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New York Times
May 16, 2005

Staying What Course?
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Is there any point, now that November's election is behind us, in
revisiting the history of the Iraq war? Yes: any path out of the quagmire
will be blocked by people who call their opponents weak on national
security, and portray themselves as tough guys who will keep America safe.
So it's important to understand how the tough guys made America weak.

There has been notably little U.S. coverage of the "Downing Street memo" -
actually the minutes of a British prime minister's meeting on July 23,
2002, during which officials reported on talks with the Bush
administration about Iraq. But the memo, which was leaked to The Times of
London during the British election campaign, confirms what apologists for
the war have always denied: the Bush administration cooked up a case for a
war it wanted.

Here's a sample: "Military action was now seen as inevitable. Bush wanted
to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of
terrorism and W.M.D. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed
around the policy."

(You can read the whole thing at www.downingstreetmemo.com.)

Why did the administration want to invade Iraq, when, as the memo noted,
"the case was thin" and Saddam's "W.M.D. capability was less than that of
Libya, North Korea, or Iran"? Iraq was perceived as a soft target; a quick
victory there, its domestic political advantages aside, could serve as a
demonstration of American military might, one that would shock and awe the
world.

But the Iraq war has, instead, demonstrated the limits of American power,
and emboldened our potential enemies. Why should Kim Jong Il fear us, when
we can't even secure the road from Baghdad to the airport?

At this point, the echoes of Vietnam are unmistakable. Reports from the
recent offensive near the Syrian border sound just like those from a
1960's search-and-destroy mission, body count and all. Stories filed by
reporters actually with the troops suggest that the insurgents,
forewarned, mostly melted away, accepting battle only where and when they
chose.

Meanwhile, America's strategic position is steadily deteriorating.

Next year, reports Jane's Defense Industry, the United States will spend
as much on defense as the rest of the world combined. Yet the Pentagon now
admits that our military is having severe trouble attracting recruits, and
would have difficulty dealing with potential foes - those that, unlike
Saddam's Iraq, might pose a real threat.

In other words, the people who got us into Iraq have done exactly what
they falsely accused Bill Clinton of doing: they have stripped America of
its capacity to respond to real threats.

So what's the plan?

The people who sold us this war continue to insist that success is just
around the corner, and that things would be fine if the media would just
stop reporting bad news. But the administration has declared victory in
Iraq at least four times. January's election, it seems, was yet another
turning point that wasn't.

Yet it's very hard to discuss getting out. Even most of those who
vehemently opposed the war say that we have to stay on in Iraq now that
we're there.

In effect, America has been taken hostage. Nobody wants to take
responsibility for the terrible scenes that will surely unfold if we leave
(even though terrible scenes are unfolding while we're there). Nobody
wants to tell the grieving parents of American soldiers that their
children died in vain. And nobody wants to be accused, by an
administration always ready to impugn other people's patriotism, of
stabbing the troops in the back.

But the American military isn't just bogged down in Iraq; it's
deteriorating under the strain. We may already be in real danger: what
threats, exactly, can we make against the North Koreans? That John Bolton
will yell at them? And every year that the war goes on, our military gets
weaker.

So we need to get beyond the clich�s - please, no more "pottery barn
principles" or "staying the course." I'm not advocating an immediate
pullout, but we have to tell the Iraqi government that our stay is
time-limited, and that it has to find a way to take care of itself. The
point is that something has to give. We either need a much bigger army -
which means a draft - or we need to find a way out of Iraq.

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