We Are The Deciders"There is
nothing worse than aggressive stupidity." ~~Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe
By Sheila Samples
04/23/06 "ICH"
-- -- If it weren't so dangerously sad, the media gyrations
to deflect attention from the sordid mess defense
secretary Donald Rumsfeld has made in Iraq would be
amusing. But efforts to hide the truth are futile
because Rumsfeld is literally surrounded by "stars" --
retired general officers speaking publicly about the
fatal mistakes Rumsfeld made in his mad dash to "sweep
everything up" and dash blindly off to war.
CNN and the Boston Globe say there are six
officers, Fox News says "a handful," the New York
Times says seven, the Christian Science Monitor
plays it safe with "several," and Rumsfeld himself
laughs it off with "two or three out of thousands."
There seems to be eight so far -- Gen. Eric Shinseki,
former Army Chief of Staff, was cut off at the knees a
year before his retirement for testifying under oath
during a Senate hearing a month before the assault on
Iraq that it would take "several hundred thousand"
troops to quell ethnic tensions that could lead to an
insurgency.
He was soon joined by Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni,
former CENTCOM commander; Lt.Gen. Greg Newbold, Director
of Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the
war planning; Maj.Gen. John Batiste, former 1st Infantry
Division commander; Maj.Gen. Charles Swannack, former
commander of the 82d Airborne Division in Iraq; Maj.Gen.
John Riggs who, after 39 years in the Army, retired from
the Pentagon in 2005; Maj.Gen. Paul Eaton, who oversaw
training of Iraqi troops from 2003-2004 and Gen. Wesley
Clark, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander.
Pay Attention!
We are now victims of a full-bore public relations
assault. White House bullhorns and media mockingbirds
are out in force, only too happy to be diverted from
discussing the treasonous Bush/Cheney/Rove/Libby leak of
an undercover CIA operative or from investigating the
restless murmurings of an impending nuclear attack on
Iran. The punditry brigade, including former military
brass on media payrolls as "analysts" immediately began
regurgitating talking points from a
Pentagon memo hurriedly
sent out when criticism began to gain momentum. They
were then summoned en masse to the Pentagon for a
briefing on the miraculous successes of Iraqi Operation
Let God Sort 'Em Out.
CNN jumped out in front of the pack with a continuous
loop of a staged video package showing Marines training
top-notch Iraqi troops while winning "hearts and minds"
of grateful Iraqi citizens,
followed quickly by an
article defending Rumsfeld. The issue soon became a
disorderly political media debate on whether the
generals were at war with each other, if they were
attempting a coup of their civilian leaders or were
merely rats deserting a sinking ship.
The brothers Limbaugh went into complete meltdown.
Rush's head exploded as he shrieked that the generals
were just a bunch of malcontents hooking up with the
"liberal drive-by media" to get rid of Rumsfeld for
attempting to fix the mess President Clinton made of the
military. David
took each general to task
for joining the anti-Bush liberal media vultures who
"have hovered over Rumsfeld's stubbornly vibrant carcass
for way too long..."
Then, Rumsfeld, like Dick Cheney does when he needs
to "catapault the propaganda," picked up the phone and
called the drug-addled, dangerously ignorant "El Rushbo"
to reassure millions of panting dittoheads that those
who oppose him or criticize his handling of the war are
being manipulated by terrorists like Zarqawi, Bin Laden
and Zawahiri.
It didn't help matters when four retired generals penned
an April 17 Wall Street Journal op-ed defending
Rumsfeld and scolding their outspoken peers.
"We do not believe that it is appropriate for active
duty, or retired, senior military officers to publicly
criticize U.S. civilian leadership during war," they
wrote, and added that the feelings of those who had come
forward were "irrelevant." They went on to single out
Zinni and Newbold, saying the two "do not understand the
true nature of this radical ideology, Islamic exremism,
and why we fight in Iraq." They then neatly connected
the war in Iraq to 9-11 by smugly suggesting Zinni and
Newbold "listen to the tapes of United 93."
Generally speaking
Who are these four men? Unlike those who were in Iraq
and are alarmed at the chaotic, snarled disorder of
Rumsfeld's leadership, the four Journal writers
are warriors of a different era and were not involved in
the planning or execution of the ongoing slaughter.
I suspect that Lt. Gen. John S. Crosby, my former
boss for whom I have tremendous admiration and respect,
now director of the government's Civilian Marksmanship
Program (CMP), and Maj. Gen. Burton R. Moore, director
of legislative liaison for the Air Force, allowed their
names to be used because of a sense of honor and
conviction that commissioned officers, whether active or
retired, do not speak out against their civilian
leaders, especially in a time of war.
However, the Journal and other media failed
to mention that the latter two -- Vietnam-era Lt. Gen.
Thomas McInerney, former assistant vice chief of staff
of the Air Force, and Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely, former
deputy commander of US Army, Pacific, are paid Fox
News analysts and active, aggressive, warmongering
Bush supporters.
McInerney joined the chorus of "swift-boaters" before
the 2004 election,
calling Sen. John Kerry's
1971 testimony about US soldiers committing barbaric
acts on Vietnamese civilians "treasonous." According to
Media Matters,
Vallely, infuriated with former ambassador Joe Wilson's
"agenda against the war on terror," emerged a week after
Cheney chief of staff "Scooter" Libby was indicted on
charges of obstruction of justice, perjury, and false
statements in the Valerie Plame leak scandal to claim
that a year before Robert Novak revealed Plame's
identity Wilson had bragged to him and others in the Fox
News green room that his wife worked at the CIA. When
asked why he had waited two years before coming forward,
Vallely remarked he "figured Joe Wilson would
self-destruct at some point in time."
At first, Vallely said that Wilson had told him "three,
possibly five times" in the spring of 2002 that his wife
worked at the CIA. Upon further questioning, Vallely
then said it was only one time, and perhaps in the
"spring-summer" time frame. Then it was "summer-early
fall." Vallely called on McInerney to back up his story
on ABC's
John Batchelor Show.
Media Matters reports that McInerney appeared
on the show to "repeat and expand upon Vallely's
memory," but he would only admit to being a friend of
Vallely and did not even suggest that Wilson had
discussed his wife's identity. Upon Wilson's threat to
sue Vallely for slander, Vallely, mercifully, shut up.
The two generals teamed up in 2004 to write a truly
frightening manifesto (with a forward written by Fox
News Iran-Contra hoodlum Oliver North) on how Rumsfeld
should really wage war --
“Endgame: The Blueprint for
Victory in the War on Terror.” Deluded by a
grandiose sense of US power, they expanded Bush's
three-nation "Axis of Evil" to an eight-nation "Web of
Terror." With the colossal successes of Afghanistan and
Iraq, it's now on to Syria and North Korea, Libya, Saudi
Arabia, and Pakistan. Forget the paradigm of diplomacy;
of containment. Forget trying to settle political crises
in the Middle East. Screw 'em. Invade 'em. Conquer 'em.
McInerney and Villely suggest, however, that because of
Iran's size, it might be wiser to "slap" it with an
embargo and keep it in line with a naval blockade.
So, what's the deal?
The administration and the Pentagon's aggressive
disinformation pundits want us to believe this issue is
political; merely disgruntled generals attempting to
stir up a mutiny within the ranks and breed discontent
within the populace before an upcoming election. If you
believe that -- you're not paying attention. The
generals being trashed for speaking out are patriots who
have committed their entire lives to honorably serving
and protecting the Republic and all it stands for, and
are no longer able to remain silent when they see it
being wantonly destroyed.
George Bush seems to think (sic) that Rumsfeld is doing
a heckuva job. He says he doesn't "appreciate the
speculation" about his buddy "Don." He's the decider,
Bush says. He
reads the front page.
Bush hears voices and he listens to them. "But mine is
the final decision," he says. "I'm the decider, and I
decide what is best. And what's best is for Don Rumsfeld
to remain as the Secretary of Defense."
But this is not about politics. It's about stopping the
madness -- and the giggling madman whose aggressive
stupidity and exaggerated sense of himself has brought
shame to this once proud nation.
Henry Kissinger once said, "Of all the despots
I've had to deal with, none was more ruthless than
Donald Rumsfeld." With Rumsfeld, it's about
rendition, brutal torture, sexual humiliation and
ghoulishly insane war crimes. It's about a group of
immensely brave apolitical patriots being forced to do
what the US Congress and the US media steadfastly refuse
to do -- tell the American people the truth. The blood
dripping from the corpses in Iraq is nothing compared to
that literally gushing from those who know what is going
on, but choose to remain silent.
This is not about Rumsfeld "transforming" the Army. It's
about the calculated destruction of all the services.
It's about privitazing the military -- contracting out
US security to war profiteers such as Halliburton,
Bechtel, Blackwater. It's about psychological operations
(PsyOps) teams and death squads roaming throughout Iraq
murdering innocents in their homes and mosques, gunning
down anything that moves in the streets. It's about a
secretary of defense not only ordering torture, but
getting
personally involved in
it.
This is not about whether Rumsfeld should be replaced.
It is about whether he should be hanged for not
supporting those for whom he is responsible. It is about
sending hundreds of thousands of Americans into the
mayhem of an insurgent battlefield; many to certain
death as a result of improper training, lack of
protective armor and lack of proper equipment.
It is about Rumsfeld "disappearing" the
nearly 2,400 dead
servicemembers who continue to return in the dead of
night without honor. It is about 35 families who will
drop to their knees tonight and pray for the safety of
their children, not knowing they are already dead. It is
about more than 20,000 soldiers and marines evacuated
from Rumsfeld's war, many physically and mentally
damaged beyond repair -- nearly 12,000 of them suffering
from disease. This is about destroying entire
populations with Depleted Uranium, including many future
generations of Americans.
Of course Rumsfeld must go. And, ultimately, he will
take George Bush, Dick Cheney, Condi Rice and the rest
of the depraved warmongers with him. The American people
have finally had enough of aggressive stupidity.
And we are the deciders.
Sheila Samples is
an Oklahoma writer and a former civilian US Army
Public Information Officer. She is a regular
contributor for a variety of Internet sites. Contact
her at:
rsamples@sirinet.net.
© 2005 Sheila Samples