From: John Grant<[email protected]> on 22 May 2015

Here We Go Again
The Debacle That Bites Back
By John Grant
This Can't Be Happening

Jeb Bush had a tough time when a female college student told him his
brother, George, and his shock-and-awe debacle in Iraq had created
ISIS. Jeb winced and did some ducking and covering. He'd already
fumbled a question from Megyn Kelly of Fox News that, if he knew what
we know now, would he have done what his brother did. He said he would
have also invaded Iraq and that his older brother was one of his
campaign's foreign policy advisers.
Once Jeb realized he'd stumbled into a hornet's nest, he quickly
back-peddled and said he had not understood Kelly's question. He said
he thought he was being asked if he didn't know now what his brother
didn't know then, would he invade Iraq? In other words, are you, Jeb,
as cavalier and oblivious to reality as your brother was? Suddenly
realizing how much bad freight his brother's war carried, he revised
his answer: Of course he would not have invaded Iraq.

There was a rare element of accountability, here, something rarely
seen vis-à-vis the Iraq War -- or wars like Vietnam, for that matter.
The question would not have plagued another candidate quite as much.
Beyond voting for the war, which Hillary Clinton did and now calls a
"mistake," even before 9/11 Jeb Bush was part of the Project For A New
American Century, which functioned as a blueprint for the invasion of
Iraq. The PNAC fellows were about sustaining America as ruler of the
world; there is little indication they were very much concerned about
the truth.

UNHCR map of Iraq; ISIS controls cities with black dots

UNHCR map of Iraq; ISIS controls cities with black dots

Last week, thanks to a sand storm that grounded US planes, ISIS (or
the Islamic State) was able to take Ramadi, the capital of Anbar
Province. Since then, they've taken the ancient Syrian city of
Palmyra. ISIS already controlled Falluja, a small city between Ramadi
and Baghdad, and Mosul to the north -- plus a lot of sand in between.
As is its inclination, the ISIS forces reportedly executed a lot of
people in Ramadi. No doubt they did the same in Palmyra.

The Islamic State is largely synonymous with the Sunni dominated Anbar
Province in western Iraq; its control extends into Syria. Much of the
top leadership of the Islamic State is made up of former Saddam
generals angry about US Proconsul Paul Bremmer's cavalier decision to
completely eliminate the Iraqi army. In the same misguided spirit,
Bremmer also disbanded the Bath Party. These decisions, taken in
concert, amounted to one of the stupidest foreign policy decisions of
modern times, according to the national security consultant Richard
Clarke.

So who should be held accountable? Or better yet, who's gonna ever get it right?

George W. Bush's post-9/11 decision to militarily wreck Iraq over
non-existent nuclear weapons, who will control Iraqi oil and the
delusional idea of introducing Jeffersonian democracy into Iraq has
now shape-shifted into a truly horrendous monster. Shock-and-awe has
gone through the meat-grinder and come out the other end as
well-organized psychopathic reaction. What goes around, comes around.
The plot gets really absurd when you consider that while the United
States government is frantic to counter ISIS it feels obliged to check
ISIS's natural enemy, Iraqi Shiites and Iran, who want nothing more
than to crush ISIS. Anbar Province Sunnis aligned with the United
States are too weak and insignificant to counter ISIS. Shiite militias
controlled by the Baghdad government (militias that fought US troops
during the war) have been employed in Anbar in a limited fashion. The
US demands these Shiite militias be controlled by the Baghdad
government (which is allied with Iran) and not directly by Iranians.
To completely unleash the Shiite militias in Anbar would likely lead
to a terrible sectarian bloodbath and all sorts of unforeseen
consequences and greater war in the region.

It's hard to imagine the growing perception of the Iraq War as debacle
being altered when it hits the history books. True, it ended the
Saddam regime, but at the cost of empowering our worst enemy and
creating a worse nightmare than Saddam. The US is now performing
pretzel-like contortions in Anbar, doing the best it can to PR spin a
debacle into a success.

Meanwhile, US right-wing militarists insist on seeing the problem as
caused by President Obama. He originally opposed the war and, as
promised, eventually withdrew US troops from Iraq. Now, over ISIS, the
whole drumbeat to war seems to be happening again. We're told in
anxious, angry tones that if you thought Afghanistan was a haven for
terrorists in 2001, the Islamic State in 2015 is much worse and on
steroids. With so much military secrecy at play and so much political
dishonesty so potentially and intimately connected to the
fear-oriented, war-mongering impulse, it's deja-vu all over again.
Fear is rising again, and when Fear takes over it's only a matter of
time before the delusions come out and calls for reason and
proportionate reaction are trumped by calls for preemptive attack.

It's good to periodically remind ourselves of Susan Sontag's plea
after 9/11: "By all means let's mourn together; but let's not be
stupid together." Sontag's plea might translate today as this: By all
means, let's recognize that whether the United States spawned it or
not the Islamic State is indeed a monster regime whose absence from
the world would be a great improvement. OK. But following up on a
military debacle with more of the same is to fully assume the status
of "stupid" in Sontag's equation. If US arrogance and blundering was
the fertile ground that nurtured the Islamic State, another round of
US arrogance and blundering can only make things even worse.

With the election "silly season" coming into full swing, ISIS is going
to be a big topic. Who exactly caused the US to lose the high ground
in Iraq? Was it the guy who set it all in movement -- or the guy who
said from the beginning he was against the war and then wanted to end
it? Do we blame those who opened the Pandora's Box in Iraq or do we
blame those who fought from the beginning that the box not be opened?
It's one of many variants of the stabbed-in-the-back myth: Blame those
who opposed the war for the sins of those who set the whole runaway
war train in motion. The point is, there's a profound argument at
play, here, between an imperial militarist class that never errs and
those who would choose a different path to peace and prosperity that
includes shifting military funds to domestic problems.

The antiwar movement tried to make this case after 9/11 and in the
run-up to the Iraq War. Violence against other people has
consequences, many of them unforeseen thanks to the effects of
self-delusion. This is certainly why the Vietnam War went off the
rails: Decisions were made not on sober intelligence but upon
wish-fulfillment. The United States always gets what it wants, and our
leaders don't want to hear that the on-the-ground reality won't allow
what they want. As for 9/11, the anti-war movement tried to make cause
and effect linkages between US military foreign policy and the 9/11
attacks, but those linkages remain censored thinking in mainstream
America.

Mike Caddell of Radio-Free Kansas reports that voices on the
militarist right in his conservative state can't fathom how ISIS could
take Ramadi in the face of US aerial bombing. It must be because Obama
is a Kenyan socialist and he gave it away. These Kansas conservatives
apparently did not understand that Iraqis might be smart enough to
attack during a sandstorm that would ground US planes. Such a mundane
game-changer raises the horror that looms underneath all this: the
specter of the US as an impotent giant.

Many Americans have come to see aerial bombing as magical. If an
international problem arises and the culprit can't be reasoned with or
bought off, many accept it as a natural response to send in bomb-laden
F16s to fix the problem. This assumption is so deep-seated in the
American psyche these days that not sending in bombers is
automatically seen by some as bad leadership. Obama went against that
with Syria, in what was arguably a profile in courage. Not bombing our
way back into Ramadi, thus killing lots of innocent civilians, would
be another example of smart leadership. Accept that this is a regional
problem we cannot solve, that we can only work to avoid a greater war.

A British bomber over Iraq in 1920

A British bomber over Iraq in 1920

Aerial bombing, of course, was first developed by the British in Iraq
circa 1920. Winston Churchill even advocated gassing Iraqi villages
from the air to control them. From Nicholson Baker's Human Smoke,
here's Royal Wing Commander J. A. Chamier on dealing with Iraqi
rebellions:

"The attack with bombs and machine guns must be relentless and
unremitting and carried on continuously by day and night, on houses,
inhabitants, crops and cattle. This sounds brutal, I know, but it must
be made brutal to start with. The threat alone in the future will
prove efficacious if the lesson is once properly learnt." Think
shock-and-awe 2003. The same brutal logic was at work: wogs only
understand violence, so make your first impression especially
memorable. Back in 1920, the British were still working in the realm
of what William Polk in Violent Politics says is the only
tried-and-true counter-insurgency tactic: Scorched earth.

It all comes down to exactly what it is our
military/police/surveillance state is defending. It doesn't seem to be
the bottom-up America of Woody Guthrie. That America is awash in
troubles -- from the effects of neglected and decaying infrastructure;
the growing challenges from man-made climate change; a worsening,
unfair plutocratic economy; the mass incarceration of poor African
American citizens; the dehumanizing effects of technology; a Rube
Goldberg health care system in which corporate profits trump citizen
needs; and, finally, an education system put to shame by other
developed nations. And that's only the beginning.

Instead, what our military is sustaining is an ever-more-vulnerable
empire set loose by Teddy Roosevelt at the turn of the 20th century
and given a grand boost mid-century at the end of World War Two. At
what point does such an empire begin to destroy the society and
culture at its core?

The truth is, the only reason ISIS wants to attack us is because we
attacked them first and wrecked their homeland. The same was true for
al Qaeda, which rose out of US military alignment with Saudi Arabia
and its oil. No one is suggesting the United States give up its power,
become a hermit nation and no longer protect itself. Power isn't a bad
thing; neither is sophisticated intelligence or a responsible
military. The point is to stop giving so many people in the world
reasons to hate us.

Republicans and many Democrats like to preach that renewing America's
slipping greatness is a matter of re-energizing a militaristic
capacity that strikes fear in the people of the world. The realities
of the coming competitive world would seem to dictate another
response, one that doesn't ignore violent threats, but one that
ratchets down the imperial militarism and one that belatedly addresses
the nation's many domestic shortcomings -- to make the US a better
world citizen and, also, to be more competitive in the world.

This is not a new argument. The problem is just becoming more acute.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to