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Our
Escalating 'Victory' in Iraq
by Lee
Shelton
February
2, 2007
My,
how time flies. It seems like only yesterday that we were teetering on the
brink of annihilation, worrying whether or not Saddam Hussein would use
his phantom weapons of mass destruction and his imaginary al Qaeda
connections to bring the "Great Satan" to its knees.
The
U.S.
began its invasion of
Iraq
on
March 20, 2003
, and by May 1, President Bush was already announcing
the end of "major combat operations." Standing proudly on the
flight deck of the U.S.S. Abraham
Lincoln, beneath a banner emblazoned with the words "Mission
Accomplished," he stated, "In the battle of
Iraq
, the
United States
and our allies have prevailed." He praised the military, saying,
"Because of you, our nation is more secure. Because of you, the
tyrant has fallen, and
Iraq
is free."
That
was a defining moment for the president. The critics who doubted his
decision to invade a sovereign country that had never once attacked the
U.S.
seemed to have been put in their place.
But
the naysayers and the Bush-haters wouldn't be silenced that easily. Surely
the fall of Hussein's Ba'athist regime would cause instability in the
region, create a power vacuum, and lead to sectarian violence between the
Islamic factions. Worst case scenario: the
U.S.
would find itself caught in the middle of a bloody civil war.
On
November 19, 2003
, President Bush addressed
that very issue with a reporter from the Al-Sharq
Al-Awsat newspaper in
London
: "The political track is developing and it's developing well,
because certain things didn't happen. One, there was no great huge refugee
flows. Two, there wasn't the sectarian violence. Remember, these were
all--some of the predictions. I'm not suggesting you were making these
predictions, but others might have been making predictions about sectarian
violence. You remember that prediction. Or refugee flows. Or hunger--food
shortages throughout the country. And none of that happened."
Things
seemed to be going the president's way. Less than one month later,
America
learned that Saddam Hussein had been captured. It appeared that even our
moderately pessimistic predictions had been proven false, and that the war
was turning out to be the cakewalk
the neocons had promised.
At
that time--and for the next year-and-a-half--sending more troops to
Iraq
was out of the question, even for the chickenhawks in
Washington
. In June of 2005, Bush said,
"Sending more Americans would undermine our strategy of encouraging
Iraqis to take the lead in this fight. And sending more Americans would
suggest that we intend to stay forever, when we are, in fact, working for
the day when
Iraq
can defend itself and we can leave." (If you recall, that speech was
around the same time Vice President Dick Cheney was on TV reassuring
America that the increasing violence in Iraq was merely a sign that the
insurgency was "in
the last throes" - which means that what we're seeing now must be
the insurgency's death twitches.)
But
while the situation hasn't changed much in
Iraq
since then, the administration's handling of it--especially after the
Democratic takeover of Congress--has
changed. Not content with the current rate of American casualties, the
commander in chief has now decided to send in more troops. In a January 10
address
to the nation, President Bush announced that he had "committed more
than 20,000 additional American troops" to the unconstitutional
conflict--the vast majority of them to be deployed to the supposedly
liberated city of
Baghdad
.
You
see, a troop "surge" is needed to quell the heretofore
nonexistent sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims and various
other groups. Here's what the president had to say
about this sudden shift in strategy: "[C]learly one aspect of this
war that has not gone right is the sectarian violence inside Baghdad--a
violent reaction by both Sunni and Shia to each other that has caused a
lot of loss of life, as well as some movements in neighborhoods inside of
Baghdad.
"There are a couple of theaters inside of
Iraq
, war theaters. One, of course, is
Baghdad
, itself, where the sectarian violence is brutal. And we've got to help
them--we've got to help the Maliki government stop it and crack it and
prevent it from spreading, in order to be successful."
Unfortunately,
more troops can only mean more American and Iraqi deaths. Think the
Middle East
is a mess now? As far as the president is concerned, the party's just
getting started. After all, we still have the burgeoning nuclear
superpower of
Iran
to worry about.
So,
it looks as if the Bush administration will be declaring victory in
Iraq
a little while longer. But don't worry. I'm sure they will let you know
when that victory is in the last throes, and when your sons and daughters
can start coming home.
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