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The Vietnamization of Bush's
Vacation
NY Times
By FRANK RICH
Published: August 28, 2005
ANOTHER week in Iraq, another light at the end of the tunnel. On Monday
President Bush saluted the Iraqis for "completing work on a democratic
constitution" even as the process was breaking down yet again. But was anyone
even listening to his latest premature celebration?
We have long since lost count of all the historic turning points and
fast-evaporating victories hyped by this president. The toppling of Saddam's
statue, "Mission Accomplished," the transfer of sovereignty and the purple
fingers all blur into a hallucinatory loop of delusion. One such red-letter
day, some may dimly recall, was the adoption of the previous, interim
constitution in March 2004, also proclaimed a "historic milestone" by Mr. Bush.
Within a month after that fabulous victory, the insurgency boiled over into the
war we have today, taking, among many others, the life of Casey Sheehan.
It's Casey Sheehan's mother, not those haggling in Baghdad's Green Zone, who
really changed the landscape in the war this month. Not because of her
bumper-sticker politics or the slick left-wing political operatives who have
turned her into a circus, but because the original, stubborn fact of her grief
brought back the dead the administration had tried for so long to lock out of
sight. With a shove from Pat Robertson, her 15 minutes are now up, but even Mr.
Robertson's antics revealed buyer's remorse about Iraq; his stated motivation
for taking out Hugo Chávez by assassination was to avoid "another $200
billion war" to remove a dictator.
In the wake of Ms. Sheehan's protest, the facts on the ground in America
have changed almost everywhere. The president, for one, has been forced to make
what for him is the ultimate sacrifice: jettisoning chunks of vacation to
defend the war in any bunker he can find in Utah or Idaho. In the first speech
of this offensive, he even felt compelled to take the uncharacteristic step of
citing the number of American dead in public (though the number was already out
of date by at least five casualties by day's end). For the second, the White
House recruited its own mom, Tammy Pruett, for the president to showcase as an
antidote to Ms. Sheehan. But in a reversion to the president's hide-the-fallen
habit, the chosen mother was not one who had lost a child in Iraq.
It isn't just Mr. Bush who is in a tight corner now. Ms. Sheehan's protest
was the catalyst for a new national argument about the war that managed to
expose both the intellectual bankruptcy of its remaining supporters on the
right and the utter bankruptcy of the Democrats who had rubber-stamped this
misadventure in the first place.
When the war's die-hard cheerleaders attacked the Middle East policy of a
mother from Vacaville, Calif., instead of defending the president's policy in
Iraq, it was definitive proof that there is little cogent defense left to be
made. When the Democrats offered no alternative to either Mr. Bush's policy or
Ms. Sheehan's plea for an immediate withdrawal, it was proof that they have no
standing in the debate.
Instead, two conservative Republicans - actually talking about Iraq instead
of Ms. Sheehan, unlike the rest of their breed - stepped up to fill this
enormous vacuum: Chuck Hagel and Henry Kissinger. Both pointedly invoked
Vietnam, the war that forged their political careers. Their timing, like Ms.
Sheehan's, was impeccable. Last week Mr. Bush started saying that the best way
to honor the dead would be to "finish the task they gave their lives for" - a
dangerous rationale that, as David Halberstam points out, was heard as early as
1963 in Vietnam, when American casualties in that fiasco were still inching
toward 100.
And what exactly is our task? Mr. Bush's current definition - "as the Iraqis
stand up, we will stand down" - could not be a better formula for quagmire.
Twenty-eight months after the fall of Saddam, only "a small number" of Iraqi
troops are capable of fighting without American assistance, according to the
Pentagon - a figure that Joseph Biden puts at "fewer than 3,000." At this rate,
our 138,000 troops will be replaced by self-sufficient locals in roughly 100
years.
For his part, Mr. Hagel backed up his assertion that we are bogged down in a
new Vietnam with an irrefutable litany of failure: "more dead, more wounded,
less electricity in Iraq, less oil being pumped in Iraq, more insurgency
attacks, more insurgents coming across the border, more corruption in the
government." Mr. Kissinger no doubt counts himself a firm supporter of Mr.
Bush, but in Washington Post this month, he drew a damning lesson from Vietnam:
"Military success is difficult to sustain unless buttressed by domestic
support." Anyone who can read a poll knows that support is gone and is not
coming back. The president's approval rating dropped to 36 percent in one
survey last week.
What's left is the option stated bluntly by Mr. Hagel: "We should start
figuring out how we get out of there."
He didn't say how we might do that. John McCain has talked about sending
more troops to rectify our disastrous failure to secure the country, but he'll
have to round them up himself door to door. As the retired Gen. Barry McCaffrey
reported to the Senate, the National Guard is "in the stage of meltdown and in
24 months we'll be coming apart." At the Army, according to The Los Angeles
Times, officials are now predicting an even worse shortfall of recruits in 2006
than in 2005. The Leo Burnett advertising agency has been handed $350 million
for a recruitment campaign that avoids any mention of Iraq.
Among Washington's Democrats, the only one with a clue seems to be Russell
Feingold, the Wisconsin senator who this month proposed setting a "target date"
(as opposed to a deadline) for getting out. Mr. Feingold also made the crucial
observation that "the president has presented us with a false choice": either
"stay the course" or "cut and run." That false choice, in which Mr. Bush
pretends that the only alternative to his reckless conduct of the war is Ms.
Sheehan's equally apocalyptic retreat, is used to snuff out any legitimate
debate. There are in fact plenty of other choices echoing about, from
variations on Mr. Feingold's timetable theme to buying off the Sunni
insurgents.
But don't expect any of Mr. Feingold's peers to join him or Mr. Hagel in
fashioning an exit strategy that might work. If there's a moment that could
stand for the Democrats' irrelevance it came on July 14, the day Americans woke
up to learn of the suicide bomber in Baghdad who killed as many as 27 people,
nearly all of them children gathered around American troops. In Washington that
day, the presumptive presidential candidate Hillary Clinton held a press
conference vowing to protect American children from the fantasy violence of
video games.
The Democrats are hoping that if they do nothing, they might inherit the
earth as the Bush administration goes down the tubes. Whatever the dubious
merits of this Kerryesque course as a political strategy, as a moral strategy
it's unpatriotic. The earth may not be worth inheriting if Iraq continues to
sabotage America's ability to take on Iran and North Korea, let alone Al
Qaeda.
As another politician from the Vietnam era, Gary Hart, observed last week,
the Democrats are too cowardly to admit they made a mistake three years ago,
when fear of midterm elections drove them to surrender to the administration's
rushed and manipulative Iraq-war sales pitch. So now they are compounding the
original error as the same hucksters frantically try to repackage the old
damaged goods.
IN the new pitch there are no mushroom clouds. Instead we get McCarthyesque
rhetoric accusing critics of being soft on the war on terrorism, which the Iraq
adventure has itself undermined. Before anyone dare say Vietnam, the president,
Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld drag in the historian David McCullough and
liken 2005 in Iraq to 1776 in America - and, by implication, the original
George W. to ours. Before you know it, Ahmad Chalabi will be rehabilitated as
Ben Franklin.
The marketing campaign will crescendo in two weeks, on the anniversary of
9/11, when a Defense Department "Freedom Walk" will trek from the site of the
Pentagon attack through Arlington National Cemetery to a country music concert
on the Mall. There the false linkage of Iraq to 9/11 will be hammered in once
more, this time with a beat: Clint Black will sing "I Raq and Roll," a ditty
whose lyrics focus on Saddam, not the Islamic radicals who actually attacked
America. Lest any propaganda opportunity be missed, Arlington's gravestones are
being branded with the Pentagon's slogans for military campaigns, like
Operation Iraqi Freedom, The Associated Press reported last week - a historic
first. If only the administration had thought of doing the same on the fallen's
coffins, it might have allowed photographs.
Even though their own poll numbers are in a race to the bottom with the
president's, don't expect the Democrats to make a peep. Republicans, their
minds increasingly focused on November 2006, may well blink first. In yet
another echo of Vietnam, it's millions of voters beyond the capital who will
force the timetable for our inexorable exit from Iraq.
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