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What Would Be Worse Than Bush?

Posted by Guest Blogger at 2:00 PM on July 17, 2007.


Howie Klein: An approach to Iraq even worse than Bush's? Oh yes, Cheney unchained would be a lot worse.
cheneyiwantyou.0
cheney

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This post, written by Howie Klein, originally appeared on Down With Tyranny!

I started reading ex-CIA analyst Michael Scheur's book, Imperial Hubris-- Why The West Is Losing The War on Terror months ago. I've finished 3 or 4 other books since starting it. I loved it at first. It was filled with denunciations of the Bush Regime and confirmed my own belief that Bush's ascension to the presidency was one of the most catastrophic national security disasters in the history of the United States, right up there with the War of 1812, the insurrection by southern bandits that came to be known as the Civil War, and the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

The first half of the book is filled with a spot on analysis of Bush's horrendous shortcomings as a leader. His detailed, minute comparisons of the relative leadership qualities and overall effectiveness of Bush and bin-Laden are among the most scathing indictments of Bush I have ever read in any context. On the other hand Scheur's critic of the failings of the Bush Regime-- while extremely accurate in many respects-- comes from an even more peculiar perspective. It's as though when "Anonymous" was first revealed to be Scheur, it was actually a cover by the real author: Dick Cheney, writing about why his apocalyptic wet dream, best laid plans, went awry in the hands of a half-baked ex-junkie, cheerleader. Basically, he says the only option America has towards dealing with "the Muslim world" is a military one.

And it is not the option of daintily applying military power as we have since 1991. "U.S. soldiers are unprepared for the absolute mercilessness of which modern warriors are capable," Ralph Peters correctly said in Fighting For The Future: Will America Triumph?, "and they are discouraged or prohibited by their civilian masters and their own customs from taking the kind of measures that might be effective against members of the warrior class." To secure as much of our way of life as possible, we have to use military force in the way that Americans used it on the fields of Virginia and Georgia, in France and on the Pacific Islands, and from skies over Tokyo and Dresden. Progress will be measured by the pace of killing and, yes, by body counts. Not the fatuous body counts of Vietnam, but precise counts that will run to extremely large numbers. They piles of dead will include as many or more civilians as combatants because our enemies wear no uniforms.

This paragraph makes me think that the book was actually a joint work by Dick and Lynne Cheney. This is far more her semi-pornographic literary style. It could also have been co-authored with Scooter, another close Cheney confidant with a flair for the unspeakably vile.

Killing in large numbers is not enough to defeat our Muslim foes. With killing must come a Sherman-like razing of infrastructure. Roads and irrigation systems; bridges, power plants, and crops in the field; fertilizer plants and grain mills-- all these and more will need to be destroyed to deny the enemy its support base. Land mines, moreover, will be massively reintroduced to seal borders and mountain passes too long, high or numerous to close with U.S. soldiers. As noted, such actions will yield large civilian casualties, displaced populations and refugee flows.

This, of course is why we have things like the Geneva Conventions, war crimes tribunals and it is also why Cheney insisted that the first thing Bush do is strong arm as many countries as possible to make the U.S. and its officials immune from war crimes prosecutions.

In this morning's Washington Post Anne Applebaum says there are no magic bullets for Iraq and goes on to list all the plans (by Hillary, Obama, the House Dems, the Senate Dems, the Senate Obstructionists, etc) that won't work. It sounds like she gets paid by the word and had to fill a column but had nothing to say. Her ending, while not as hideous as Anonymous'/Scheur's/the Cheneys', speaks to and of and by the utter intellectual and moral bankruptcy of the Beltway Crowd that cheered us into this catastrophe: "Last weekend, I met a Marine about to depart for his second tour in Iraq. He wasn't exactly enthusiastic about going, nor was he particularly optimistic about what could be achieved. But he wasn't demanding to stay home, either. If nothing else, he felt obliged to stick by the many Iraqis who had helped the Marines and who might well be murdered if the Marines left for good. He had, in other words, perceived the only truth of which we can really be certain: that there are no obvious solutions in Iraq, only policy changes that could make some things better and some things worse. Maybe much worse."

Watch for Matt Bai's new book The Argument: Billionaires, Bloggers and the Battle to Remake Democratic Politics which will bemoan how "American voters who once looked to newspaper columnists for guidance on politics now blog their own idle punditry." I'll take some idle punditry from a citizen blogger like Scarecrow over the senseless-- but "professional"-- babbling of a Matt Bai, David Broder or Anne Applebaum any day of the week.

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Tagged as: bush, cheney, iraq war

Howie Klein was president of his freshman class, drove to Afghanistan and Nepal, became the president of Reprise Records and started a blog called Down With Tyranny!. He's always hated tyrants.


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in a way they are right
Posted by: jareilly on Jul 17, 2007 3:13 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Taking Iraq as just one particular case, with a sufficient level of brutality, it seems likely that the US could "succeed" for at least a generation. And the amount of violence would have to be as described or worse than in this book. Cities would have to be flattened, crops burned, regions emptied, wells poisoned, borders mined and sealed, public summary executions frequent and unrestrained. Millions of Iraqi civilians would have to die and thousands more US troops. Large garrisons would have to be established in every major city and smaller ones throughout Iraq. Over 500,000 US troops would be required for 3 to 5 years. 5 trillion dollars might have to be spent, still a fraction of GDP x 5 years. Concentration camps would have to be set up and only the most pliant local leaders would be tolerated. If all else fails, there are nuclear weapons. Against all this, how could any militant opposition survive?

I don't think it is crazy to ponder the military measures necessary to successfully subdue Iraq. It could be done, given the military might of the US. I do think is is crazy to suggest that the military option is the best, first or most durable option. I don't think this country could stomach "total war" in the manner described, much to our credit. If anybody, like Cheney, somehow unleashed, attempted it, there would be domestic opposition which would require the permanent suspension of civil liberties, due process rights, the Constitution, etc. I am not sure all of us would sit still for that either, although some would dearly love to see it happen.

I think we could "beat them", but I think we would destroy ourselves in the process. That's actually a conservative critique of the Bush Regime. If there were any real conservatives left in the Republican Party vs. the corrupt, christo-corporatist glad-handers that now control the party, we would have heard that critique by now. But there aren't. This was never going to be a total war. As I have said in other comments, Iraq is a smash and grab crime. We go in and first enrich our cronies in the oil and military contractor business, we drive up oil prices by cutting Iraqi oil production and enrich our Houston, TX cronies, we make a stab at getting a permanent grip on Iraqi oil via low cost, high-return production service agreements, now embedded in the "Iraqi oil distribution law", which the Repubs AND Dems are attacking the Iraqi government for failing to pass. If they don't get the PSA's, fuck it, they still enriched their cronies. And as Bush has said of his own legacy, "History? Who knows? We'll all be dead by then!".

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» The phrase... Posted by: Bbear41
Imagine if Saudi Arabia and Pakistan went the same way that Iran did...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jul 17, 2007 9:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Which would probably be the most likely result of all out WWII-style warfare against the Iraqi civilian population.

How many pundits in the 70's were predicting the Iranian revolution? How many pundits in the 80's were predicting the collapse of the Soviet Union? Zero, right?

Let's see what the Iraq and Afghanistan war have done for the likes of Usama bin Ladin and Al Queda... they have thousands of new recruits (a lot from Saudi Arabia) and new and improved reasons for hating the West. Could they overthrow the Pakistani and Saudi regimes? It's not beyond the realm of the possible. In fact, the longer the US stays in the Middle East, the more likely this becomes.

The stupidity of Bush is only surpassed by the idiocy of Cheney. Bush is an incompetent idiot, but Cheney is a clever and capable idiot, which is far worse.

The only solution? Leave Iraq, abandon the plans for control of the oil, and let a UN peacekeeping force come in until the Iraqis manage to work things out for themselves.

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The fire next time
Posted by: hquain on Jul 18, 2007 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While it's true that the current range of rightist opinion includes a surprising amount of 1920's/30's-style exterminationism, the real brilliance of the current regime is the discovery that their goals can be achieved far less spectacularly and far more certainly. Iraq is destroyed, its professional class decimated, its infrastructure wrecked -- without firebombing the cities. Year after year, week after week, through multitudes of small scale attacks, a 500lb bomb here, a spray of machine gun fire there, dozens, scores of times daily, with only a small if steady leak of American dead -- that's the way to get the job done. The kill-them-all types are good for stirring up the crowds, but the Rumsfeldian pros have other ideas.

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True, Scheuer Is Savage. . .
Posted by: Russ Wellen on Jul 18, 2007 11:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . but knowledgeable and useful. Remember, he used to be head of the CIA's bin Laden unit.

Asia Times Online runs his regular column. Check out his latest.

In this one, he points out how El-Zawahiri is now calling for Muslims of all stripes to put aside their differences and unite agains the Great Satan. According to Scheuer, Chertoff might be right and they may be ready for their next assault on our shores.

If you want state-of-the-art info on Al Qaeda, politics aside, he's your man.

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