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http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/05/11/con05442.html

Debating Iraq: A Murtha Moment and the Slide to An Exit

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Danny Schechter, Mediachannel.org

The much-maligned Mr. Marx said history often begins as tragedy and
repeats itself as farce. That was never more true last Friday night as we
watched the great Iraq war “debate.” Those of us with the stomach to do so
saw the consequences of years of increasingly polarized partisanship in
our Congress. It was as a manipulated and managed an episode of theater
that I have ever seen. It was more like a fraternity food fight than an
honest discourse on all sides.

Even the Washington Post, the local organ of media power, was disgusted,
noting: “Aggressive challenges to the Bush administration's military and
political strategy -- even calls for an immediate withdrawal of troops,
such as that made by Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.) on Thursday -- must be
part of that democratic discussion. Yet what we've mainly seen during the
past two weeks is a shameful exercise in demagoguery and name-calling.”

That’s because no one is really saying what they believe. The Democrats
want out but are afraid to say so and the self-styled patriots see the end
coming but need someone to blame beside themselves. The drama on the hill
represented a triumph of message point politics with thoroughly robotic
and irrelevant cliché-ridden speeches on the Republican side with Congress
member after Congress member playing at patriotism by finger pointing.

It was matched I am afraid, by equally vitriolic opportunism by leading
Democrats who had blindly supported the war and now avoided talking about
the truth of what their hawkish colleague Mr. Murtha was talking about.
Instead they defended his character and military record, but rarely backed
his courageous call for withdrawal.

The “debate” was a transparent maneuver by the Bush lovers to set up a
straw man with a phony resolution to prove how stupid the usually hawkish
Murtha was to suggest that redeployment and withdrawal was now called for
to save what face we can in a losing war in Iraq.

The response bizarrely echoed the days when Senator Joe McCarthy took on
the US Army with suggestions that they were infiltrated by reds. The Army
won that encounter. And make no mistake about it. Murtha is today a
political stand-in for a silenced military, which is warning us that the
fight is lost. He was on Meet the Press revealing that his information
comes from leaders of the Pentagon.

“There is nobody who talks to people in the Pentagon more than I do,” he
said and revealed the he has come up with a bi-partisan plan concocted
with former heads of the military. ”We are going to get out Tim, there’s
no question about it.” He predicts that that will happen just before the
2006 election, a sign of how politicized this “debate ” is. It’s about
domestic positioning, not Iraq. Murtha is the voice of a demoralized and
beaten military, not his party.

Murray Kempton, the great chronicler of Red Scare era spoke of a “shadow
line” that McCarthy and his supporters crossed. To paraphrase an essay in
his “America Comes of Middle Age,” “the sun goes down on the same war upon
which it rose not so long ago.”

In a sense it is the military on trial in the Congress not as a den of
communist but as force incapable of delivering the impossible victory, the
“mission accomplished,” demanded of them by their President and the
neo-con chicken hawks in the Pentagon. And yet like Ahab in Moby Dick they
are under unrelenting pressure to catch the elusive white whale.
Significantly reality may even be catching up with the Administration
because their rhetoric is softening even if their policy is not.

Reports Bloomberg News: “White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan said
last week that Murtha was aligning himself with extremists within his
party. (Quote: “it is baffling that he is endorsing the policy positions
of Michael Moore and the extreme liberal wing..."Unquote)

“ Vice President Dick Cheney, before Murtha made his proposal, accused
administration critics on Nov. 16 of using the war to ``play for political
advantage.'' The president himself called some of his Democratic opponents
``irresponsible.''

Today Bush is changing his tune saying the critics ``have every right to
voice their dissent.''

Bear in mind that Murtha is not against the war per se; the bloodletting,
the devastation of a country, the civilian casualties, and the war crimes
are not on his agenda. What we have done to Iraq is not his passion. He
says we need to act in our own self-interest because the “future of our
military is at risk.” He argues, “our military and their families are
stretched thin. Many say that the Army is broken. Some of our troops are
on their third deployment.”

Read John Burns in the Sunday New York Times and you find him echoing
Kempton of 40 years ago by calling the war “the shadowlands America fell
into when it led the invasion of Iraq more than 30 months ago—shadows that
still obscure an understanding of the landscape.” His reporting confirms
Murtha’s conclusion.

It is clear that the polemicists on the right who are championing “our
troops,” and terror-baiting the critics, are only prolonging their agony.
Burns is on the ground and the war’s cheerleaders are not. He quotes
General William Webster to the effect that 153,000 troops are
“exhausted…and have simply been overwhelmed.”

For more details, read James Fallows in the current Atlantic. He concludes
that the US military is failing in its efforts to build an Iraqi Army, the
force that has been presented as necessary precondition for US withdrawal.
Here is his assessment:

“ The crucial need to improve security and order in Iraq puts the United
States in an impossible position. It can't honorably leave Iraq—as opposed
to simply evacuating Saigon-style—so long as its military must provide
most of the manpower, weaponry, intelligence systems, and strategies being
used against the insurgency. But it can't sensibly stay when the very
presence of its troops is a worsening irritant to the Iraqi public and a
rallying point for nationalist opponents—to say nothing of the growing
pressure in the United States for withdrawal”

We are getting into a situation where those doing the fighting see no good
choices. “On the current course we will have two options,” a Marine
lieutenant colonel who had recently served in Iraq told Fallows.” We can
lose in Iraq and destroy our Army or we can just lose.”

Wow.

“ The officer went on to say that of course neither option was acceptable
which is why he thought it was so urgent to change course.”

This explains the call for withdrawal by the Congressman closest to the
military.

This debate is getting bitter. The days of a united Congress singing God
Bless America on the steps of the Capitol are long gone. The ugly
hyper-partisanship of the GOP has provoked a reaction of acrimony and
bitterness.

Here’s Murtha on Vice President Cheney’s comments,

" I like guys who've never been there that criticize us who've been there.
I like that. I like guys who got five deferments and never been there and
send people to war, and then don't like to hear suggestions about what
needs to be done."_

But what now? Is it enough for Democrats to return a volley of insults
with insults of their own? No, says a member of Congress anonymously to
Josh Marshall’s Talking Points blog:

“ I'll bet you a dollar that the Democratic response (if there is one)
will be a) unorganized (from Biden through Dean), b) incoherent (or at
least internally inconsistent), c) slow, d) measured, and e) cerebral. All
the wrong things to do. What they need to do is show some blood and gore,
use a couple of veterans, and ask the question -- is this worth it? If it
is, why are the families of Bush, Cheney, Wolfowitz, Delay, Hastert,
Rumsfeld et al. not on the front lines? As we say in Marketing, an
anecdote is worth a thousand data points.”

The Washington Post expresses a fear: “the country is in danger of
splitting into pieces.” The truth is that once again we have become a
nation divided against itself.

We are in a Tom Paine moment: “This is a time for all good men (and women)
to come to the aid of their country.” That means it’s time to crank up the
volume of protest and press the press to tell the truth about what’s
really happening by calling for an honest debate based on reality, not
rhetoric and fantasy. Most politicians seem stuck in a cesspool of their
own making. We need a media that tells the truth about the real choices.

And that’s something we can all demand so as to deepen this debate, avoid
the trap or partisan righteousness and the ongoing pissing contests that
divert attention from a war that is tearing Iraq and our own country
apart.


BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION

News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. His new books are
“The Death of Media” and “When News Lies: Media Complicity and the Iraq
War.” For more information: www.newsdissector/store.htm. Comments to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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