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War on Iraq

Bush's Fantasy of Progress in Iraq

By Robert Scheer, AlterNet. Posted March 16, 2006.


If violence and constant mayhem is a sign of progress three years post-invasion, then Bush will be thrilled by what the future holds.
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What is he thinking?

On a day when Shiite vigilantes conducted hangings in Sadr City in reprisal for the killing of scores of their co-religionists in a market bombing, President Bush continued to insist that progress in Iraq justified staying the course. "By their response over the past two weeks, Iraqis have shown the world that they want a future of freedom and peace," he said Monday. "We're helping Iraqis build a strong democracy so that old resentments will be eased and the insurgency marginalized."

Contrast that fantasy with the same day's harsh news: "In Sadr City, the Shiite section in Baghdad where the terrorist suspects were executed, government forces vanished," reported the New York Times. "The streets are ruled by aggressive teenagers with shiny soccer jerseys and machine guns. They set up roadblocks and poke their heads into cars and detain whomever they want. Mosques blare warnings on loudspeakers for American troops to stay out. Increasingly, the Americans have been doing just that."

The next day, 87 corpses, all male, were found scattered throughout the city, shot or strangled after being bound and blindfolded. This, in turn, was in apparent reprisal for a series of bombings on Sunday targeting Shiite civilians which killed 58 and wounded 300, according to Iraq's Health Ministry.

Of course, the drip-drip of American troop deaths continues, as Lance Cpl. Bunny Long, 22, of Modesto, Calif., will be coming home in a flag-draped casket after being killed Friday by a suicide, vehicle-borne, IED. If such constant mayhem is taken as a sign of progress, three years after the U.S. invasion, then Bush surely will be thrilled by what the future holds.

The British, on the other hand, have seen the handwriting on the wall and once again have begun to flee an imperial disappointment in Mesopotamia, announcing they are reducing their forces by 10 percent. Clearly, London has grasped what Bush cannot: The three-year occupation by Western armies is an incitement to guerrilla violence, not an impediment.

Of course, Bush would have us believe this expanding civil war is the work of insidious foreigners rather than of competing agendas arising from within an Iraq society long stunted by colonialism and dictatorship. It does not occur to him that he is the foreigner who the majority of Iraqis hold responsible for the country's despair, and whose occupation immeasurably strengthens the hand of extremists on all sides.

Bush's neoconservative Svengalis apparently failed to alert him to the possibility that religious, ethnic and nationalist sentiments might trump his plans for a Western-imposed 'democracy," subservient to U.S. interests. Or that U.S.-engineered elections would be won by allies and disciples of the radical Shiite government in the 'evil axis" capital of Tehran.

Such bright contradictions were on display in Bush's latest strategically bankrupt "plan" for victory: Spending $3.3 billion to fight the improvised explosive devices (IEDs) Bush now claims Iran is smuggling into Iraq -- to the very Shiite forces that won the U.S.-engineered election and are positioned to form the first real post-Hussein government.

The IEDs, mentioned a whopping 26 times in the speech, have obviously come to replace that nonexistent WMD threat as the centerpiece of Bush's Iraq policy. We will stop them, he says, by bumping anti-IED-related spending by a factor of 22, from %$150 million in 2004 to $3.3 billion. "We're putting the best minds in America to work on this effort," Bush said.

Why not put a few of them to work on figuring how to extract the U.S. military from Iraq instead? After all, that is where all the IEDs happen to be exploding.

But, of course, this alternative, to stop making U.S. troops targets in the midst of a raging civil war in a Muslim country that the United States has no business occupying, was summarily dismissed by our president. "[M]y decisions on troop levels will be made based upon the conditions on the ground and on the recommendations of our military commanders, not artificial timetables set by politicians here in Washington, D.C.," he said.

Has the president never read our Constitution, which mandates civilian control over the military? Does he not grasp that he is himself a Washington politician? How can you effectively sell democracy to the world when you mock it so contemptuously at home? You can't. Not until the public and its representatives force this administration to change its disastrous course can we begin to restore international respect for the American political system that Bush has so masterfully subverted.

Digg!

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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Bush's delusions.....
Posted by: Zemiti on Mar 16, 2006 2:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...lead him astray. Typical case of monkey see, monkey do...or a matter of the three stooges in la la land...;he is so transfixed by his own delusional vision that he's dragging us all to the brink of WW3...impeach him NOW!...or worse fate will befall him when he gets indicted for war crimes in the near future...the first US president to have this ignominious honor...c'mon, toss the chump, get rid of this blood dripping parasite...he's long exceeded his sell by date.

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Stop listening to what he says. Watch what he does.
Posted by: Sojourner on Mar 16, 2006 8:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, you still want to believe what this administration says? Rank foolishness, unless you like to pick at him in your writing.

How about paying attention to the huge investment the US has made and is making at long-term permanent bases in Iraq? That's where Bush's payoff lies. When he pulls half our troops out before the Fall elections, he's gonna look like the Wizard of OZ. And his GOP will hold their own in Congress.

Because liberal commentators love to be able to write, "Liar, liar, liar"? We know that already. What we need to know is what our options are when he pulls the rabbit out of the hat, letting the three factions fight while the US just goes about its own business.

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Starting to look familiar....
Posted by: Rowdy714 on Mar 16, 2006 8:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it's tragic that so many people cannot see the parallel with Viet Nam. Do we need a hundred thousand dead GI's before we wake up? In other words - what if only 10,000 had died in Viet Nam? Would we still call it a foolish adventure? Do we base the justice of our foreign policy solely on how many American lives it might cost?

What we are doing over there is neither right nor wrong. It's INSANE. If the illegal invasion wasn't bad enough, we're sinking fast into something that we need NO part of.

Any literate American can pick up a high school history book and see what this is going to cost: in human lives, in dollars, in international prestige and respect. This is VERY much like what we discovered in Viet Nam.

We should never have gotten involved in the Vietnamese civil war. We tried to manipulate it and hurt a lot of people over a long period of time. It's madness. The only way out of Iraq will be the way out of Viet Nam.

When the American people show their corporate-controlled government that it costs more money to stay than to get out. When American cities, industry and Senators are crippled by imminent economic and political ruin, then maybe we can get the troops home and make a fresh start.

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Crying all the way to the bank
Posted by: ScottP on Mar 16, 2006 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Halliburton and Exxon profits and executive compensation are doing great! Was there some secondary factor that should also be factored into the decision making? Is the Texaco CEO doing OK?

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Where's The Mystery
Posted by: vanquish on Mar 16, 2006 11:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AlterNet, in my opinion, is one of the best sources for "Main Street USA" thinking. However, as a registered Republican, I'm amazed to hear Democrats use terms like the ones used in this article to describe George W. Bush. Such as: "Bush's neoconservative Svengalis apparently failed to alert him…" and "he is so transfixed by his own delusional vision…". I hope they're tongue and cheek; otherwise, the people behind Bush have been 100% effective in convincing Americans that he's failed, he's stupid, things are going badly for him, and on and on. I can tell you that things are going exactly according to plan. The powers-to-be couldn't be happier. A new Gallup poll shows Americans are happier today than they have been in decades; Republicans beat Democrats and Independents in the contentment quotient by substantial margins ( http://www.xxxchurch.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4808).
The only hiccup since those behind the scenes picked the late B movie actor, Ronald Reagan, to star in their movie was Bill Clinton. Am I one of the happy Republicans? No. I loathe the entire Bush family for what they and their accomplices are doing to our country, but I do give them credit for having a plan and working that plan. It seems to me that the actions of a sociopath like George W. Bush would come as no surprise to anyone, but I guess that's not the case.

Bob Miller

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» RE: Where's The Mystery ...Not to us Posted by: Captainmagic
» RE: Where's The Mystery Posted by: chief of okeefe
Progress by Gunbarrel
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 16, 2006 11:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes there is progress in Iraq. Geo. Bush has progressed the death rate for Iraqis ten fold. He has expanded the Iraqi People's hatred for us and themselves to great levels. He's progressed their oil out from under them and he's not done yet. Before the next election he will progress another 9/11 style attack so he can repeel the amendment that allows for only two terms as president.
With Iraq in shambles,he will progress his intrests to other Nations. Mostly African ones. There will be a few 'token' saber
rattlings at Syria and Iran,but the plan's in the works for Russia and China to progress those two. Africa's an easier target because most of the Countries have been desimated by famine and disease. Or in the military vein;
The severly debilitated populace represents an opposition that could be easily overcome,with a few thousand men,and about a billion and a half dollars. They also have WMD's stashed under the rotting corpses.
These bastards are after only one thing. Conquest of the entire planet. Bush isn't into Nation Building,he's into Nation Conquest. He cares not for anyone in his own Country,unless you're packing cash up his ass. He has little regard for Human Life or for that matter his alledged 'Rule of Law' thinking. The weak use the 'Rule of Law'as governance. True Humans are 'governed' by a code that's higher than anything that could be legislated. George don't know it,niehter does most of the NSC,the Congress,or the Supreme Court.
We are not the People that are going to put up with this sham of a governance. We are the People that will see for the first time, an outgoing president marched straight into jail after the election. We will be the first People to send one of our own leaders to the Hague for Crimes Against Humanity.
We will be the First People the sieze all profits made by corrupt companies swindling the taxpayers and committing Treason for the sake of Profit,Plunder and Control.
We will be the First People in History that will reshape it's Govt,restore the People's Liberty,and secure a truer Freedom
than we have had since before 1492. We will be the First People that will bring down a criminal governance without having to kill them. We will be the First People to restore true Peace to the People of the World. I think that's progress.

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» RE: Progress by Gunbarrel Posted by: thinkverybig
ITMFA
Posted by: chief of okeefe on Mar 17, 2006 7:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Write it everywhere!

On sidewalks, on walls, on the sides of cars with W stickers!

Fight the power!

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Bush Is A Madman
Posted by: doneman2000 on Mar 19, 2006 5:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With an administration based on LIES LIES and more LIES who knows when to believe what they have to say. The worst president in history...without question.

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Statesmen
Posted by: frank67 on Apr 10, 2006 11:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George W Bush makes the folowing presidents look like great statesmen: Polk, Buchannan, Harding, Hoover, and Reagan.

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