December 13, 2006
William Odom destroys Iraq fallacies
What to do now in and with Iraq considering the answer has now
seemingly bottomed-out into the realms of shape-shifting, prayer,
legend and lore?
George Bush takes a mighty dump on the Iraqi Study Group (gotta love
his comments about "Jimmy Baker" and also how he can now "return to his
day job"--you just can't take the child out of the man) and then
invites a couple of retired generals for a press op who also eagerly
take swings at the ISG pinata, uh report.
Yes, we sure broke Iraq but the unvarnished truth is that we cannot fix
it. There is no military method to do so and after so many years it has
become certain that there is also no political solution for relieving
the chaos. There simply is no 'good' solution. We, as Americans, have
an inbred fallacy that there is ALWAYS an answer to any problem. It
either that or we get a lawyer and sue. But alas, such methodology is
not applicable to Iraq.
It's quite curious how Russ Feingold didn't get a West Wing invite and
photo op. Or William Odom, as you'll see why in the column below:
Six brutal truths about Iraq
By William E. Odom
December 11, 2006
General William Odom, one of the earliest advocates of an immediate
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, attacks some of the mythologies
that are interfering with an honest debate about how to proceed in the
Middle East and says the media have failed to recognize dramatic
changes in the region.
Mythologies about the war in Iraq are endangering our republic, our
rights, and our responsibilities before the world. The longer we fail
to dispel them, the higher price we will pay. The following six truths,
while perhaps not self-evident to the American public, are nevertheless
conspicuously obvious to much the rest of the world.
Truth No. 1: No "deal" of any kind can be made among
the warring parties in Iraq that will bring stability and order, even
temporarily.
Ever since the war began to go badly in the summer of 2003, a mythology
has arisen that a deal among Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds could bring
peace and stability to Iraq. First, the parliamentary elections were
expected to be such a breakthrough. When peace and stability did not
follow, the referendum on a constitution was proclaimed the panacea.
When that failed, it was asserted that we just had not yet found the
proper prime minister. Even today, the Iraq Study Group is searching
for this holy grail. It doesn’t exist.
Truth No. 2: There was no way to have "done it right" in Iraq so that U.S. war aims could have been achieved.
Virtually every new book published on the war, especially Cobra II,
Fiasco, and State of Denial, reinforce the myth – the illusion –
that we could have won the war; we just did not plan properly and
fight the war the right way. The Washington Post, Wall Street Journal,
New York Times, and most other major newspapers have consistently
filled their opinion pages with arguments and testimonials to support
that myth. (Professor Eliot Cohen of Johns Hopkins University offers
the most recent conspicuous reinforcement of this myth in the Wall
Street Journal, December 7, 2006.)
The fragmentation of the country, civil war, and the rise of outside
influence from Iran, Syria, and other countries – all of these things
might have been postponed for a time by different war plans and
occupation polices. But failure would have eventually raised its ugly
head. Possibly, some of the variables would be a bit different. For
example, if the Iraqi military had not been dissolved and if most of
the Baathist Party cadres not been disenfranchised, the Sunni factions,
instead of the Shiites, probably would have owned the ministry of
interior, the police, and several unofficial militias. The Shiites, in
that event, would have been the insurgents, abundantly supplied by
Iran, indiscriminately killing Sunni civilians, fighting the U.S.
military forces, blowing up the power grid, and so on.
A different U.S. occupation plan might have changed the course Iraq has
taken to civil war and fragmentation, but it could have not prevented
that outcome.
Go here to read the rest.
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