Hi.  I know the sender joins me in adding celebrants of Christmas and 
Kwanza, as well as pagans, non-believers, et al, to her best wishes list.  
And do click-on the public art.  It's gorgeous and stirring.
Ed 

---

Happy Chanukah Ed - 

Great to see you at Mary's - thanks for all you do! I did an art project last 
week with the children of fasting hotel workers at LAX and was so inspired by 
the kids and everyone else there I'm passing this photo along and wishing you a 
happy, courageous, and very eventful 2007, including successful fundraising for 
your film.  
.  
And - in the spirit of a clean sweep in the new year here's one of my favorite 
poems of 2006, by my 11-year old friend Celia Jailer Shannon in Berkeley:

Time
The clock is ticking 1, 2, 3, 4
My wish, my dream is that it stop,
Giving time a rest,
Sending someone, something in
To sweep out all the tension and hate.
To sweep in all the happiness and luck that
Anyone could ever want or need.
Cleaning out all the places where love got
Old and cobwebs grow and dust collects,
To make them shine and sparkle new again.
To give the world and everything upon it
A new and shiny-clean slate.

Love,
Judy 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/sidney_blumenthal/2006/12/inside_bushs_i
raq_escalation_p.html
The Guardian December 21, 2006

Delusions of victory

By Sidney Blumenthal

"We're going to win," President Bush told a guest at a White House Christmas
party. Another guest, ingratiating himself with his host, urged him to
ignore the report of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, co-chaired by James
Baker, the former secretary of state and his father's close associate, which
described the crisis in Iraq as "grave and deteriorating" and offered 79
recommendations for diplomacy, transferring responsibility to the Iraqi
government and withdrawing nearly all US troops by 2008. "The president
chuckled," according to an account in the neoconservative Weekly Standard,
"and said he'd made his position clear when he appeared with British prime
minister Tony Blair. The report had never mentioned the possibility of
American victory. Bush's goal in Iraq, he said at the photo op with Blair,
is 'victory.'" Bush reasserted his belief that "victory in Iraq is
achievable" at his Wednesday press conference.

Two members of the ISG were responsible for George Bush's becoming
president. Baker had manoeuvred through the thicket of the 2000 Florida
contest, finally bringing Bush v Gore before the supreme court, where Sandra
Day O'Connor was the deciding vote. (Jeffrey Toobin of the New Yorker
reported that she had complained before hearing the case that she wanted to
retire but did not want a Democrat to appoint her replacement.) Through the
Iraq Study Group, Baker and O'Connor were attempting to salvage what they
had made possible in Bush v Gore. Upon Bush's receipt of the report, a White
House spokesman told the press,"Jim Baker can go back to his day job."

The day after the report was submitted, on December 8, Tony Blair appeared
at the White House. He had testified before the Baker commission, and
supported its main proposals, but now stood beside Bush as the president
tossed them aside, talking instead of "victory." 

"The president isn't standing alone," explained White House press secretary
Tony Snow. Blair left to pursue a vain mission for Middle East peace,
emphasising by his presence the US absence. His predetermined failure
outlined the dimensions of the vacuum that only the US could fill. On
December 18, Chatham House, the former Royal Institute of International
Affairs, issued a report on Blair's foreign policy: "The root failure of
Tony Blair's foreign policy has been its inability to influence the Bush
administration in any significant way despite the sacrifice - military,
political and financial - that the United Kingdom has made."

The day before the Chatham House report was released, former secretary of
state Colin Powell appeared on CBS News's Face the Nation to announce his
support for the rejected Iraq Study Group and declare, "We are not winning,
we are losing." He made plain his opposition to any new "surge" of troops in
Baghdad, a tactic he said had already been tried and failed. Powell added
that Bush had not explained "the mission" and that "we are a little less
safe."

The Chatham House report describes Blair and Powell as partners before the
invasion of Iraq who had concluded that Bush was set on war and decided to
lend their voices to its defence. "The British role was therefore to provide
diplomatic cover," the report states. Powell, of course, delivered the most
important speech of his career justifying the invasion before the UN
security council on February 5, 2003, which was later disclosed to have been
a tissue of falsehoods and which he called a "blot" on his record. Since the
time of the Reagan administration, when he was national security adviser,
Powell had been aligned with Baker, Bush Sr and other foreign policy
realists. But during his tenure as secretary of state he had suppressed his
scepticism and obligations as a constitutional officer in favour of his
loyalty as a "good soldier" to his commander in chief. Now, his reputation
in tatters, he is trying to restore himself as a member of his original team
and speaking for the unanimous opposition to Bush's new plans from the Joint
Chiefs of Staff of which he was once chairman.

Bush's touted but unexplained "new way forward" (his version of the ISG's
"the way forward") may be the first order of battle, complete with details
of units, maps and timetables, ever posted on the website of a thinktank. "I
will not be rushed," said Bush. But apparently he has already accepted the
latest neoconservative programme, artfully titled with catchphrases
appealing to his desperation - "Choosing Victory: A Plan for Success in
Iraq" - and available for reading on the site of the American Enterprise
Institute.

The author of this plan is Frederick W Kagan, a neoconservative at the AEI
and the author of a new book, Finding the Target: The Transformation of
American Military Policy, replete with up-to-date neocon scorn of Bush as
"simplistic", Donald Rumsfeld as "fatuous", and even erstwhile neocon icon
Paul Wolfowitz, former deputy secretary of defence and currently president
of the World Bank, as "self-serving". Among the others listed as
"participants" in drawing up the plan are various marginal and obscure
figures including, notably, Danielle Pletka, a former aide to the senator
Jesse Helms; Michael Rubin, an aide to the catastrophic Coalition
Provisional Authority; and retired Major General Jack Keane, the former
deputy army chief of staff.

This rump group of neocons is the battered remnant left of the phalanx that
once conjured up grandiose visions of conquest and blowtorched ideological
ground for Bush. Although neocons are still entrenched in the
vice-president's Office and on the National Security Council, they mostly
feel that their perfect ideas have been the victims of imperfect execution.
Rather than accepting any responsibility for the ideas themselves, they
blame Rumsfeld and Bush. Meyrav Wurmser, a research fellow at the
neoconservative Hudson Institute, whose husband, David Wurmser, is a Middle
East adviser on Dick Cheney's staff, recently vented the neocons' despair to
an Israeli news outlet: "This administration is in its twilight days.
Everyone is now looking for work, looking to make money ... We all feel
beaten after the past five years." But they are not so crushed that they
cannot summon one last ragged Team B to provide a manifesto for a cornered
president.

Choosing Victory is a prophetic document, a bugle call for an additional
30,000 troops to fight a decisive Napoleonic battle for Baghdad. (Its
author, Kagan, has written a book on Napoleon.) It assumes that through this
turning point the Shiite militias will melt away, the Sunni insurgents will
suffer defeat and from the solid base of Baghdad security will radiate
throughout the country. The plan also assumes that additional combat teams
that actually take considerable time to assemble and train are instantly
available for deployment. And it dismisses every diplomatic initiative
proposed by the Iraq Study Group as dangerously softheaded. Foremost among
the plan's assertions is that there is still a military solution in Iraq -
"victory."

The strategic premise of the entire document rests on the incredulous
disbelief that the US cannot enforce its will through force. "Victory is
still an option in Iraq," it states. "America, a country of 300 million
people with a GDP of $12 trillion, and more than 1 million soldiers and
marines can regain control of Iraq, a state the size of California with a
population of 25 million and a GDP under $100bn." By these gross metrics,
France should never have lost in Algeria and Vietnam. The US experience in
Vietnam goes unmentioned.

Bush's rejection of the Iraq Study Group report was presaged by a
post-election speech delivered on December 4 by Karl Rove at the Churchill
dinner held by Hillsdale College, a citadel of conservative crankdom. Here
Rove conflated Winston Churchill and George Bush, Neville Chamberlain and
James Baker, and the Battle of Britain and the Iraq war. "Why would we want
to pursue a policy that our enemies want?" demanded Rove. "We will either
win or we will lose ... Winston Churchill showed us the way. And like Great
Britain under its greatest leader, we in the United States will not waver,
we will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail."

A week later, on December 11, Bush met at the White House with Jack Keane,
from the latest neocon Team B, and four other critics of the ISG. But even
before, on December 8, in a meeting with senators, he compared himself to an
embattled Harry Truman, unpopular as he forged the early policies of the
cold war. When Senator Dick Durbin, D-Ill, offered that Truman had created
the Nato alliance, worked through the UN and conducted diplomacy with
enemies, and that Bush could follow his example by endorsing the
recommendations of the ISG, Bush rejected Durbin's fine-tuning of the
historical analogy and replied that he was "the commander in chief."

The opening section of the ISG report is a lengthy analysis of the dire
situation in Iraq. But Bush has frantically brushed that analysis away just
as he has rejected every objective assessment that had reached him before.
He has assimilated no analysis whatsoever of what's gone wrong. For him,
there's no past, especially his own. There's only the present. The war is
detached from strategic purposes, the history of Iraq and the region, and
political and social dynamics, and instead is grasped as a test of
character. Ultimately, what's at stake is his willpower.

Repudiated in the midterm elections, Bush has elevated himself above
politics, and repeatedly says, "I am the commander in chief." With the crash
of Rove's game plan for using his presidency as an instrument to leverage a
permanent Republican majority, Bush is abandoning the role of political
leader. He can't disengage militarily from Iraq because that would abolish
his identity as a military leader, his default identity and now his only
one.

Unlike the political leader, the commander in chief doesn't require
persuasion; he rules through orders, deference and the obedience of those
beneath him. By discarding the ISG report, Bush has rejected doubt,
introspection, ambivalence and responsibility. By embracing the AEI
manifesto, he asserts the warrior virtues of will, perseverance and resolve.
The contest in Iraq is a struggle between will and doubt. Every day his
defiance proves his superiority over lesser mortals. Even the joint chiefs
have betrayed the martial virtues that he presumes to embody. He views those
lacking his will with rising disdain. The more he stands up against those
who tell him to change, the more virtuous he becomes. His ability to realise
those qualities surpasses anyone else's and passes the character test.

The mere suggestion of doubt is fatally compromising. Any admission of doubt
means complete loss, impotence and disgrace. Bush cannot entertain doubt and
still function. He cannot keep two ideas in his head at the same time.
Powell misunderstood when he said that the current war strategy lacks a
clear mission. The war is Bush's mission.

No matter the setback it's always temporary, and the campaign can always be
started from scratch in an endless series of new beginnings and offensives -
"the new way forward" - just as in his earlier life no failure was
irredeemable through his father's intervention. Now he has rejected his
father's intervention in preference for the clean slate of a new scenario
that depends only on his willpower.

"We're not winning, we're not losing," Bush told the Washington Post on
Tuesday, a direct rebuke of Powell's formulation, saying he was citing
General Peter Pace, chairman of the joint chiefs, and adding, "We're going
to win." Winning means not ending the war while he is president. Losing
would mean coming to the end of the rope while he was still in office. In
his mind, so long as the war goes on and he maintains his will he can win.
Then only his successor can be a loser.

Bush's idea of himself as personifying martial virtues, however, is based on
a vision that would be unrecognisable to all modern theorists of warfare.
According to Carl von Clausewitz, war is the most uncertain of human
enterprises, difficult to understand, hardest to control and demanding the
highest degree of adaptability. It was Clausewitz who first applied the
metaphor of "fog" to war. In his classic work, On War, he warned, "We only
wish to represent things as they are, and to expose the error of believing
that a mere bravo without intellect can make himself distinguished in war."

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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