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Just Above Sunset
September 26, 2004 - One step beyond the tipping point...
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Last weekend in these two
items - Trends: There just isn't enough fairy dust to fix this one and The rolling meme gathers speed - you could find the argument that around September 13 a new narrative started gathering momentum – or a new meme,
a newly accepted axiomatic sense of what is an actual fact. Chuck Hagel on Face the Nation: "[T]o say, 'Well, we just must stay the course and any
of you who are questioning are just hand-wringers,' is not very responsible. The fact is we're in trouble." Yipes! The president
says things are going just fine and we’re making progress, and these guys are saying these things? Well-placed sources in the administration are confident Bush's decision will be to get out. They
believe that is the recommendation of his national security team and would be the recommendation of second-term officials.
An informed guess might have Condoleezza Rice as secretary of state, Paul Wolfowitz as defense secretary and Stephen Hadley
as national security adviser. According to my sources, all would opt for a withdrawal. Now Novak is the ultimate
insider in these matters – ask whose wife is a secret CIA agent and needs to be exposed and ruined, for vengeance.
And he says it’s over, just no one in the administration is saying that now. It’ll wait. The question lingers: why would the administration want to leak to Robert Novak that Bush is contemplating
a quickish exit from Iraq? An obvious thought is that the leak comes from someone diametrically opposed to such a stance.
An admission of any plan of that kind would demoralize the president's supporters (and war supporters) and probably prompt
a question in the debates or upcoming news conferences. The president might then be forced to dismiss such an idea, boxing
himself into the neoconservative position before the election. Tada! You scotch the withdrawal idea by raising it. The beauty
of this is that it uses that anti-war curmudgeon, Novak, to bolster the president's resolve. Alternatively, it's less an attempt
to corner the president than to wake him up. "Look," someone might be trying to say from within the cocoon. "You might still
think we're marching to victory but almost no one else does. We're in a situation where withdrawal is increasingly a least-worst
option." That comports with the allegedly despondent mood of Paul Wolfowitz, addressing a bunch of Iraqi exiles last week.
Wolfowitz is a smart and principled man. He knows the extent of the failure since the fall of Baghdad and may be doing his
best to rescue something from it. So you have Wolfowitz, Hagel, McCain, and Graham all trying to wake the president up - or
bounce him into a concrete commitment of more money, troops and attention before the election. All this is purely my conjecture.
Whatever scenario is more accurate, the underlying message is clear. Most of Washington now believes that the war in Iraq
is all but lost and that Bush has to tell us soon how he intends to turn things around. People are coming out of denial. And
that's dangerous for the president if it becomes widespread before November 2. Most of Washington believes
the new meme? The crux of the speech came during the question-and-answer session, when an audience member posed
the following: "The Financial Times today editorializes that it is 'time to consider Iraq withdrawal,' noting the protracted
war is not winnable and it's creating more terrorists than enemies of the West. What is your response?" An irritated yet good-natured
Rumsfeld responded, "Who put that question in? He ought to get a life. If he's got time to read that kind of stuff, he ought
to get a life." Ah, in short, anyone who
even reads bad news has the wrong attitude and should "get a life." Tell me again – how did we get into this war
and make so many bad decisions? I guess those with reservations about our rationale(s), our evidence, about how many
troops we’d need and how easy this all would be simply had a bad attitude and needed to get a life. Now Mr. Bush hopes that by pretending that Mr. Allawi is a real leader of a real government, he
can conceal the fact that he has led America into a major strategic defeat. This is, of course, a bit
grim, but the consensus now. The Bush administration fostered the Iraq insurgency by botching the essential tasks of enlisting
allies, rebuilding infrastructure, training and equipping local security forces, and preparing for elections. It's understandable,
then, that John Kerry - whose speech yesterday was deadly accurate in its description of Mr. Bush's mistakes - proposes going
back and doing the job right. Oh. No way out. At one time I would have ruled out anything less than what might be called a U.S. victory in Iraq
-- a secure nation governed by democratically elected rulers. I would have argued that no matter how the United States got
into Iraq, it simply could not preemptively pull out. To do so would have great and grave consequences. It could plunge the
country into civil war, Shiites against Sunnis and Kurds against them both. It would cause the country to disintegrate, maybe
dividing into thirds -- a Kurdish north, a Sunni center and a Shiite south. Where things are not so ethnically neat, expect
a bloodbath -- and expect outsiders to join in. I suppose such a strongman
would do. … Iraq is fast becoming Vietnam -- only the stakes are higher. (Vietnam had no oil.) It
is also Vietnam in the way the presidential campaign is handling it. Once again the GOP is playing the odious patriotism card
to silence dissent. As for Bush, he talks about Iraq with the same loopy unreality as he does his National Guard service.
He's a fabulist. And it’s 1968, or
1972, all over again. Same questions. … Before 9/11, he says, the terrorists learned two lessons from how the United States responded
to their multiple strikes: "They could strike the United States with relative impunity," and, "If they hit us hard enough,
they could change our policy," as happened after the 1983 attack in Beirut and again in Mogadishu. That's why, Cheney insists,
the nation must stay the course in Iraq. The strategy of terrorists is to use violence to force a change in U.S. policy. If
that happens, "that's a victory for the terrorists." So it’s a burden-of-proof
thing. Cheney, the one man who
can be said to most probably control and direct the administration, is saying one needs to prove the case for anything else
but war. Unless you come up with some damned good reasons, then continual war it is. Those, like Kerry, who wanted to give the inspectors more time, or who wanted to bring more allies
aboard before invading, believed that the burden of proof was on war, that an attacking nation must provide evidence of the
justness of its decision. The administration argued the opposite, that Iraq needed to prove to the world that it didn't deserve
to be invaded. The job of the inspectors, in this view, wasn't to find weapons of mass destruction but to prove a virtual
impossibility, that Iraq didn't possess WMD. That was the lesson of 9/11, the administration said. We couldn't wait to find
out whether Iraq had WMD. If we did, it might be too late. |
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This issue updated and published on...
Paris readers add nine hours....
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