On Sunday, the New York Times published a piece by Frank Rich
under
the headline “Someone Tell the President the War Is Over.” The
article was a flurry of well-placed jabs about the Bush
administration’s lies and miscalculations for the Iraq war. But the
essay was also a big straw in liberal wind now blowing toward
dangerous conclusions.
Comparing today’s war-related poll numbers for George W. Bush with
those for President Lyndon B. Johnson, the columnist writes: “On
March 31, 1968, as L.B.J.’s ratings plummeted further, he announced
he wouldn't seek re-election, commencing our long extrication from
that quagmire.” And Rich extends his Vietnam analogy: “What lies
ahead now in Iraq instead is not victory, which Mr. Bush has never
clearly defined anyway, but an exit (or triage) strategy that may
echo Johnson’s March 1968 plan for retreat from Vietnam.”
But Rich does not linger over the actual meaning of the “plan for
retreat” and the “long extrication” -- which meant five more years of
massive U.S. military assaults in Vietnam, followed by two more years
of military aid to the Saigon government while fighting continued.
The death toll during that period in Vietnam? Tens of thousands of
Americans, perhaps a million Vietnamese people. That “extrication”
was more than merely “long.”
Rich’s narrative does not just skitter past five years of horrific
carnage inflicted by the U.S. government in Vietnam -- and elsewhere
in Indochina -- after the spring of 1968. His storyline is also, in
its own way, a complacent message that stands in sharp contrast to
the real situation we now face: a U.S. war on Iraq that may persist
for a terribly long time. For the Americans still in Iraq, and for
the Iraqis still caught in the crossfire of the occupation, the
experiences ahead will hardly be compatible with reassuring forecasts
made by pundits in the summer of 2005.
Mocking President Bush’s assertion on Aug. 11 that “no decision
has
been made yet” about withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, Rich
concludes: “The country has already made the decision for Mr. Bush.
We’re outta there.”
But of course Americans are not outta there. And President Bush
reasserted last Thursday that withdrawal of U.S. troops is contingent
on the U.S.-allied Iraqi forces achieving standards of performance
and self-sufficiency that are little more than mirages.
Yes, eventually, U.S. troops may leave Iraq. But, in the summer
of
2005, for commentators to declare the withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Washington’s latest imperial war to be a virtual fait accompli makes
about as much sense as it would have in the spring of 1968.
Even after the commander in chief gives an order to begin
systematic
withdrawal of U.S. troops -- and we’re very far from such a
presidential order today -- there is likely to be continuation of
massive U.S. military actions in Iraq. And even an actual sharp
reduction of American troop levels on the ground hardly ensures a
drop-off of Pentagon-inflicted violence. During the three years after
July 1969, when President Nixon announced that the burden of fighting
Communist forces would shift to Washington’s South Vietnamese ally,
the White House cut U.S. troop levels in Vietnam by more than 85
percent. During that same period, the tonnage rate of U.S. bombs
falling on Vietnam actually increased.
Today, while the U.S. warfare in Iraq continues unabated, the
message
that “we’re outta there” is pernicious. It looks past the ongoing
need to demand complete U.S. withdrawal (if “we’re outta there,” why
bother to protest?) and stands aloof from the very real political
battles that will be fought to determine just how long or short the
bloody “extrication” process will last.
We’re not “outta there” -- until an antiwar movement in the United
States can grow strong enough to make the demand stick. And we’re not
there yet. Not by a long shot.
Norman Solomon is the author of the new book “War Made Easy: How
Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.” For excerpts and
other
information, go to: www.WarMadeEasy.com
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