Leave Iraq
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How to
Leave Iraq
Just Go
By SAUL
LANDAU
Iraq-satiated Democrats face a
formidable political challenge: If they win in November, can they extricate the
country from Bush's illegal war, which apparently can't be won by US military
forces and has drained material and psychic resources?
Obama and Clinton promise to
withdraw the troops-well, most combat forces by 2010. They don't say what
they'll do with the 180,000 "contractors" the US pays to do
jobs soldiers once did, or how to deal with the super-Walmart sized embassy,
still under construction. Indeed, few ask the question: Why do we need such an
obscene and dominating structure if we're leaving? Nor have we seen plans to
meet the issue of the future of US bases in Iraq, or how to include Iraq's neighbors,
those most concerned (Syria and Iran), with post occupation stabilization.
All American political aspirants use
the word "peace" in the same way as people say "bless you"
when you sneeze: such words mean nothing. Just recall how 13 colonies transformed
themselves into an empire. It took only a century of conquest-of Indian land
and Mexican and Spanish territory. That's one example of a peace loving people!
McCain is a maverick because he
admits implicitly that war forms a basic thread in American culture. He says
he'll keep US troops in Iraq
indefinitely, until we win (whatever that means). He extols the glorious
military that hasn't won a war against an enemy that fought back since World
War II-and even then, thanks to the Soviet forces. The arms makers, the
Halliburtons and Blackwaters of the country, love this kind of talk-as do their
stockholders.
The axioms of US politics vitiate
honest dialogue on war and empire. Distortion appears thanks to the media
stenographers as daily news. Bush, who will say anything, praises himself for
making progress in Iraq.
One must translate that word as "wreaking five years of death and
destruction." Wiping his usual Alfred E. Newman smirk from his turned down
mouth, he praised "progress" in Iraq and challenged Democrats who
call for troop withdrawals. "No matter what shortcomings these critics
diagnose, their prescription is always the same: retreat," Bush said. (USA Today March
27)
His optimism clashed with facts when
in late March fighting erupted in Basra and
rioting in Baghdad.
With US encouragement, the
Iraqi government launched a military offensive in Basra to undermine Moktada al Sadr, Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki's political rival. The Prime Minister faction feared
his would lose in the provincial elections in October because the public hates
his government. They have done nothing to provide water supply, housing or jobs
for poor Iraqis. Maliki's coalition did, however, line its own pockets. The
attack failed. The US-trained army had to rely on US air and ground support to
rescue them from Sadr's militias. So much for the success of Bush's surge!
Violence in Iraq
escalated.
Almost five years after he claimed
to have accomplished the mission (May 1, 2003), Bush still pats himself on the
back. He deposed Saddam Hussein, who "killed his own people." Bush's
puppet government just killed hundreds of Iraqis in Basra. Bush does not see contradictions.
If the US
withdraws, he warns, a parade of horrors will ensue -the old yawner we heard
about dominoes falling in Asia if we pulled out of Vietnam. We're still waiting for
the sound of those tumbling chips as the City Bank building dominates the
skyline of Ho Chi Minh City.
Bush and Cheney repeat vague disaster scenarios. Their media outlets (Fox and
CNN, for examples) reiterate the nonsense almost as often as commercials.
The public said no to this war in
the 2006 congressional election, and in every poll. Dick Cheney says:
"so?" His and Bush's "get-Saddam" obsession has cost 4,000+
US soldiers' lives, plus upwards of 30,000 wounded . The final costs will run
into trillions of dollars.
Incidentally, neither Hillary nor
Barack refer to the colossal toll in Iraqi lives. Bush's policies have cost Washington immense
prestige and credibility. Their lies and deceptions may convince a small
minority, but most of the world recognizes Iraq as an unmitigated disaster. It
has led to increased regional tensions, and contributed to US economic malaise
as well. Can a Democrat recoup the global solidarity generated after 9/11? Or,
has anti-Americanism become so ubiquitous in the world that Bush's deeds cannot
be undone by a "nicer guy" regime?
Bush still claims Iraqis are better
off because of his invasion. Strangely enough, most Iraqis can't yet see the
benefits from ongoing death, destruction, torture, prison and exile. Bush seems
to think that taking those factors into account shows a short term perspective
on their part.
"The challenge before us,"
he wrote, "is whether we respond to al-Qaeda's barbarism by running away,
as it hopes we do - abandoning the future of Iraq, the Middle East and
ultimately our own security to the very people responsible for last week's
atrocities - or whether we stand and fight. To me, there is only one choice
that protects America's
security - and that is to stand, and fight, and win." (Washington Post, April 26, 2007)
Imagine, Bush still sneaks in and
out of Baghdad
when he visits to lecture his puppets. When Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad visited, he rode around Iraq with little protection and got
the kind of warm welcome Bush must pray for.
Bush's insistence that he's fighting
Al Qaeda in Iraq
so he doesn't have to fight them here collides with facts uncovered by on the
scene journalists Patrick Cockburn (The Independent) and Ned Parker (Los
Angeles Times). They estimate Al Qaeda's presence contributes a minute part of Iraq's daily
violence. (The 2006 Iraq Study Group report supports their conclusions.)
Ironically, Al Qaeda didn't exist in Iraq until after Bush invaded.
Given the public skepticism about
the war and the declining economy, the Democrats' November electoral task
should be easy. But wait! They control both Houses and didn't cut off Iraq War
funds. One agonizing anti-war Member said, "We don't have the votes to end
it. The Joe Liebermans and Blue Dogs make it impossible," referring to the
former Democrat-now Independent - from Connecticut
who echoes Bush by blaming the Iraqi insurgency on Al Qaeda. In 1994,
conservative House Democrats formed The Blue Dog Coalition to represent more
hawkish positions and stronger anti-tax stands.
In looking for ways out, why don't
Democrats leaders simply repeat the Iraq Study Group's recommendation? Iraq's eastern and western neighbors, Iran and Syria,
should become leading participants in helping to stabilize Iraq after US troops depart. "Given the
ability of Iran and Syria to influence events within Iraq and their interest in avoiding chaos in Iraq, the United States should try to engage
them constructively," said the report.
The solution is obvious, yet arm
chair pundits and Solons wring their hands. If the US
pulls, civil war may erupt in Iraq.
Hey, civil war broke out when Shia v. Shia fought each other in Basra. The clashes there
should have forever exploded the myth that Iraq suffers only from a
Shiite-Sunni or Kurd-Turkuman-Christian feud.
The White House mischaracterized al
Maliki's attack as aimed at criminals and terrorists. The flimsy lie was
exposed and even with US
military help, government forces lost. Indeed, had not Sadr called a cease fire
(purportedly, thanks to Iran),
Maliki's humiliation would have been worse. The Basra
conflagration dramatizes the lies that Bush and Cheney tell and the media
repeats about the value of the surge and progress in Iraq. It also underlined the main
fact of US
occupation: it has destroyed the integrity of Iraqi society. The longer we
remain, the more difficult it will become to re-glue the elements of that
country into some cohesive mass.
Al Qaeda has not sponsored the
anti-U.S. insurgency in Iraq.
The US
presence has brought death, destruction and misery to Iraqis. That's why we're
hated.
The Dems could use facts to show
flaws in Bush argument for staying his bloody course. They could posit
withdrawal from Iraq
as a stabilizing move-a change from threatening war and demanding US-style
democratization. (Recall the January 2006 Palestinian elections in Gaza; free and fair and
under Israeli occupation. Hamas won.
Since the wrong Party won, Bush said
the elections didn't count. Such behavior doesn't auger well for the US as broker
for an Israeli-Palestinian peace.)
"To leave Iraq,"
said my colleague, "just go." He forgot that such a bold move might
require the invention of the spinal transplant.
Saul Landau is the author of "A
Bush and Botox World." He is an Institute for Policy Studies fellow and
winner of the "best activist video" award from the San Francisco
Video Fest for WE DON'T PLAY GOLF HERE (available on dvd from
roundworldproductons@gmail.com