-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Bennis / ON THE EVE OF BUSH'S "NEW DIRECTION:" Desperately 
Seeking Victory / Jan 10
Date:   Sat, 13 Jan 2007 07:45:39 -0800 (PST)
From:   ZNet Commentaries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-01/10bennis.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
ON THE EVE OF BUSH'S "NEW DIRECTION:"  Desperately Seeking Victory January 10, 
2007
By Phylis Bennis 

**   Bush's "new direction" will escalate the war by deploying thousands more 
U.S. combat troops, sending potentially a billion dollars in economic support 
aid into Iraq, and putting more blame for the occupation's failure on Iraqis 
themselves.

**   The strategy differs very little from the existing one, except to make 
things worse; more troops mean more violence, not less; the money is too little 
and too late, and it can do nothing while U.S. troops continue their military 
occupation and Iraq remains at war.

**   The Bush administration is desperately seeking a new strategy to buy them 
either something they can call a "victory" or at least a long enough delay to 
insure that Bush's successor takes the blame for the failure.  The current 
strategy of military occupation and political backing of an artificial and 
largely powerless government in Iraq has failed so massively that even top 
generals have refused to get on board Bush's latest call for escalation.

**   The debate over a "new direction" emerges just as the Iraqi parliament is 
preparing legislation that would allow foreign (especially U.S.) oil companies 
to control as much as 70% of the profit in future oil exploration.

**   Elsewhere in the region U.S.-orchestrated UN sanctions on Iran appear to 
have had little impact so far except to encourage increasingly explicit Israeli 
military (and even nuclear) threats; Palestine continues to burn, and the 
occupation-driven humanitarian and political crises in Gaza continue to 
escalate.

**   The Democrats won the November elections with a mandate to find a new 
direction OUT of Iraq, not to send more troops INTO Iraq; but it remains 
uncertain whether they will use the only actual power they have - the power of 
the purse - to actually stop the war.

**   There are some hopeful signs, including the Pelosi/Reid letter demanding 
the beginning of a troop withdrawal, and the moving of Iraq-related hearings to 
much higher priority and visibility; but there are reasons for pessimism too, 
including the lack of even a hint of teeth in the Pelosi/Reid letter and 
Pelosi's follow-up commitment not to cut funds, the virtual absence of experts 
supporting an immediate and complete end to occupation in the hearings line-up, 
and Biden's completely false claim that it might be "unconstitutional" for 
Congress to move to de-fund the war. 

**   There is an urgent need to ratchet up pressure on congress, particularly 
to hold the democrats accountable for the strong anti-war basis for their 
November victory; the January 27-29 mobilizations in Washington will represent 
a major component of that pressure.

****

Bush's "new direction" speech will announce a major escalation of U.S. troops 
in Iraq. The move will be called a "surge," as if that actually represents a 
military strategy, but the euphemism disguises an ordinary, already tried and 
already failed escalation of the U.S. occupation.  As has been true throughout 
the invasion and occupation, U.S. troops are the cause, not the solution, to 
violence in Iraq. 

If, as anticipated, Bush claims 20,000 combat troops will be sent, it may mean 
as many as 75,000 all together since logistics, transport, medical, engineering 
and other support units will be required to keep an additional 20,000 
acknowledged "combat" troops in the field. (In fact, as Military Families Speak 
Out has emphasized, every military job in Iraq is a "combat" position.)  While 
there may be a claim that the new deployments are linked directly to a specific 
"new strategy for victory," the reality is that the troops will be sent to 
"stabilize" Baghdad, a job that has already proved impossible as long as the 
U.S. occupation continues.  The summer 2006 troop increase, which transferred 
about 15,000 additional soldiers to Baghdad, largely from other positions in 
Iraq, led to an immediate escalation in violence across the city.

The speech will also likely announce a new fund of about $1 billion to be sent 
to Iraq for some vague combination of job creation and reconstruction. The only 
details so far seem to be based on a wishful assumption that angry young Iraqi 
men will be delighted to go to work as pittance-paid street sweepers and 
garbage collectors for the U.S. occupation forces and the U.S.-backed 
government, and will immediately abandon their ties to the anti-occupation 
resistance. 

It is unlikely that the new allocation (from a so-far unknown U.S. government 
source) will be tied to any change in the existing profiteering-based contract 
system in which the vast majority of the billions allocated for 
"reconstruction" in Iraq has gone to U.S.-based contractors.  It should be 
recognized that the U.S. owes a huge financial debt to Iraq - reparations for 
12 years of crippling sanctions, real reconstruction of the invasion-destroyed 
infrastructure, compensation for the shredding of Iraq's national life and 
social fabric - but that the U.S. cannot begin to make good on that obligation 
as long as the military occupation remains in place.

Bush's speech will also likely feature an issue that has become more 
commonplace across Washington's mainstream political spectrum in the last 
several months: Iraqis are responsible for their own crisis, and the Iraqi 
government better "stop relying" on U.S. forces for assistance.  The reality, 
of course, is that the Green Zone-based parliament IS in fact dependent on the 
U.S. occupation forces for protection and for what little power it has; that 
reality has led to the situation in Baghdad today in which many 
parliamentarians elected on a strong anti-occupation platform abandoned that 
principle when they realized that their own position depended on the Americans. 
 

Many of those parliamentarians holding to an anti-occupation position today are 
doing so while boycotting participation in the parliament itself.  But it 
remains an outrage Bush and other U.S. officials continue to assert that 
despite the U.S. invasion and occupation, the U.S. decisions to destroy Iraq's 
army and dismiss its entire state apparatus, the collapse of the Iraqi economy, 
and the occupation-driven war itself, that it is only the Iraqis' own lack of 
will that is responsible for their plight.

It appears that Bush is in the process of shifting focus from asserting that 
victory is at hand in Iraq to tamping down expectations and keeping an eye on 
this war in history, especially his own legacy. Bush's eulogy for Gerald Ford, 
and his weekly radio broadcast the next day, both focused on Ford's heroism for 
doing something (the Nixon pardon) widely reviled and politically unpopular at 
the time, but later judged by history to have been the "right thing."  

It was a speech clearly designed to re-shape Bush's own legacy - not the 
reckless warmonger who got everything wrong in Iraq, but the brave, however 
unpopular, leader who risked public opprobrium to do the right thing, and who 
waited for the future to recognize his genius.  Of course Ford's pardoning of 
Nixon was a political act, with only political consequences; no one died as a 
result of that decision (we won't talk here about Ford's own crimes: 
authorizing Indonesia's occupation of East Timor at the cost of 200,000 lives, 
his Kissinger-led collaboration with Pinochet's assassins, etc.).

The failure in Iraq is no longer a question; Bush himself now admits "we are 
not winning" in Iraq. Failure has been a constant; the difference now is that 
the lack of any options is so obvious that even key military leaders are 
rejecting the 
stay-the-course-but-add-a-bunch-more-soldiers-to-make-it-look-better strategy 
Bush is about to present. It is in this context that top Generals Casey and 
Abizaid's resignations must be viewed. Both strongly and quite publicly opposed 
the early "surge" proposals for Bush's escalation. (We should note they were 
not opposed to more troops in principle, but rather believed the escalation 
would "send the wrong message" to Iraqi leaders who "should" be carrying more 
of the military burden.  

But their opposition was nonetheless significant.)  After all Bush's 
high-profile claims that he would "let the generals on the ground decide," it 
became clear that any generals on the ground who did not agree with his plan 
would be out. Incoming Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' trip to Baghdad, 
similarly, was clearly not about "listening" to the troops on the ground, but 
rather designed to let the in-country command know what was coming - whether 
they liked it or not.

As a result, CentCom chief General John Abizaid, responsible for ground wars in 
both Iraq and land-locked Afghanistan, will be replaced by a Navy admiral.  It 
isn't clear whether the choice of a naval officer to command land wars 
reflected the lack of top army or marine generals who might be willing to 
accept the so-called "surge" strategy, or whether the appointment of a navy 
officer is rooted in the higher profile of the U.S. naval deployment cruising 
off Iran's coast.  Either or both are possible. General George Casey, commander 
in Iraq, will be replaced by Gen. David Petraeus, known for his involvement 
with counter-insurgency strategy.  

The new focus on counter-insurgency may turn out to be linked to another recent 
shift, that of current director of national intelligence John Negroponte to 
become Condoleezza Rice's deputy at the State Department.  Negroponte, of 
course, was U.S. ambassador to the UN when Colin Powell stood before the 
Security Council and set out the Bush administration's lies to justify the 
invasion of Iraq in 2003.  Later, as ambassador to occupied Iraq, Negroponte 
called for using the "Salvador Option" in Iraq, a reference to the reliance on 
U.S.-backed death squads that characterized his own years as U.S. ambassador to 
Honduras during the years of Central America's contra wars. 

The related shift is that of current Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad to 
take over the couldn't-get-confirmed John Bolton's position as ambassador to 
the UN.  Khalilzad, a Cheney protégé, is a noted neo-con with close ties the 
Reagan and Bush Senior administrations, and to the U.S. oil industry.  (For 
details on Khalilzad's history with the Taliban, Unocal, and the bombing of 
Afghanistan, see my article yesterday at 
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2007/01/08/un_ambassadors_oily_past.php.)

Shifting Khalilzad, himself a Sunni Afghan, out of Baghdad may reflect a 
grudging admission that his favored strategy of outreach to Iraq's 
disenfranchised Sunni community wasn't working (of course it wasn't - whatever 
his religion and languages, he still represented U.S. policies of occupation 
and war).  But he remains a key Bush loyalist so sending him to the UN 
indicates that somewhere in the administration, perhaps in Rice's State 
Department, someone still recognizes that Washington cannot afford to 
completely give up the idea of bringing the United Nations to heel.

Maintaining control of oil remains at the top of the U.S. agenda in Iraq.  
Despite the escalating war, and despite the problems facing Iraq's parliament - 
including the weeks-long boycott by the 30 legislators loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr 
- Britain's Independent on Sunday reported January 7 that Iraq is about to pass 
a law that would "give Western oil companies a massive share in the third 
largest reserves in the world. To the victors, the oil? That is how some 
experts view this unprecedented arrangement with a major Middle East oil 
producer that guarantees investors huge profits for the next 30 years." 

According to the Independent, "critics fear that given Iraq's weak bargaining 
position, it could get locked in now to deals on bad terms for decades to 
come."  The law was crafted with the help of U.S. mercenaries from the 
BearingPoint corporation. "Its provisions are a radical departure from the norm 
for developing countries: under a system known as 'production-sharing 
agreements,' or PSAs, oil majors such as BP and Shell in Britain, and Exxon and 
Chevron in the US, would be able to sign deals of up to 30 years to extract 
Iraq's oil. PSAs allow a country to retain legal ownership of its oil, but 
gives a share of profits to the international companies that invest in 
infrastructure and operation of the wells, pipelines and refineries. Their 
introduction would be a first for a major Middle Eastern oil producer. Saudi 
Arabia and Iran, the world's number one and two oil exporters, both tightly 
control their industries through state-owned companies with no appreciable 
foreign collaboration, as do most members of the Organisation of Petroleum 
Exporting Countries, Opec."

The escalation of war in Iraq has a parallel in escalating violence and tension 
throughout the Middle East region. Iran does not appear to be facing serious 
effects yet from the relatively mild sanctions imposed by the UN Security 
Council under U.S. pressure. But the U.S. has not abandoned its effort to 
escalate against Iran. This weekend's leaked report in the London Telegraph, 
purportedly documenting very specific Israeli plans for a military and possibly 
nuclear strike against Iran is clearly part of a unified effort to ratchet up 
pressure against Tehran. It is not at all clear that the Israeli report is 
accurate (Prime Minister Olmert's effort to claim military credentials for 
himself through last summer's Lebanon war backfired terribly; he has little 
credibility now with Israel's military).  But the widening discussion of Israel 
having (as Olmert himself and new Defense Secretary Robert Gates recently 
acknowledged) and potentially even using nuclear weapons is clearly part of an 
effort to "normalize" such a possibility.

In the occupied Palestinian territories, desperation is rising. The now almost 
year-long collective punishment in the form of economic sanctions against the 
Palestinian population, in the guise of boycotting the Hamas-led Palestinian 
Authority, has brought Gaza especially to the brink of absolute despair. The 
rising absolute poverty, combined with the disempowerment resulting from the 
occupation's tightening of control over all aspects of life, have led to a 
serious shredding of the social fabric of Palestinian society, including the 
rise in clan-based and family violence, and especially political violence 
between Palestinian factions. With U.S. backing, Israeli-Egyptian collaboration 
to send additional arms to the Fatah-led security forces of Palestinian 
President Mahmoud Abbas has of course heightened the antagonism and the level 
of violence between Fatah and Hamas.

And throughout the region the anger and humiliation engendered by the hasty, 
disrespectful and illegitimate execution of Saddam Hussein have added to the 
tensions and anger. Whatever else it was, this execution was not Nuremberg.  

Despite their flaws, the Nuremberg tribunals for the first time recognized that 
the crime of waging aggressive war lies at the root of all other war crimes. 
Nuremberg empowered international law in entirely new ways. Justice Jackson, 
one of the Nuremberg prosecutors, wrote that the individual accountability 
established there must apply to the victors as well as the vanquished.  And 
while Jackson's goal has yet to be implemented, the Nuremberg precedent set the 
terms for using international law as a weapon against leaders of powerful as 
well as defeated governments.  The flawed U.S.-controlled trial of Saddam 
Hussein did not even abide by, let alone chart new ground in international law. 
 This was victor's justice of the worst sort - just the opposite of what 
Justice Jackson called for.     

A fair trial would have allowed -- insisted on -- including evidence 
implicating those who enabled those crimes: the U.S. for providing military, 
financial and diplomatic support for the regime, as well as providing the seed 
stock for biological weapons; the Brits for providing growth medium for 
biological weapons; the Germans for providing chemical weapons; the French for 
providing missile technology... etc.   

Also, in a "new Iraq" the convictions after a fair trial would have led to life 
imprisonment -- not the death penalty. The fact that the first confirmation, 
for almost an hour, came only from the U.S.-backed propaganda station al-Hurra, 
indicates again that the U.S., not the Iraqi government, is still calling the 
shots around the trial and execution.  (U.S. and some British outlets were 
running headlines saying "Arabic language media reporting SH's execution..." as 
if al-Hurra was a legitimate independent news outlet.)
 
Here in the U.S., it remains unclear whether the victorious Democrats will take 
seriously the American people's November mandate: stop the war.  Congress has 
only one means of controlling an illegal war: to stop funding it.  So far very 
few Democrats have indicated a willingness to take that step.  Following the 
Pelosi-Reid letter to Bush, urging a redeployment of troops rather than an 
escalation, Pelosi went out of her way to reiterate that she would not support 
cutting off funds "to the troops."     

So far no one in Congress has mentioned that of the new $100 billion 
supplemental appropriations bill to pay for war in Iraq and Afghanistan, only 
1/10 of the money is designated for body armor and other means of protecting 
the troops; clearly anyone in Congress without the backbone to vote against ALL 
funds for the war could at least demand the sections be divided so they could 
vote for money for body armor, and vote no on all the rest.  

The January 27 mobilization, which will bring tens of thousands to Washington 
to demand that Congress heed the mandate of its election: people voted these 
members in to end the war.  Not for a "new direction in Iraq" but a new 
direction OUT of Iraq.  

 

____________________________ 

Check out Phyllis Bennis' newest book, Challenging Empire: How People, 
Governments and the UN Defy U.S. Power.  You can also check out some of her 
recent work on-line -  --A Critique of the Iraq Study Group (with Erik Leaver) 
- http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/3767 --Media appearances on why we need to bring 
all the troops home now and end the occupation - on the Lehrer News Hour (PBS) 
and the Diane Rehm Show (NPR). 
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/middle_east/july-dec06/iraq_10-23.html 
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/middle_east/july-dec06/iraq_12-12.html  
http://www.wamu.org/programs/dr/06/12/21.php 

 

  






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