Dying to Save the G.O.P. Congress
By FRANK RICH
10/29/06 "New
York Times" -- -- IF you happened to be up around
dawn on Tuesday, you could witness the death rattle of our
adventure in Iraq live on CNN. Zalmay Khalilzad, the American
ambassador, and Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the American
commander, were making new promises from the bunker of the Green
Zone, inspiring about as much confidence as Jackie Gleason and
Art Carney hatching a get-rich-quick scheme to sell a kitchen
gadget on “The Honeymooners.”
“Success in Iraq is possible and can be achieved on a realistic
timetable,” said Mr. Khalilzad. Iraq can be “in a very good
place in 12 months,” said General Casey. Even a child could see
how much was wrong with this picture.
If there really is light at the end of the tunnel, why after
three and a half years can’t we yet guarantee light in Baghdad?
Symbolically enough, television transmission of the Khalilzad-Casey
press conference was interrupted by another of the city’s daily
power failures. If Iraq’s leaders had signed on to the 12-month
plan of “benchmarks” the Americans advertised, why were those
leaders nowhere in sight? We found out one day later, when the
prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, mocked the very idea of an
America-imposed timetable. “I am positive that this is not the
official policy of the American government, but rather a result
of the ongoing election campaign,” he said, adding dismissively,
“And that does not concern us much.”
Give the Iraqi leader credit for a Borat-like candor that almost
every American in this sorry tale lacks. Of course all the White
House’s latest jabberwocky about “benchmarks” and “milestones”
and “timetables” (never to be confused with those Defeatocrats’
“timelines”) is nothing more than an election-year P.R.
strategy, as is the laughable banishment of “stay the course.”
There is no new American plan to counter the apocalypse now
playing out in Iraq, only new packaging to pacify American
voters between now and Nov. 7. And recycled packaging at that:
President Bush had last announced that he and Mr. Maliki were
developing “benchmarks” to “measure progress” in Iraq back in
June.
As Richard Holbrooke, the broker of the Bosnia peace accords,
has observed, the only real choice left for the president now is
either “escalation or disengagement.” But there are no troops,
let alone money or national will, for escalation. Disengagement
within a year, however, is favored by 54 percent of Americans
and, more important, 71 percent of Iraqis. After Election Day,
adults in Washington will step in, bow to the obvious and pull
the plug. The current administration strategy — praying for a
miracle — is not an option. The current panacea favored by
anxious Republican Congressional candidates — firing Donald
Rumsfeld — is too little, too late.
The adults in charge of disengagement will include the Bush
family consigliere, James Baker, whose bipartisan Iraq Study
Group will present its findings after the election, and John
Warner, the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, who has
promised a re-evaluation of Iraq policy within roughly the same
time frame. Democrats will have a role in direct proportion to
the clout they gain in the midterms.
One way or another the various long-shot exit scenarios being
debated in the capital will be sorted out: federalism and
partition; reaching out somehow for help from Iran and Syria;
replacing Mr. Maliki with a Saddam-lite strongman. There will be
some kind of timeline, or whatever you want to call it, with
enforced benchmarks, or whatever you want to call them, for
phased withdrawal. (Read “Out of Iraq: A Practical Plan for
Withdrawal Now” by George McGovern and William R. Polk for a
particularly persuasive blueprint.) In any event, the timeline
will end no later than Inauguration Day 2009.
In keeping with the political cynicism that gave birth to this
war and has recklessly prolonged it, the only ones being kept in
the dark about this inevitable denouement are our fighting men
and women. They remain trapped, dying in accelerating numbers in
a civil war that is now killing so many Iraqi civilians that Mr.
Maliki this month ordered his health ministry to stop releasing
any figures.
Our troops are held hostage by the White House’s political
imperatives as much as they are by the violence. Desperate to
maintain the election-year P.R. ruse that an undefined “victory”
is still within reach, Mr. Bush went so far at Wednesday’s press
conference as to say that “absolutely, we’re winning” in Iraq.
He explained his rationale to George Stephanopoulos last
weekend, when he asserted that the number of casualties was the
enemy’s definition of success or failure, not his. “I define
success or failure as to whether or not the Iraqis will be able
to defend themselves,” the president said, and “as to whether
the unity government” is making the “difficult decisions
necessary to unite the country.”
Unfortunately, the war is a calamity by both of those
definitions as well. The American command’s call for a mere
3,000 more Iraqi troops to help defend Baghdad has gone
unanswered. As we’ve learned from Operation Together Forward,
when Iraqis do stand up, violence goes up. And when American and
British troops stand down, murderous sectarian militias, some of
them allied with that “unity” government, fill the vacuum,
taking over entire cities like Amara and Balad in broad
daylight. As for those “difficult decisions” Mr. Bush regards as
so essential, the Iraqi government’s policy is cut and run. Mr.
Maliki is not cracking down on rampaging militias but running
interference for their kingpin, Moktada al-Sadr. Mr. Maliki
treats this radical anti-American Shiite cleric, his political
ally, with far more deference than he shows the American
president.
The ultimate chutzpah is that Mr. Bush, the man who sold us
Saddam’s imminent mushroom clouds and “Mission Accomplished,” is
trivializing the chaos in Iraq as propaganda. The enemy’s
“sophisticated” strategy, he said in last weekend’s radio
address, is to distribute “images of violence” to television
networks, Web sites and journalists to “demoralize our country.”
This is a morally repugnant argument. The “images of violence”
from Iraq are not fake — like, say, the fiction our government
manufactured about the friendly-fire death of Pat Tillman or the
upbeat news stories the Pentagon spends millions of dollars
planting in Iraqi newspapers today. These images of violence are
real. Americans really are dying at the fastest pace in at least
a year, and Iraqis in the greatest numbers to date. To imply
that this carnage is magnified by the news media, whether the
American press or Al Jazeera, is to belittle the gravity of the
escalated bloodshed and to duck accountability for the
mismanagement of the war. Mr. Bush’s logic is reminiscent of
Jeffrey Skilling’s obtuse view of his innocence in the Enron
scandal, though at least Mr. Skilling has been held accountable
for the wreckage of lives on his watch.
It is also wrong to liken what’s going on now, as Mr. Bush has,
to the Tet offensive. That sloppy Vietnam analogy was first made
by Mr. Rumsfeld in June 2004 to try to explain away the
explosive rise in the war’s violence at that time. It made a
little more sense then, since both the administration and the
American public were still being startled by the persistence of
the Iraq insurgency, much as the Johnson administration and
Walter Cronkite were by the Viet Cong’s tenacity in 1968. Before
Tet, as Stanley Karnow’s history, “Vietnam,” reminds us, public
approval of L.B.J.’s conduct of the war still stood at 40
percent, yet to hit rock bottom.
Where we are in Iraq today is not 1968 but 1971, after the
bottom had fallen out, Johnson had abdicated and America had
completely turned on Vietnam. At that point, approval of Richard
Nixon’s handling of the war was at 34 percent, comparable to Mr.
Bush’s current 30. The percentage of Americans who thought the
Vietnam War was “morally wrong” stood at 51, comparable to the
58 percent who now think the Iraq war was a mistake. Many other
Vietnam developments in 1971 have their counterparts in 2006:
the leaking of classified Pentagon reports revealing inept and
duplicitous war policy, White House demonization of the press,
the joining of moderate Republican senators with Democrats to
press for a specific date for American withdrawal.
That’s why it seemed particularly absurd when, in his interview
with Mr. Stephanopoulos last weekend, Mr. Bush said that “the
fundamental question” Americans must answer is “should we stay?”
They’ve been answering that question loud and clear for more
than a year now.
What we should be thinking about instead are our obligations to
those who are doing the staying. Kevin Tillman, who served with
his brother in Iraq and Afghanistan, observed in an angry online
essay this month: “Somehow back at home, support for the
soldiers meant having a 5-year-old kindergartener scribble a
picture with crayons and send it overseas, or slapping stickers
on cars, or lobbying Congress for an extra pad in a helmet.”
If we really support the troops, we’ll move past Mr. Bush’s
“fundamental question” to one from 1971 posed by a 27-year-old
Vietnam veteran, John Kerry, before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee: “How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a
mistake?”
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
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