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http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050502&s=mcgovern

What I Didn't See in Iraq
by JIM MCGOVERN

(Jim McGovern is the Representative of the Third Congressional District of
Massachusetts)

[from the May 2, 2005 issue of The Nation]

"Trust me when I tell you things are so much better in Iraq," said one US
military official to me on my recent visit to that war-ravaged country. I
didn't know whether to scream or pull the remaining two strands of hair
out of my head. I was in Iraq as part of a delegation of eight members of
Congress, led by House minority leader Nancy Pelosi. Everything we have
been told about Iraq by the Bush Administration has either been an
outright lie or overwhelmingly false. There were no weapons of mass
destruction; we have not been greeted as liberators; and the cost in terms
of blood and treasure has outpaced even their worst-case scenarios. Trust
is something I cannot give to this Administration.

If things in Iraq are so much better, why are we not decreasing the number
of US forces there? Why is the insurgency showing no signs of waning? Why
are we being told that in a few months the Administration will again ask
Congress for billions of dollars more to fight the war? Why, according to
the World Food Program, is hunger among the Iraqi people getting worse?
It's time for some candor, but candor is hard to come by in Iraq.

We were in Iraq for one day--for security reasons, it is US policy that
Congressional delegations are not allowed to spend the night. We spent
most of our time in the heavily fortified Green Zone, which serves as
coalition headquarters. It's the most heavily guarded encampment I've ever
seen--and it still gets attacked. I even had armed guards accompany me to
the bathroom. The briefings we received from US military and diplomatic
officials were, to say the least, unsatisfying. The Nixonian approach that
our military and diplomatic leaders have adopted in dealing with visiting
members of Congress is aimed more at saving face than at engaging in an
honest dialogue. At first, our briefers wanted to get away with slick
slide presentations, but we insisted on asking real questions and
attempting to get real answers.

During one such briefing, Lieut. Gen. David Petraeus, tasked with
overseeing training of Iraqi security forces, informed us that 147,000
Iraqis had been trained. That sounded good to me. Perhaps we could start
reducing the number of American forces, I suggested. But upon further
questioning, General Petraeus conceded that less than one-fourth of the
147,000 were actually "combat capable." Why didn't he say that to begin
with? I asked--respectfully--our military and diplomatic officials what
the gap was between the Iraqis we have trained and the number we needed to
train in order to draw down the number of US troops. I could not get a
straight answer.

During the morning of our visit, US military officials crowed about a
recent operation in which Iraqi security forces had killed eighty-five
insurgents. By the afternoon, when more reports came in, it was unclear
how many insurgents had actually been killed and whether the Iraqi
security forces had exaggerated their own actions.

I asked both General Petraeus and our embassy about US plans to build
military bases in Iraq, which in my view would indicate a prolonged US
presence. I was told--emphatically--that there are no plans to construct
military bases. Yet Congress recently passed a huge supplemental wartime
appropriations bill that includes, at the request of the Bush
Administration, $500 million for military base construction. In Iraq.

Shortly before we traveled to Iraq we visited Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, who lamented the mistakes the United States has made
post-invasion, including the total dissolution of all the Iraqi security
forces. He said, "The army you disbanded is now the army you're fighting."
But I couldn't get a single US official to acknowledge any mistakes. The
standard line remains, "We're moving in the right direction."

It's hard to believe that after a two-year occupation the average Iraqi
isn't getting tired of the overwhelming US presence. We met with several
Iraqi women leaders, including members of the National Assembly, who told
us that there was more electricity available in Iraq before the invasion
than afterward. It's also certain that the insurgency uses our presence as
an organizing tool to recruit members and weapons. While we can all be
encouraged by the turnout in the recent Iraqi elections, it is impossible
for the Iraqi people to truly determine their own fate in a climate where
there is no security.

And while US officials point to a declining number of coalition
casualties, there is still an unacceptably high level of violence in Iraq.
One military leader told us they can tell that things are changing for the
better because when US helicopters fly over certain areas of Iraq, Iraqis
wave. Well, I took a helicopter ride (it's too dangerous to drive) from
the Baghdad airport to the Green Zone wearing an armored vest and
sandwiched between two heavily armed American soldiers who were pointing
their guns down at the ground. I suggested to the military leader that
perhaps he was confusing a wave with a plea not to shoot.

Our young men and women in uniform are performing their difficult duties
extraordinarily well. Indeed, the only honest and direct responses I got
from any American in Iraq were from the soldiers. They told me they had
been instructed by their superiors not to share any complaints with
visitors.

What worries me almost as much as our misguided policy in Iraq is that so
many of my colleagues and so many citizens have become resigned to the
fact that the war will go on. Congress is not being inundated with letters
and phone calls and faxes and e-mails and street protests demanding an end
to our presence in Iraq. President Bush's re-election seems to have taken
much of the energy out of the antiwar movement. My recent visit to Iraq
only strengthened my belief that this war is wrong. And only renewed,
passionate dissent by the American people can end it.

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