January 05, 2007
The New Year began
on the hopeful note that Bush’s illegal war in Iraq would soon be ended. The
repudiation of Bush and the Republicans in the November congressional election,
the Iraq Study Group’s unanimous conclusion that the US needs to remove its
troops from the sectarian strife Bush set in motion by invading Iraq, Donald Rumsfeld’s
removal as defense secretary and his replacement by Iraqi Study Group member
Robert Gates, the thumbs down given by America’s top military commanders to the
neoconservatives’
plan to send more US troops to Iraq, and new polls of the US military that
reveal that only a minority supports Bush’s Iraq policy, thus giving new
meaning to "support the troops," are all indications that
Americans have shed the stupor that has given carte blanche to George W. Bush.
When word leaked
that Bush was inclined toward the "surge option" of committing
more troops by keeping existing troops deployed in Iraq after their
replacements had arrived, NBC
News reported that an administration official "admitted to us today
that this surge option is more of a political decision than a military
one." It is a clear sign of exasperation with Bush when an
administration official admits that Bush is willing to sacrifice American
troops and Iraqi civilians in order to protect his own delusions.
The American
Establishment, concerned by Bush’s egregious mismanagement, moved to take
control of Iraq policy away from him. However, recent news reports and analysis
suggest that Bush has turned his back to the American establishment and his
military advisers and is throwing in his lot with the neoconservatives and the
Israeli lobby. This will further isolate Bush and make him more vulnerable to
impeachment.
In the January 5
issue of CounterPunch John Walsh gives a good description of
the struggle between the American establishment and the neocons.
Peter Spiegel, the
Pentagon correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, reported on January 4
that the neocons have used the failure of the administration’s policy in Iraq
to convince Bush to launch an aggressive counterinsurgency requiring the
buildup of troop levels by extending deployments beyond the agreed terms. [Old
guard back on Iraq policy, January 4, 2007]
Raed Jarrar (CounterPunch,
January 4) suggests that the Shi’ite militias, such as the one led by
Al-Sadr, are the intended targets of the "surge option." There
seems no surer way to escalate the conflict in Iraq than to attack the Shi’ite
militias. For longer than the US fought Germany in WW II, 150,000 US troops in
Iraq have been thwarted by a small insurgency drawn from Iraq’s minority
population of Sunnis. It hardly seems feasible that 30,000 additional US
troops, demoralized by extended deployment, can succeed in a surge against the
Shi’ite militias when 150,000 US troops cannot succeed against the minority
Sunnis.
The reason the US
has not been driven out of Iraq is that the majority Shi’ites have not been
part of the insurgency. The Shi’ites are attacking the Sunnis, who are forced
to fight a two-front war against US troops and Shi’ite militias and death
squads. The US owes its presence in Iraq, just as the colonial powers always
owed their presence in the Middle East, to the disunity of Arabs. Western
domination of the Muslim world succeeded by not picking a fight with all of the
disunited Arabs at the same time.
Attacking the
Shi’ite militias while fighting a Sunni insurgency would violate this rule. If
Bush ignores US military commanders and expert opinion and accepts the surge
option advanced by the delusional neocon allies of Israel’s right-wing Likud
Party, US troops will be engulfed in general insurgency. This is why General
John Abizaid resigned on January 5. He wants no part of the Republican Party’s
sacrifice of US soldiers to sectarian conflict.
In recent Senate
Armed Services Committee hearings, Republican Senator John McCain, who believes
in the efficacy of violence and not in diplomacy, pressed General Abizaid to
request more US troops to be sent to Iraq. General Abizaid
replied as follows:
"Senator McCain, I met with every divisional commander, General
Casey, the core commander, General Dempsey, we all talked together. And I said,
in your professional opinion, if we were to bring in more American troops now,
does it add considerably to our ability to achieve success in Iraq? And they
all said no."
Bush is like
Hitler. He blames defeats on his military commanders, not on his own insane
policy. Like Hitler, he protects himself from reality with delusion. In his
last hours, Hitler was ordering non-existent German armies to drive the
Russians from Berlin.
By manipulating
Bush and provoking a military crisis in which the US stands to lose its army in
Iraq, the neoconservatives hope to revive the implementation of their plan for
US conquest of the Middle East. They believe they can use fear, "honor,"
and the aversion of macho Americans to ignoble defeat to expand the conflict in
response to military disaster.
The neocons believe
that the loss of an American army would be met with the electorate’s demand for
revenge. The barriers to the draft would fall, as would the barriers to the use
of nuclear weapons.
Neocon godfather
Norman Podhoretz set out the plan for Middle East conquest several years ago in
Commentary Magazine. It is a plan for Muslim genocide. In place of
physical extermination of Muslims, Podhoretz advocates their cultural
destruction by deracination. Islam is to be torn out by the roots and reduced
to a purely formal shell devoid of any real beliefs.
Podhoretz disguises
the neoconservative attack against diversity with contrived arguments, but its
real purpose is to use the US military to subdue Arabs and to create space for
Israel to expand.
Not enough
Americans are aware that this is what the "war on terror" is
all about.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.