Perhaps the great lesson is; Never trust a Jew. It might be more complicated; things often are. But look at Jews Make War on the point.
Read for yourself. Think for yourself. Decide for yourself. See some practical views from A Marine reports from Iraq
By Stephen Walt,
professor of international relations and co-author with
John Mearsheimer, of The Israel Lobby
From
Top Ten Lessons Of The Iraq War -
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/03/20/top_ten_lessons_of_the_iraq_war?wp_login_redirect=0
BY
STEPHEN M. WALT
| MARCH 20, 2012
This month marks the ninth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Regardless of your views on the wisdom of that decision, it's fair to say
that the results were not what most Americans expected. Now that the
war is officially over and most U.S. forces have withdrawn, what lessons
should Americans (and others) draw from the experience? There are many
lessons that one might learn, of course, but here are my Top 10 Lessons from
the Iraq War. Lesson #1: The United States lost. The first and most
important lesson of Iraq war is that we didn't win in any meaningful sense
of that term. The alleged purpose of the war was eliminating Saddam
Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, but it turns out he didn't have any.
Oops. Then the rationale shifted to creating a pro-American democracy, but
Iraq today is at best a quasi-democracy and far from pro-American. The
destruction of Iraq improved Iran's position in the Persian Gulf -- which is
hardly something the United States intended -- and the costs of the war
(easily exceeding $1 trillion dollars) are much larger than U.S. leaders
anticipated or promised. The war was also a giant distraction, which
diverted the Bush administration from other priorities (e.g., Afghanistan)
and made the United States much less popular around the world. This lesson is important because supporters of the war are already
marketing a revisionist version. In this counter-narrative, the 2007 surge
was a huge success (it wasn't, because it failed to produce political
reconciliation) and Iraq is now on the road to stable and prosperous
democracy. And the costs weren't really that bad. Another variant of this
myth is the idea that President George W. Bush and Gen. David Petraeus had
"won" the war by 2008, but President Obama then lost it by getting out
early. This view ignores the fact that the Bush administration negotiated
the 2008 Status of Forces agreement that set the timetable for U.S.
withdrawal, and Obama couldn't stay in Iraq once the Iraqi government made
it clear it wanted us out. The danger of this false narrative is obvious: If Americans come to see
the war as a success -- which it clearly wasn't -- they may continue to
listen to the advice of its advocates and be more inclined to repeat similar
mistakes in the future. Lesson #2: It's not that hard to hijack the United States into a
war. The United States is still a very powerful country, and the
short-term costs of military action are relatively low in most cases. As a
result, wars of choice (or even "wars of whim") are possible. The Iraq war
reminds us that if the executive branch is united around the idea of war,
normal checks and balances -- including media scrutiny -- tend to break
down. The remarkable thing about the Iraq war is how few people it took to
engineer. It wasn't promoted by the U.S. military, the CIA, the State
Department, or oil companies. Instead, the main architects were a group of
well-connected neoconservatives [ that is essentially
Zionist crazies & Jews - Editor ], who began openly lobbying for war during
the Clinton administration. They failed to persuade President
Bill Clinton,
and they were unable to convince Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney to opt
for war until after 9/11. But at that point the stars aligned, and Bush and
Cheney became convinced that invading Iraq would launch a far-reaching
regional transformation, usher in a wave of pro-American democracies, and
solve the terrorism problem. As the New York Times' Thomas Friedman
told Ha'aretz in
May 2003: "Iraq was the war neoconservatives wanted... the war the
neoconservatives marketed.... I could give you the names of 25 people (all of
whom are at this moment within a five-block radius of this office [in
Washington]) who, if you had exiled them to a desert island a year and half ago,
the Iraq war would not have happened." [ The Jews had the insolence to
entitle this article
White Man's Burden. They are the White Man's burden far more than blacks
ever were, because they are cunning parasites who can pass themselves off as
white - Editor
] Lesson #3: The United States gets in big trouble when the
"marketplace of ideas" breaks down and when the public and our leadership do
not have an open debate about what to do. Lesson #4: The secularism and middle-class character of Iraqi
society was overrated. Lesson #5: Don't listen to ambitious exiles. "How vain the faith and promises of men who are exiles from their
country. Such is their extreme desire to return to their homes that they
naturally believe many things that are not true, and add many others on
purpose, so that with what they really believe and what they say they
believe, they will fill you with hopes to that degree that if you attempt to
act upon them, you will incur a fruitless expense or engage in an
undertaking that will involve you in ruin." Two words: Ahmed Chalabi. Lesson #6: It's very hard to improvise an occupation. Lesson #7: Don't be surprised when adversaries act to defend
their own interests, and in ways we won't like. Americans had every reason to be upset by these various responses,
because they helped thwart our aims. But we should hardly have been
surprised when these various forces did what they could to resist us.
What else would you expect? Lesson #8: Counterinsurgency warfare is ugly and inevitably leads
to war crimes, atrocities, or other forms of abuse. Lesson #9: Better "planning" may not be the answer.
For starters, there were extensive pre-war plans for occupying and
rebuilding Iraq; the problem was that key decision makers (e.g., Rumsfeld)
simply ignored them. So planning alone isn't the answer if politicians
ignore the plans. It's also worth noting that had Americans been told about
the real price tag of the invasion -- i.e., that we would have to send a lot
more troops and stay there longer -- they would never have supported the
invasion in the first place. But more importantly, better plans don't guarantee success, because
trying to do "state building" in a deeply divided society is an immense
challenge, and opportunities to screw it up are legion. As Minxin Pei and
Sara Kasper of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace concluded from
their study of past attempts of "nation-building," "few national
undertakings are as complex, costly, and time-consuming as reconstructing
the governing institutions of foreign societies." For example, having more troops on the ground might have prevented the
collapse of order, but the U.S. army could not have kept a sufficiently
large force (350,000 or more) in Iraq for very long. Moreover, an even larger
U.S. presence might have increased Iraqi resentment and produced an
insurgency anyway. Similarly, critics now believe the decision to disband
the Iraqi army and launch an extensive de-Bathification process was a
mistake, but trying to keep the army intact and leaving former Bathists in
charge might easily have triggered a Shi'ite uprising instead. Lastly,
state-building in countries that we don't understand is inherently
uncertain, because it is impossible to know ex ante which potential
leaders are reliable or competent or how politics will evolve once the
population starts participating directly. We won't know enough to play
"kingmaker," and we are likely to end up having to prop up leaders whose
agendas are different from ours. In short, as Benjamin Friedman, Harvey Sapolsky, and Christopher Preble
argue here, better tools or tactics are probably not enough to make
ambitious nation-building programs are smart approach. Which leads to Lesson
#10. Lesson #10: Rethink U.S. grand strategy, not just tactics or
methods. The U.S. military has many virtues, but it is not good at running other
countries. And it is not likely to get much better at it with practice. We
have a capital-intensive army that places a premium on firepower, and we are
a country whose own unusual, melting-pot history has made us less sensitive
to the enduring power of nationalism, ethnicity, and other local forces.
Furthermore, because the United States is basically incredibly secure, it
is impossible to sustain public support for long and grinding wars of
occupation. Once it becomes clear that we face a lengthy and messy struggle,
the American people quite properly begin to ask why we are pouring billions
of dollars and thousands of lives into some strategic backwater. And they
are right. So my last lesson is that we shouldn't spend too much time trying to
figure out how to do this sort of thing better, because we're never going to
do it well and it will rarely be vital to our overall security. Instead, we
ought to work harder on developing an approach to the world that minimizes
the risk of getting ourselves into this kind of war again. From
Ha'aretz
-
http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/white-man-s-burden-1.14110 1. The doctrine Washington is a small city. It's a place of human dimensions. A kind of small
town that happens to run an empire. A small town of government officials and
members of Congress and personnel of research institutes and journalists who
pretty well all know one another. Everyone is busy intriguing against everyone
else; and everyone gossips about everyone else. In the course of the past year, a new belief has emerged in the town: the
belief in war against Iraq. That ardent faith was disseminated by a small group
of 25 or 30 neoconservatives, almost all of them Jewish, almost all of them
intellectuals (a partial list: Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith,
William Kristol, Eliot Abrams, Charles Krauthammer), people who are mutual
friends and cultivate one another and are convinced that political ideas are a
major driving force of history. They believe that the right political idea
entails a fusion of morality and force, human rights and grit. The philosophical
underpinnings of the Washington neoconservatives are the writings of
Machiavelli, Hobbes and Edmund Burke. They also admire Winston Churchill and the
policy pursued by Ronald Reagan. They tend to read reality in terms of the
failure of the 1930s (Munich) versus the success of the 1980s (the fall of the
Berlin Wall). Are they wrong? Have they committed an act of folly in leading Washington to
Baghdad? They don't think so. They continue to cling to their belief. They are
still pretending that everything is more or less fine. That things will work
out. Occasionally, though, they seem to break out in a cold sweat. This is no
longer an academic exercise, one of them says, we are responsible for what is
happening. The ideas we put forward are now affecting the lives of millions of
people. So there are moments when you're scared. You say, Hell, we came to help,
but maybe we made a mistake. 2. William Kristol Kristol is pleasant-looking, of average height, in his late forties. In the
past 18 months he has used his position as editor of the right-wing Weekly
Standard and his status as one of the leaders of the neoconservative circle in
Washington to induce the White House to do battle against Saddam Hussein.
Because Kristol is believed to exercise considerable influence on the president,
Vice President Richard Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, he is also
perceived as having been instrumental in getting Washington to launch this
all-out campaign against Baghdad. Sitting behind the stacks of books that cover
his desk at the offices of the Weekly Standard in Northwest Washington, he tries
to convince me that he is not worried. It is simply inconceivable to him that
America will not win. In that event, the consequences would be catastrophic. No
one wants to think seriously about that possibility. What is the war about? I ask. Kristol replies that at one level it is the war
that George Bush is talking about: a war against a brutal regime that has in its
possession weapons of mass destruction. But at a deeper level it is a greater
war, for the shaping of a new Middle East. It is a war that is intended to
change the political culture of the entire region. Because what happened on
September 11, 2001, Kristol says, is that the Americans looked around and saw
that the world is not what they thought it was. The world is a dangerous place.
Therefore the Americans looked for a doctrine that would enable them to cope
with this dangerous world. And the only doctrine they found was the
neoconservative one. That doctrine maintains that the problem with the Middle East is the absence
of democracy and of freedom. It follows that the only way to block people like
Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden is to disseminate democracy and freedom. To
change radically the cultural and political dynamics that creates such people.
And the way to fight the chaos is to create a new world order that will be based
on freedom and human rights - and to be ready to use force in order to
consolidate this new world. So that, really, is what the war is about. It is
being fought to consolidate a new world order, to create a new Middle East. Does that mean that the war in Iraq is effectively a neoconservative war?
That's what people are saying, Kristol replies, laughing. But the truth is that
it's an American war. The neoconservatives succeeded because they touched the
bedrock of America. The thing is that America has a profound sense of mission.
America has a need to offer something that transcends a life of comfort, that
goes beyond material success. Therefore, because of their ideals, the Americans
accepted what the neoconservatives proposed. They didn't want to fight a war
over interests, but over values. They wanted a war driven by a moral vision.
They wanted to hitch their wagon to something bigger than themselves. Does this moral vision mean that after Iraq will come the turns of Saudi
Arabia and Egypt? Kristol says that he is at odds with the administration on the question of
Saudi Arabia. But his opinion is that it is impossible to let Saudi Arabia just
continue what it is doing. It is impossible to accept the anti-Americanism it is
disseminating. The fanatic Wahhabism that Saudi Arabia engenders is undermining
the stability of the entire region. It's the same with Egypt, he says: we
mustn't accept the status quo there. For Egypt, too, the horizon has to be
liberal democracy. It has to be understood that in the final analysis, the stability that the
corrupt Arab despots are offering is illusory. Just as the stability that
Yitzhak Rabin received from Yasser Arafat was illusory. In the end, none of
these decadent dictatorships will endure. The choice is between extremist Islam,
secular fascism or democracy. And because of September 11, American understands
that. America is in a position where it has no choice. It is obliged to be far
more aggressive in promoting democracy. Hence this war. It's based on the new
American understanding that if the United States does not shape the world in its
image, the world will shape the United States in its own image. 3. Charles Krauthammer Charles Krauthammer is handsome, swarthy and articulate. In his spacious
office on 19th Street in Northwest Washington, he sits upright in a black
wheelchair. Although his writing tends to be gloomy, his mood now is elevated.
The well-known columnist (Washington Post, Time, Weekly Standard) has no real
doubts about the outcome of the war that he promoted for 18 months. No, he does
not accept the view that he helped lead America into the new killing fields
between the Tigris and the Euphrates. But it is true that he is part of a
conceptual stream that had something to offer in the aftermath of September 11.
Within a few weeks after the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, he had
singled out Baghdad in his columns as an essential target. And now, too, he is
convinced that America has the strength to pull it off. The thought that America
will not win has never even crossed his mind. What is the war about? It's about three different issues. First of all, this
is a war for disarming Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction. That's the
basis, the self-evident cause, and it is also sufficient cause in itself. But
beyond that, the war in Iraq is being fought to replace the demonic deal America
cut with the Arab world decades ago. That deal said: you will send us oil and we
will not intervene in your internal affairs. Send us oil and we will not demand
from you what we are demanding of Chile, the Philippines, Korea and South
Africa. That deal effectively expired on September 11, 2001, Krauthammer says. Since
that day, the Americans have understood that if they allow the Arab world to
proceed in its evil ways - suppression, economic ruin, sowing despair - it will
continue to produce more and more bin Ladens. America thus reached the
conclusion that it has no choice: it has to take on itself the project of
rebuilding the Arab world. Therefore, the Iraq war is really the beginning of a
gigantic historical experiment whose purpose is to do in the Arab world what was
done in Germany and Japan after World War II. It's an ambitious experiment, Krauthammer admits, maybe even utopian, but not
unrealistic. After all, it is inconceivable to accept the racist assumption that
the Arabs are different from all other human beings, that the Arabs are
incapable of conducting a democratic way of life. However, according to the Jewish-American columnist, the present war has a
further importance. If Iraq does become pro-Western and if it becomes the focus
of American influence, that will be of immense geopolitical importance. An
American presence in Iraq will project power across the region. It will suffuse
the rebels in Iran with courage and strength, and it will deter and restrain
Syria. It will accelerate the processes of change that the Middle East must
undergo. Isn't the idea of preemptive war a dangerous one that rattles the world
order? There is no choice, Krauthammer replies. In the 21st century we face a new
and singular challenge: the democratization of mass destruction. There are three
possible strategies in the face of that challenge: appeasement, deterrence and
preemption. Because appeasement and deterrence will not work, preemption is the
only strategy left. The United States must implement an aggressive policy of
preemption. Which is exactly what it is now doing in Iraq. That is what Tommy
Franks' soldiers are doing as we speak. And what if the experiment fails? What if America is defeated? This war will enhance the place of America in the world for the coming
generation, Krauthammer says. Its outcome will shape the world for the next 25
years. There are three possibilities. If the United States wins quickly and
without a bloodbath, it will be a colossus that will dictate the world order. If
the victory is slow and contaminated, it will be impossible to go on to other
Arab states after Iraq. It will stop there. But if America is beaten, the
consequences will be catastrophic. Its deterrent capability will be weakened,
its friends will abandon it and it will become insular. Extreme instability will
be engendered in the Middle East. You don't really want to think about what will happen, Krauthammer says
looking me straight in the eye. But just because that's so, I am positive we
will not lose. Because the administration understands the implications. The
president understands that everything is riding on this. So he will throw
everything we've got into this. He will do everything that has to be done.
George W. Bush will not let America lose. 4. Thomas Friedman Tom Friedman, The New York Times columnist, did not oppose the war. On the
contrary. He too was severely shaken by September 11, he too wants to understand
where these desperate fanatics are coming from who hate America more than they
love their own lives. And he too reached the conclusion that the status quo in
the Middle East is no longer acceptable. The status quo is terminal. And
therefore it is urgent to foment a reform in the Arab world. Some things are true even if George Bush believes them, Friedman says with a
smile. And after September 11, it's impossible to tell Bush to drop it, ignore
it. There was a certain basic justice in the overall American feeling that told
the Arab world: we left you alone for a long time, you played with matches and
in the end we were burned. So we're not going to leave you alone any longer. He is sitting in a large rectangular room in the offices of The New York
Times in northwest Washington, on the corner of 17th Street. One wall of the
room is a huge map of the world. Hunched over his computer, he reads me witty
lines from the article that will be going to press in two hours. He polishes,
sharpens, plays word games. He ponders what's right to say now, what should be
left for a later date. Turning to me, he says that democracies look soft until
they're threatened. When threatened, they become very hard. Actually, the Iraq
war is a kind of Jenin on a huge scale. Because in Jenin, too, what happened was
that the Israelis told the Palestinians, We left you here alone and you played
with matches until suddenly you blew up a Passover seder in Netanya. And
therefore we are not going to leave you along any longer. We will go from house
to house in the Casbah. And from America's point of view, Saddam's Iraq is Jenin.
This war is a defensive shield. It follows that the danger is the same: that
like Israel, America will make the mistake of using only force. This is not an illegitimate war, Friedman says. But it is a very presumptuous
war. You need a great deal of presumption to believe that you can rebuild a
country half a world from home. But if such a presumptuous war is to have a
chance, it needs international support. That international legitimacy is
essential so you will have enough time and space to execute your presumptuous
project. But George Bush didn't have the patience to glean international
support. He gambled that the war would justify itself, that we would go in fast
and conquer fast and that the Iraqis would greet us with rice and the war would
thus be self-justifying. That did not happen. Maybe it will happen next week,
but in the meantime it did not happen. When I think about what is going to happen, I break into a sweat, Friedman
says. I see us being forced to impose a siege on Baghdad. And I know what kind
of insanity a siege on Baghdad can unleash. The thought of house-to-house combat
in Baghdad without international legitimacy makes me lose my appetite. I see
American embassies burning. I see windows of American businesses shattered. I
see how the Iraqi resistance to America connects to the general Arab resistance
to America and the worldwide resistance to America. The thought of what could
happen is eating me up. What George Bush did, Friedman says, is to show us a splendid mahogany table:
the new democratic Iraq. But when you turn the table over, you see that it has
only one leg. This war is resting on one leg. But on the other hand, anyone who
thinks he can defeat George Bush had better think again. Bush will never give
in. That's not what he's made of. Believe me, you don't want to be next to this
guy when he thinks he's being backed into a corner. I don't suggest that anyone
who holds his life dear mess with Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and President
Bush. Is the Iraq war the great neoconservative war? It's the war the
neoconservatives wanted, Friedman says. It's the war the neoconservatives
marketed. Those people had an idea to sell when September 11 came, and they sold
it. Oh boy, did they sell it. So this is not a war that the masses demanded.
This is a war of an elite. Friedman laughs: I could give you the names of 25
people (all of whom are at this moment within a five-block radius of this
office [ in Washington ]) who, if you had exiled them to a desert island a year and a half ago,
the Iraq war would not have happened. Still, it's not all that simple, Friedman retracts. It's not some fantasy the
neoconservatives invented. It's not that 25 people hijacked America. You don't
take such a great nation into such a great adventure with Bill Kristol and the
Weekly Standard and another five or six influential columnists. In the final
analysis, what fomented the war is America's over-reaction to September 11. The
genuine sense of anxiety that spread in America after September 11. It is not
only the neoconservatives who led us to the outskirts of Baghdad. What led us to
the outskirts of Baghdad is a very American combination of anxiety and hubris.
20 March 2012
Top 10 Lessons of the Iraq War
Given the stakes involved, it is remarkable how little serious debate
there actually was about the decision to invade. This was a bipartisan
failure, as both conservatives and liberals, Republicans and Democrats all
tended to jump onboard the bandwagon to war. And
mainstream media
organizations became
cheerleaders rather than critics. Even within the halls of government,
individuals who questioned the wisdom of the invasion or raised doubts about
the specific plans were soon marginalized. As a result, not only did the
United States make a bone-headed decision, but the Bush administration went
into Iraq unprepared for the subsequent occupation.
Before the war, advocates argued that
democracy would be easy to install in Iraq because it had a highly literate
population and a robust middle class, and because sectarianism was minimal.
Of course, the people who said things like this apparently knew nothing
about Iraq itself and even less about the difficulty of building democracy
in a country like Iraq. This failure is especially striking insofar as
Iraq's turbulent pre-Saddam history was hardly a secret. But a realistic
view of Iraq clashed with the neocons' effort to sell the war, so they sold
a fairy tale version instead.
The case for war was
strengthened by misleading testimony from various Iraqi exiles, who had an
obvious interest in persuading Washington to carry them to power.
Unfortunately, U.S. leaders were unaware of Machiavelli's prescient warnings
about the danger of trusting the testimony of self-interested foreigners. As
he wrote in his Discourses:
As the Army's
official history of the occupation notes dryly: "conditions in Iraq
proved to be wildly out of sync with prewar assumptions." Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld and Co. assumed that standing up a new Iraqi government
would be quick work and that the light U.S. force would head home almost
immediately. But when conditions deteriorated, U.S. leaders -- both civilian
and military -- were extremely slow to realize that they faced a wholly
different situation. And, as FP colleague Thomas Ricks
has documented, once the U.S. military found itself facing a genuine
insurgency, it took years before it began to adjust its tactics and
strategy in a serious way. We tend to think of the U.S. military as a highly
intelligent fighting force -- after all, we've got all those intelligence
services, think tanks, in-house analysis operations, war colleges, etc. --
yet this case reminds us that the defense establishment is also big and
unwieldy organization that doesn't improvise quickly.
This lesson seems obvious: Adversaries will pursue their own interests.
But the architects of the Iraq war seem to have blindly assumed that other
interested parties would simply roll over and cooperate with us after a
little bit of "shock and awe." Instead, various actors took steps to defend
their own interests or to take advantage of the evolving situation, often in
ways that confounded U.S. efforts. Thus, Sunnis in Iraq took up arms to
resist the loss of power, wealth, and status that the collapse of the
Ba'thist regime entailed. Syria and Iran took various measures to strengthen
anti-U.S. forces inside Iraq, in order to bog us down and bleed us. Al Qaeda
also tried to exploit the post-invasion power-vacuum to go after U.S. forces
and advance its own agenda.
Another lesson from Iraq (and Afghanistan) is that local identities
remain quite powerful and foreign occupations almost always trigger
resistance, especially in cultures with a history of heavy-handed foreign
interference. Accordingly, occupying powers are likely to face armed
insurgencies, which in turn means organizing a counterinsurgency campaign.
Unfortunately, such campaigns are extremely hard to control, because
decisive victories will be elusive, progress is usually slow, and the
occupation force will have [ problems ] distinguishing friend from foe within the local
population. And that means that sometimes our forces will go over the line,
as they did in Haditha or Abu Ghraib. No matter how much we emphasize
"hearts and minds," there will inevitably be abuses that undermine our
efforts. So when you order up an invasion or decide to occupy another
country, be aware that you are opening Pandora's Box.
There is little question that the invasion of Iraq was abysmally planned,
and the post-war occupation was badly bungled. It is therefore unsurprising
that U.S. leaders (and academics) want to learn from these mistakes so as to
perform better in the future. This goal is understandable and even laudable,
but it does not necessarily follow that better pre-war planning would have
produced a better result.
Because it is not clear if any U.S. approach would have succeeded
at an acceptable cost, the real lesson of Iraq is not to do stupid
things like this again.
The war in Iraq was conceived by 25 neoconservative intellectuals, most of
them Jewish, who are pushing President Bush to change the course of history. Two
of them, journalists William Kristol and Charles Krauthammer, say it's possible.
But another journalist, Thomas Friedman (not part of the group), is skeptical
WASHINGTON - At the conclusion of its second week, the war to liberate Iraq
wasn't looking good. Not even in Washington. The assumption of a swift collapse
of the Saddam Hussein regime had itself collapsed. The presupposition that the
Iraqi dictatorship would crumble as soon as mighty America entered the country
proved unfounded. The Shi'ites didn't rise up, the Sunnis fought fiercely. Iraqi
guerrilla warfare found the American generals unprepared and endangered their
overextended supply lines. Nevertheless, 70 percent of the American people
continued to support the war; 60 percent thought victory was certain; 74 percent
expressed confidence in President George W. Bush.
Has America bitten off more than it can chew? Bill Kristol says no. True, the
press is very negative, but when you examine the facts in the field you see that
there is no terrorism, no mass destruction, no attacks on Israel. The oil fields
in the south have been saved, air control has been achieved, American forces are
deployed 50 miles from Baghdad. So, even if mistakes were made here and there,
they are not serious. America is big enough to handle that. Kristol hasn't the
slightest doubt that in the end, General Tommy Franks will achieve his goals.
The 4th Cavalry Division will soon enter the fray, and another division is on
its way from Texas. So it's possible that instead of an elegant war with 60
killed in two weeks it will be a less elegant affair with a thousand killed in
two months, but nevertheless Bill Kristol has no doubt at all that the Iraq
Liberation War is a just war, an obligatory war.
Is this going to turn into a second Vietnam? Charles Krauthammer says no.
There is no similarity to Vietnam. Unlike in the 1960s, there is no
anti-establishment subculture in the United States now. Unlike in the 1960s,
there is now an abiding love of the army in the United States. Unlike in the
1960s, there is a determined president, one with character, in the White House.
And unlike in the 1960s, Americans are not deterred from making sacrifices. That
is the sea-change that took place here on September 11, 2001. Since that
morning, Americans have understood that if they don't act now and if weapons of
mass destruction reach extremist terrorist organizations, millions of Americans
will die. Therefore, because they understand that those others want to kill them
by the millions, the Americans prefer to take to the field of battle and fight,
rather than sit idly by and die at home.
Is this an American Lebanon War? Tom Friedman says he is afraid it is. He was
there, in the Commodore Hotel in Beirut, in the summer of 1982, and he remembers
it well. So he sees the lines of resemblance clearly. General Ahmed Chalabi (the
Shi'ite leader that the neoconservatives want to install as the leader of a free
Iraq) in the role of Bashir Jemayel. The Iraqi opposition in the role of the
Phalange. Richard Perle and the conservative circle around him as Ariel Sharon.
And a war that is at bottom a war of choice. A war that wants to utilize massive
force in order to establish a new order.