In his interview with George Stephanopoulos on Wednesday evening,
George W. Bush accepted that there might be a parallel between the
spike in killings of US troops in Iraq and the Tet offensive in
Vietnam. Many commentators are saying that he finally admitted that
Iraq is a quagmire like Vietnam, but this is a complete misreading of
what Bush is saying.

Bush's position is that things are going just great in Iraq, and that
a few trouble-makers have managed to hijack the US media with a small
number of limited bombings and other sabotage, and have made it look
like the US isn't making progress. Bush believes that the media and
Americans are falling for a get-up job. So he is is trying to say to
the American public that just as the Tet offensive was a military
defeat for the Viet Cong but a propaganda defeat for Washington, so
the October offensive of the Sunni Arab guerrillas is so much smoke
and mirrors, a mere propaganda stunt with no substantive importance
for Iraq.

But in fact, the current guerrilla war against US troops and the new
Iraqi government isn't at all like the Tet offensive. It is deadly
serious. Because the US military is not defeating the guerrillas
militarily any more. They have succeeded in provoking an
unconventional, hot civil war, which was their "poison pill" strategy
for getting the US out. The US has alienated the Sunni Arab population
decisively. In summer of 2003, only 14 percent of them supported
violent attacks on US troops. In a recent poll, 70 percent supported
such attacks. And, the guerrilla movement is well-heeled,
well-trained, and adaptive. Anderson Cooper 360 on CNN for Wednesday
presented videotape showing well-trained snipers shooting down US
troops in Baghdad. The guerrilla war is real, not just a political
show put on to weaken the will of the fickle American public.

What is delicious is that the general American public does not hold
the view of the Vietnam War popular among far-right politicians like
Bush, and so no one but the true believers will catch his drift here.
In fact, most Americans will assume that Bush has admitted that we are
in an unwinnable quagmire in Iraq, just as in Vietnam. And the
Iraq=Vietnam identification is likely to stick. Of all his
misstatements and malapropisms over the years, any one of which would
have robbed most people of credibility or made them a laughing-stock,
it is ironic that this miscalculation, uttered coolly and with no
stutter, may have been his biggest gaffe of all.

--
Jim Devine / "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely
believe they are free." -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

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