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Home World Middle East U.S. Forces, you lose!

U.S. Forces, you lose!

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A leaked classified memorandum by the U.S. National Security Adviser admits the latest Iraqi Prime Minister is "either ignorant of what is going on, misrepresenting his intentions, or that his capabilities are not yet sufficient to turn his good intentions into action." In other words incompetant. And newly disclosed details from a classified Marine Corps intelligence report admits the U.S, military is no longer able to defeat a bloody insurgency in western Iraq or counter al-Qaeda's rising popularity. In other words: Bush, you lose! Lessons From an Immoral War
by Marie Cocco

Published on Wednesday, November 29, 2006 by truthdig

WASHINGTON - The country has concluded that the Iraq war is a profound misadventure from which the United States must somehow extract itself. Details have been left to the foreign policy experts and political fixers of the Iraq Study Group, a sort of government-outside-the-government that is supposed to offer a path of wisdom to those inside the government who’ve not found one on their own.

The American people cannot untangle this dangerous web. But we can take stock of lessons learned.

What, at this bloody juncture, can we say about the role the people played in the blunder of Iraq?

The first is that we allowed the crudest sort of politics to form the basis of support for war. The Iraq invasion was a political choice, not a necessity of national security. If we were befuddled, or scared out of our wits by the Bush administration’s rhetoric about weapons of mass destruction and its false linkage of Iraq with the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, our suspicions should have been aroused by White House hucksterism: “From a marketing point of view, you don’t introduce new products in August,” White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card said in explaining why the president waited until the fall of 2002—on the eve of the midterm congressional elections—to begin selling us the faulty Iraq product.

All wars require a dose of propaganda to rally the public, to boost the troops, to bind a nation together as it endures hardship. The trouble with the Iraq war is that it was all propaganda, all the time, all along. The president and much of the Republican Party kept up the advertising right up to this month’s election, when at last the people stopped buying.

The moment of rejection might have come sooner had we not made another crucial mistake, from which we must learn the most important lesson. Many Americans were all too willing to allow this war to fester so long as only those relatively few families with sons and daughters in the volunteer military were at risk—and so long as we were not asked to pay even a dollar in taxes to support it.

Much has been made these past few days about the passing of a cruel anniversary. We’ve now been at war in Iraq as long as we were fighting World War II. There is a reason we have come to call the World War II generation “the greatest.” The citizens of that era earned the accolade, through sacrifice on the battlefield and at home.

If such broad sacrifice had been required to go to war in Iraq, would Congress have been so compliant in approving the conflict? Would the country in 2004 have reelected President Bush?

Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry at the time offered a plan for a negotiated settlement that is strikingly similar to the initial word leaking out of the Iraq Study Group. Kerry called, in part, for negotiations involving key regional players such as Iran and Syria. If the entire nation was giving up its flesh and blood—or even forced to open its wallet—would we have groped for an exit strategy two years ago?

Never again should the people be so disengaged, deliberately or not, from the consequences of a war that they allow the government to pursue in their names.

And never again should we avert our eyes from the dark seed our own actions cultivated. Even if most Americans have all but forgotten the images of Abu Ghraib, it is safe to say most Arabs and Muslims have not.

“I mean, those pictures, a hundred years from now, when the history of the Middle East is written, those things will be part and parcel of whatever textbook that Iraqis and Syrians and others are writing about the West,” Col. William Darley of Military Review told the Columbia Journalism Review for an oral history of the war.

Much the same could be said about the indefinite detention of hundreds of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba—a blight our closest allies have urged us, time and again, to rectify.

The 2008 presidential election looms. We may or may not be out of Iraq by then, but we will be forced to choose. Another lesson of this grim experience is that we must finally shun candidates who are long on charisma and good at catchphrases, but short on life experience that brings a level head.

Copyright © 2006 Truthdig, L.L.C.

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Comments (14)add comment

Chato said:

CUT! CUT! RUN! RUN! Johnny's war - no fun!
Aussies pay for bloody farce, I just say, stick it up your arse!
December 01, 2006

Lentil Girl said:

The usa has no intention of leaving Iraq for a very very very long time. Look at the "embassy" being built inside the safety of the Green Zone, the biggest US embassy in the world, not to mention those massive US bases scattered throughout Iraq, each as big as a township, self-contained, well-defended. The yanks are here to stay, to everyones peril.
December 01, 2006

Max said:

The Americon behemoth has feet of clay and they are sinking in the bloody quicksand of Iraq, a catastrofuck of their own devising...
December 01, 2006

Unregistered said:

I fear that Lentil Girl is right about the US.
December 01, 2006

Patriot said:

The COW forces in Iraq are the only thing standing between the Iraqi people and a Iranian/Al Qaeda takeover.

You do remember Al Qaeda? The evil organisation hell bent on destroying our way of life? The ones that attacked us?

Instead of decrying our brave soldiers how about supporting them for a change.
December 01, 2006

Unfucktheworld said:

Remember Osama? Bush, Blair and Howard sure the hell dont mention him anymore!
December 01, 2006

Unregistered said:

The assorted geese of Australia, having no "way of life" worth living, allowed sleazy scum to drive a wedge right through the middle of their laughable globalized nation.
Maybe it is time to ask the "enemies" of the "nation" just what the Oz "nation" is these days. Is the "nation" merely a deeply indebted, and degraded corporate arsewipe? The Oz geese don't have a clue - been too busy watching braindead spectator sport!
*CAPTAIN AUSTRALIA*
December 02, 2006

Max said:

Remember the hue and cry over the discovery of miniscule deposits of anthrax (Yes, people died but even I can't recall how many... one? two?) Remember the government advice to stock up of masking tape and plastic sheets! Ask yourself what became of the investigation into the sorce of this anthrax? Ah, the silence and deceit!
December 02, 2006

Yugo said:

Yeah why is this website so silent about criticising Putin and Chechnya? Are you scared of being poisoned or shot?
December 02, 2006

LordyLordyLordy said:

Well I dont know about the rest of the whackos here, but I like Vlad the impaler.

He has bought stability back to Russia and the trains now run on time.
December 02, 2006

Unregistered said:

If everyone does just what they are told, there will be no unpleasantness with Polonium 210 and suchlike, okay?
- John Weasleton Hogturd (Performing Monkey of Oz)
December 03, 2006

Venting Wasabi said:

Are you suggesting the Russian mafia are behind the (forgotten and buried) anthrax scare?
December 05, 2006

Unregistered said:

One need look no further than the Coalition of the Witless to find the motive for spreading anthrax spores. Detective work should start in Washington.
As for Polonium 210, America, Israel, UK all have the means and the motives.
*CAPTAIN AUSTRALIA*
December 05, 2006

So? said:

Who did send the anthrax?
August 12, 2008

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