There will be timetables, deadlines, benchmarks, goals for both America and its Iraqi satraps. But the war against terror can still be won. We shall prevail. Victory or death. And it shall be death.
President Bush's announcement early this morning tolled every bell. A
billion dollars of extra aid for Iraq, a diary of future success as the Shia
powers of Iraq still to be referred to as the "democratically
elected government" march in lockstep with America's best men and
women to restore order and strike fear into the hearts of al-Qa'ida. It will
take time oh, yes, it will take years, at least three in the words of
Washington's top commander in the field, General Raymond Odierno this week
but the mission will be accomplished.
Mission accomplished. Wasn't that the refrain almost four years ago, on that
lonely aircraft carrier off California, Bush striding the deck in his flying
suit? And only a few months later, the President had a message for Osama bin
Laden and the insurgents of Iraq. "Bring 'em on!" he shouted. And
on they came. Few paid attention late last year when the Islamist leadership
of this most ferocious of Arab rebellions proclaimed Bush a war criminal but
asked him not to withdraw his troops. "We haven't yet killed enough of
them," their videotaped statement announced.
Well, they will have their chance now. How ironic that it was the ghastly
Saddam, dignified amid his lynch mob, who dared on the scaffold to tell the
truth which Bush and Blair would not utter: that Iraq has become "hell"
.
It is de rigueur, these days, to recall Vietnam, the false victories, the
body counts, the torture and the murders but history is littered with
powerful men who thought they could batter their way to victory against the
odds. Napoleon comes to mind; not the emperor who retreated from Moscow, but
the man who believed the wild guerrilleros of French-occupied Spain could be
liquidated. He tortured them, he executed them, he propped up a local
Spanish administration of what we would now call Quislings, al-Malikis to a
man. He rightly accused his enemies Moore and Wellington of supporting
the insurgents. And when faced with defeat, Napoleon took the personal
decision "to relaunch the machine" and advanced to recapture
Madrid, just as Bush intends to recapture Baghdad. Of course, it ended in
disaster. And George Bush is no Napoleon Bonaparte.
No, I would turn to another, less flamboyant, far more modern politician for
prophecy, an American who understood, just before the 2003 launch of Bush's
illegal invasion of Iraq, what would happen to the arrogance of power. For
their relevance this morning, the words of the conservative politician Pat
Buchanan deserve to be written in marble:
"We will soon launch an imperial war on Iraq with all the 'On to
Berlin' bravado with which French poilus and British tommies marched in
August 1914. But this invasion will not be the cakewalk neoconservatives
predict ... For a militant Islam that holds in thrall scores of millions of
true believers will never accept George Bush dictating the destiny of the
Islamic world ...
"The one endeavour at which Islamic peoples excel is expelling imperial
powers by terror and guerrilla war. They drove the Brits out of Palestine
and Aden, the French out of Algeria, the Russians out of Afghanistan, the
Americans out of Somalia and Beirut, the Israelis out of Lebanon... We have
started up the road to empire and over the next hill we will meet those who
went before."
But George Bush dare not see these armies of the past, their ghosts as
palpable as the phantoms of the 3,000 Americans let us forget the hundreds
of thousands of Iraqis already done to death in this obscene war, and
those future spirits of the dead still living amid the 20,000 men and women
whom Bush is now sending to Iraq. In Baghdad, they will move into both Sunni
and Shia "insurgent strongholds" as opposed to just the Sunni
variety which they vainly invested in the autumn because this time, and
again I quote General Odierno, it is crucial the security plan be "
evenhanded". This time, he said, "we have to have a believable
approach, of going after Sunni and Shia extremists".
But a "believable approach" is what Bush does not have. The days
of even-handed oppression disappeared in the aftermath of invasion.
"Democracy" should have been introduced at the start not delayed
until the Shias threatened to join the insurgency if Paul Bremer, America's
second proconsul, did not hold elections just as the American military
should have prevented the anarchy of April 2003. The killing of 14 Sunni
civilians by US paratroopers at Fallujah that spring set the seal on the
insurgency. Yes, Syria and Iran could help George Bush. But Tehran was part
of his toytown "Axis of Evil", Damascus a mere satellite. They
were to be future prey, once Project Iraq proved successful. Then there came
the shame of our torture, our murders, the mass ethnic cleansing in the land
we said we had liberated.
And so more US troops must die, sacrificed for those who have already died.
We cannot betray those who have been killed. It is a lie, of course. Every
desperate man keeps gambling, preferably with other men's lives.
But the Bushes and Blairs have experienced war through television and
Hollywood; this is both their illusion and their shield.
Historians will one day ask if the West did not plunge into its Middle East
catastrophe so blithely because not one member of any Western government
except Colin Powell, and he has shuffled off stage ever fought in a war.
The Churchills have gone, used as a wardrobe for a prime minister who lied
to his people and a president who, given the chance to fight for his
country, felt his Vietnam mission was to defend the skies over Texas.
But still he talks of victory, as ignorant of the past as he is of the
future.
Pat Buchanan ended his prophecy with imperishable words: "The only
lesson we learn from history is that we do not learn from history."
The Bush plan, and the question of withdrawal
What Bush says
20,000 troops increase
Mistake of not sending sufficient troops must be rectified. Troops stabilise
Baghdad and reinforce Anbar province, on condition that Iraqis take on Shia
militias
$1bn reconstruction aid
Fresh funds will help create jobs and stimulate economy to show Iraqis there
can be a peace dividend, and friendly Middle East states should help out too
Pullout
US commitment to Iraq is not open-ended but no timetable for troop
withdrawal, even though US troops are expected to hand control to Iraqis by
November
What Congress says
20,000 troops increase
Troop build-up is a mistake. House expected to vote on increase, Senate
legislation forces Bush to seek congressional approval but neither move
could block troop deployment
$1bn reconstruction aid
Don't throw good money after bad. US has squandered billions since the
invasion and Democrats plan investigation. Millions of dollars 'overpaid' by
Pentagon to Iraq contractors
Pullout
Bush has not learnt the lesson of November's mid-term elections which gave
Democrats control of the House and Senate on the platform of a phased
withdrawal from Iraq
What Baker says
20,000 troops increase
Up to 20,000 military trainers and troops embedded into and supporting Iraqi
army, while combat troops drawn down to avoid increase in total numbers
$1bn reconstruction aid
US economic assistance should be boosted to $5bn per year. US should take
anti-corruption measures by posting oil contracts on the internet for
outside scrutiny
Pullout
All US combat troops not needed for force protection should be out of Iraq
by the first quarter of 2008
Likely outcome
20,000 troops increase
Escalation of conflict
Money will be wasted, with official corruption in Iraq said to drain $7bn a
year
Pullout
Troop surge could disguise 'cut and run' depending on the circumstances in
both Iraq and America
©Copyright 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
###