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Bush's Global Green Zone

By Tom Engelhardt, Tomdispatch.com. Posted June 29, 2006.


The administration has painstakingly created a fictitious bubble of safety in its Baghdad 'Green Zone.' Now Bush expects us to buy into the belief that he's made us all safer, here and abroad.
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As every political junky in the country now knows, just before finding himself not indicted by Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, Karl Rove went to a fundraiser in New Hampshire and launched the Republican campaign for the 2006 midterm elections. Its simple goal was to keep a Democratic majority (and so the power to investigate) out of either house of Congress. He promptly attacked Rep. John Murtha and other Democrats for their "cut and run" attitudes on Iraq. ("They may be with you for the first shots, but they're not going... to be with you for the tough battles.") He swore that the administration had been right to take out Saddam Hussein ("We have no excuses to make for it...") and proposed a new version of the administration's most successful post-9/11 ploy -- the constant linking of Saddam Hussein to the al-Qaeda attacks. Now, he would link the wreckage of administration policy in Iraq to future terrorist attacks. If we "cut and run," he pointed out in a fabulous Mobius strip of political logic, "It would provide a launching pad for the terrorists to strike the United States and the West."

His President had only recently announced the turning of "the tide" in Iraq with the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and the installation of a new Iraqi government in Baghdad's Green Zone. Vice President Cheney would soon answer a question about whether we were still in the "last throes" of the Iraqi insurgency by insisting that the Democrats wanted to "bail out" just as we were "making very significant progress" in Iraq. The Congressional Republicans, whatever their private hesitations, were brought into line with the Rove plan and launched the sort of offensive that, in the past, has proven so ineffective in Iraq and so effective at home.

Given the disaster that Iraq actually is, some alterations of argument were obviously in order. Put in terms of Colin Powell's infamous "Pottery Barn rule" ("If you break it, you own it"), this particular formulation would go something like: You've barged into Pottery Barn, an invading bull in a China shop and you've been breaking things right and left ever since; management, employees, and other customers are enraged, so what choice do you have but to stay and keep breaking things? Bail out now and all those angry folks will be heading for your house to break your things.

Once upon a time, this administration's top officials and associated neocons dreamed of shock-and-awing the Middle East into the shape they wanted, settling into Iraq for the long haul, dominating the planet in geopolitical and energy terms, ensuring that no nation or bloc of nations would ever again challenge the U.S. and, in the bargain, installing the Republicans as the dominant domestic party for at least a generation. Now, forced to hitch their fates to the President's disastrous war, they simply hope to squeak through the mid-term elections and, two years later, hand ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan off to another president.

Joshua Marshall of the Talking Points Memo website recently described the President as "like an owner of a business that's slowly going under... And he won't just liquidate and save what he can, because then he'd have to come to grips with the fact that he's failed. So his policy is denial and slow failure. Here of course the analogy to President Bush is rather precise since he only has to hold out until 2009 when he can give the problem to someone else, just as he did in his past life with other businesses he drove into the ground."

In fact, whether it works or not, Rove's political gamble is breathtakingly bold in its simplicity. He's throwing the dice on a single proposition: That, in the end, Americans will prefer the illusion of living in a Green-Zone world all the way and so will swallow the Green-Zone fictions that go with it.

Let's consider, then, a few small pieces of the Green-Zone world our President has created:

George in the Green Zone

On his Potemkin travels, the President has long taken a portable Green Zone with him. On the campaign trail, he almost never met an audience that hadn't been carefully vetted and so seldom found himself face to face with a questioner who wasn't beyond friendly, outright obsequious, or absolutely fawningly admiring. Put another way, with rare exceptions, his world is regularly cleared of reality as he approaches. On his foreign travels, this happens with clocklike regularity. Major metropolises are simply shut down or cleared of humanity, so that, like the USS Abraham Lincoln for his infamous "Mission Accomplished" tailhook landing, they become but movie sets on which he can tell his Green-Zone stories about how the world works without fear of complaint or contradiction.


Digg!

Tom Engelhardt, editor of Tomdispatch.com, is co-founder of the American Empire Project and author of The End of Victory Culture.

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A believer
Posted by: Thundergod on Jun 29, 2006 12:19 AM   
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I don't believe bush!

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Green Zones - only abroad?
Posted by: Madalone on Jun 29, 2006 3:40 AM   
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I would venture that Green Zones exist not only abroad, but conservative politics within the US is based on the same mindset.

When seen from an airconditioned, gated "Green-Zone" community, inner cities can easily be viewed as chaotic, barbaric "Red Zones" that need to be held in check by any means conceivable. In this context, it absolutely makes sense to incarcerate a mindboggingly large proportion of the population...

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Paranoia
Posted by: Poederbach on Jun 29, 2006 3:44 AM   
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No one ever tried Mr Bush for paranoia. He is. That is the good news. The bad news is that everybody in the US gets paranoia and on top that it is catching. There are just not enough shrinks to treat everybody.

TomTom, Fearless Navigator

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Hubris: Empty and Destructive
Posted by: ChristopherLL on Jun 29, 2006 3:53 AM   
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It is appalling that the Bush administration has used the tactic of calling their targeted "enemies" in this country by using inflammatory implications of cowardice. Cheney and his "no stomach" for fighting comment regarding those who oppose the war, Bush and his "stay the course" assertion implying those who disagree are quitters and Rove's "cut and run" implicating any who consider other options other than war traitors. And this comes from a draft dodger (Cheney), a true quitter (Bush's military obligation) and a bona fide whimp/nerd (Rove). As a man I simply see all of them attempting to somehow gain their manhood by bluster and intimidation rather than courage and leadership. Hubris is an empty and self destructive force and we are witnessing another example.

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» RE: Hubris: Empty and Destructive Posted by: FauxPorteno
» RE: Hubris: Empty and Destructive Posted by: MatthewSavage
barbarians r US
Posted by: rsaxto on Jun 29, 2006 4:30 AM   
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The more one learns of the global situation in reality terms instead of in lies, the more one comes to the necessary and reality-based conclusion that the worst barbarians in the world r US, USA, the United States of America which has never since civil war days been so dis-united. The killer-in-chief and his Cheney handler is also the torturer-in-chief, the baby-killer-in chief, the barbarian-in-chief and the world's #1 destabilizer/bankruptcy creator. If his mission is to create chaos and danger and a grossed-out environment which may, in the end, destroy the entire global human dream - he has succeeded magnificently.

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Bush in a class by himself.
Posted by: symcokid on Jun 29, 2006 6:14 AM   
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Bush didn't "cut and run", he just ignored and hauled ass from his military orders. I guess someone told him that people expect him to voice, "stay the course" as that is what War Mongers say. Many people don't realize Bush is ambidextrous, in his case he can pick his nose with either thumb. The only Prez ever elected to be a member of one of the nine, nasty, nifty nose pickers. I know, this makes about as much sense as does Bush.

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Soon enough, they may be impossible to tell from us.
Posted by: Angie on Jun 29, 2006 6:19 AM   
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At first, I thought the last sentence of the article referred to the jihadis, then I thought it was meant for the bushies, then, I thought, maybe it could me by some sort of complicity. Anyway, this will probably continue getting bloodier for both sides... an eye for an eye. Even in an occupation, having vaster weaponry and fortification won't easily change men's hearts once you've take their land and their pride. Now, lining their pockets might help.

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Wake up, people. Bush doesn't care what we think.
Posted by: HughEScott on Jun 29, 2006 7:56 AM   
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Let’s cut to the chase, folks. Bush doesn’t care what AlterNet bloggers think or any one else, for that matter. He’s in the business of dictating, not listening. So rather than waste time complaining about Baghdad Green Zones, etc., we should borrow a page from Karl Rove’s playbook and attack Dub-ya personally.

Call him for what he is: a draft-dodging Nazi.

The truth is already in our side. So let’s fight back with the same smear tactics the neocons use, starting with a fear-mongering assault on the biggest threat to American liberty since WWII –- homegrown fascism -– as pursued by the extreme rightwing political organization, Project for a New American Century (PNAC).

To learn about PNAC, visit: www.FreedomCentralUSA.com.

Once you understand PNAC, everything falls in place. Forget about Iraq. That’s a smoke screen. It’s the neocon end game we should worry about.

Herr Bush and his goose-stepping goons want permanent control of Congress, an enduring Republican White House, conservative-stacked Supreme Court, rightwing federal judges, GOP governors and legislatures in all 50 states, and a muzzled press. Simply put, total and unending dominion over our political system. The way it was in Nazi Germany before WWII.

Welcome to the Fourth Reich.

Hugh E. Scott, author, investigative journalist, Vietnam veteran, ex-USAF pilot, lifelong registered Republican, Goldwater conservative and ardent Ronald Reagan fan with a family history of honorable military service going back to 1776.

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Which only goes to prove......
Posted by: daro on Jun 29, 2006 12:39 PM   
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.......you are great at dishing it out but you can't take it.

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REJOICE, WORLD!!!!
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Jun 29, 2006 4:35 PM   
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GENGHIS KHAN IS BACK AND THIS TIME HE'S AMERICAN!!!

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re
Posted by: lopericoss@gmail.com on Nov 27, 2006 12:55 AM   
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re
Posted by: lopericoss@gmail.com on Nov 27, 2006 12:56 AM   
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Bil
Posted by: Bil on Dec 31, 2006 9:37 PM   
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new1
new2
new3
new4

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