in class. Sixteen of 36 ministers in the national government have either quit or are boycotting meetings. And 60,000 Iraqis are in Iraqi or American prisons (the peak prison population in 2003? 10,000).
That is what Bush calls "the way forward."
Pelosi was too kind to Bush, especially now that he is exclusively in time-scrounging mode until the next president inherits his catastrophe.
But give it to Number 1. He is our return on success.
Pierre Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net or through his personal Web site at www.pierretristam.com .
© 2007 Pierre Tristam
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
12 Comments so far
Show AllLUCKY LEFTY: You remind me of a college acid trip, listening to Jim Morrison sing THE END very loud, or Miles Davis taking my psyche on a trip through VOODOO WALTZ. "What's IN that aftershave?"
Balakirev, I see I'm never going to put a Kansas hurricane past you. I sometimes enjoy cognitive dissonance. Next time we'll try for a tornado in Hong Kong, or was that a typhoon? They both start with 't' so I guess they're similar. Does that make me an American? Certainly sounds American, doesn't it? From your tone, you would never poorly construct Your shithouse, you appreciate its importance in the scheme of things.
Seeya in the Funny Pages, Dick Tracy.
Peace.
Hey luckylefty
I like your writing style. It reminds me of the lingo I read in a hard-boiled mystery (the action took place between 1900-1946)I just finished: Eureka.
I can't wait to read more. If I'm on the pot, I hope I happen to have a corncob, flashlight and a book in hand if my badly made shithouse gets hit by a Florida hurricane.
Curmudgeon99 - So What. You wanted to live forever? As what? A slave of monsters? Never forget, mercs are paid to fight and win and they only win if they walk away in one piece. Know your enemy. They do not fight and die for a cause. They fight for money. No money, no fight.
If we Surround a platoon or even a battalion of mercs with 100000 angry humans, cut off their water and means of supply and payment, allow them to lay down their weapons and give them safe passage - to a Haliburton gulag that we have 'liberated', where they will be traded as prisoners of war. Don't laugh. We are looking over the ragged edge of a precipice. Once in free-fall many things could happen quickly. We are a grossly violent and brutal people.
Where reform and progressive activism have failed, total economic collapse and fragmentation, combined with some lovely special effects by Mother Nature as her ice caps melt, and a lot of hunger, will blow this country apart like a badly made shithouse in a Kansas hurricane. I call it The Great Shattering.
Be prepared for something beyond your ability to imagine, something, as the boys used to say, "Totally Different".
The feudalistic "Gotta be THE SAME forever" boys are singing their last sonata and they, by themselves, are going to crater the entire nation/state global system of economic, social, political, religious/spiritual, and domestic life along with international banking and global oil networks. Simply overwhelmed. That bad. Unfortunately, they are going to take a lot of us with them when they blow chunks.
Fortunately, after that, with a lot of flexibility and a lot of high order creativity there may be space for a lot of different experiments in living; domestic, social, political, economic, and spiritual to the extent that such systems remain as an artifact in our culture. We like shaman. They dress funny and sometimes they tell funny stories when they're not being inscrutable. We'll probably keep some of them around, and a couple of flamboyant mystics, no gender preference. And through the natural cross pollination that occurs between experimenting groups over and thru time we might produce some viable alternatives to the psychotic madness we have wrought. As long as we remember, "You don't get a child without a mother and a father and you don't get a father or a mother without a child." It's a circle intimately connected to the old idea, Xmas like connected to "I am divided for the Joy of Re-Union." So tell me again about who got made first. Right, I thought so. Like I said, "Totally Different". Blessing and the curse. .
Curmudgeon99 - We're all going to go sometime. Why not decide to enjoy the fireworks display? Surely if you can, "…drink tea from an empty cup" you can see the beauty of a super nova even as it consumes your flesh. They tell me the Too Bright Light sometimes does that as well except that Too Bright Light seems to consume the cerebral cortex like a devouring worm. At least that's what I've heard.
Peace.
What about when the legions of Blackwater mercenaries are loosed on the people and all dissenters find themselves in the concentr.....er, illegal immigrant detention centers built on a $160 million no-bid contract by Halliburton?
A side note to protest organizers: now is the time to do a meet and greet with the local cops, most of whom oppose Cheneybush (because so many have already been killed or maimed during the illegal occupation,) and will be hesitant to employ the Bush Anti-Protest Manual tactics if brought into the fold. And you union reps - Teamsters, etc - remind your brothers in the Police Unions that "we the people" are fighting for them, too. With the cops on our side, we might actually stand a chance...
johndec, I heard about the Hunt deal. I have lived in Texas all my life and worked in the oil industry 30 years,the story I read said Impulse Energy Corp. was also in on the deal with Hunt. I have never heard of them and could not Google up anything. I was just wondering who is involved in Impulse, I bet its rich rethugs looking for a return on their investment in bush.
To think Kennedy was assassinated for far far less....not that I'm suggesting it for the Rule of Law will eventually apply....That's if like the Nazis after WW2; Bu$hCo doesn't escape to Paraguay to Bu$h's 200,000 acre Ranch....
ppeters,
I totally agree. There is an old saying about people like Bush in Texas: "He'd rather lie for a nickel than tell the truth for a dollar." He feels comfortable lying and would rather do it even when the truth serves him better.
It's official HUNT OIL from Texas, good buddies with Bush and the DICK have signed deal with Kurds to explore and exploit oil in northern Iraq. Let the THEIVERY begin. Also in accompaniment with more LYING and Mass Murdering for profit.
The only way GW will even remotely contemplate exiting Iraq is when the oil "sharing" legislation is signed. It matters not to GW or Cheney how many die as long as their friends get their oil leases. The only thing Americans can hope for is charges being filed in the world court for this cabal when their terms are up.
With GW, even if it is easier just to state the truth, he will choose to lie. He has always been that way and he is not about to change. Put simply and truthfully he is a liar.