Bob Herbert,
Thank you for your excellent opinion piece, "The Rumsfield Stain," in
today's NY Times. Except that it would be far stronger if you called for
getting out of Iraq now. As you recall a couple of months ago President
Bush called on Syria to get out now, and they were not committing the
atrocities you describe our troops committing in Iraq. Why is it so
difficult for you to say the same about Iraq that Bush said about Syria
given your devastating article below? All other strategies mean more
American soldiers killed and wounded, more torture of prisoners, more
Iraqi civilians killed and wounded, and more atrocities. None of them
support Iraq's right to determine its own future free of foreign
intervention. Those who call for continuing the war until . . ., as you
do, ought to say clearly why they want to take on responsibility for all
that continuing misery. I urge you to speak out for the position adopted
by the city of Burlington, Vermont on April 1, 2005 when the people
overwhelmingly voted yes on referendum question 7 that said "we strongly
support our soldiers in Iraq and believe the best way to support them is
to bring them home now." 
James Marc Leas

Law Office of James Marc Leas
37 Butler Drive, S. Burlington, VT 05403
802 864-1575   802 864-9319fax   802 734-8811cell
www.vermontpatentlawyer.com


The Rumsfeld Stain

By BOB HERBERT 
The New York Times, May 23, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/23/opinion/23herbert.html?hp


How does Donald Rumsfeld survive as defense
secretary?

Much of what has happened to the military on his
watch has been catastrophic. In Iraq, more than
1,600 American troops have died and many
thousands have been maimed in a war that Mr.
Rumsfeld mishandled from the beginning and still
has no idea how to win. The generals are telling
us now that the U.S. is likely to be bogged down
in Iraq for years, and there are whispers
circulating about the possibility of "defeat."

Potential recruits are staying away from the
armed forces in droves. Most Americans want no
part of the administration's hapless venture in
Iraq. A woman in Connecticut with two college-age
sons said to me recently: "My boys should die in
Baghdad? For what?"

Parents from coast to coast are going out of
their way to dissuade their children from joining
the military. Recruiters, desperate and in many
cases emotionally distraught after repeatedly
missing their monthly goals, began abandoning
admission standards and signing up individuals
who were physically, mentally or morally unfit
for service.

The abuses became so widespread that the Army
suspended recruiting on Friday so recruiters
could spend the day being retrained in the legal
and ethical standards they are supposed to
maintain. The Army is going through its toughest
year for recruiting since the nation went to an
all-volunteer military in 1973.

The military spent decades rebuilding its
reputation and regaining the respect of the vast
majority of the American people after the debacle
in Vietnam. Under Mr. Rumsfeld, that hard-won
achievement is being reversed. He invaded Iraq
with too few troops, and too many of them were
poorly trained and inadequately equipped. The
stories about American troops dying on the
battlefield because of a lack of protective armor
have now been widely told.

The insurgency in Iraq appeared to take Mr.
Rumsfeld completely by surprise. He expected to
win the war in a walk. Or, perhaps, a strut.

Now the military is in a fix. Many of the troops
have served multiple tours in Iraq and are weary.
The insurgency remains strong, and the Iraq
military has proved to be a disappointing ally.

A senior American officer, quoted last week in
The Times, said that while he still believed the
effort in Iraq would succeed, it could take "many
years."

As if all this were not enough, there is also the
grotesque and deeply shameful issue that will
always be a part of Mr. Rumsfeld's legacy - the
manner in which American troops have treated
prisoners under their control in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. There is no
longer any doubt that large numbers of troops
responsible for guarding and interrogating
detainees somehow loosed their moorings to
humanity, and began behaving as sadists, perverts
and criminals.

The catalog of confirmed atrocities is huge.
Consider just one paragraph from a long and
horrifying story on Friday by Tim Golden of The
Times about the torture and brutal deaths of two
Afghan inmates at the hands of U.S. troops:

"In sworn statements to Army investigators,
soldiers describe one female interrogator with a
taste for humiliation stepping on the neck of one
prostrate detainee and kicking another in the
genitals. They tell of a shackled prisoner being
forced to roll back and forth on the floor of a
cell, kissing the boots of his two interrogators
as he went. Yet another prisoner is made to pick
plastic bottle caps out of a drum mixed with
excrement and water as part of a strategy to
soften him up for questioning."

These were among the milder abuses to come to
light. The continuum of bad behavior that has
been a hallmark of the so-called war on terror
extends from this kind of activity to incidents
of extreme torture and death.

Neither the troops nor the American public signed
on for a war in Iraq that would last many years.
And I can't believe there are many Americans who
wanted their military sullied by the wanton
behavior of the torture crowd.

The troops who do their jobs honestly and
diligently, and who fight bravely when they have
to, have been betrayed by leaders who encouraged
abusive behavior and allowed atrocities to
flourish.

Mr. Rumsfeld has driven the military into a
ruinous quagmire, and there is no evidence at all
that he's capable of finding a serviceable route
out. 


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