| EDITORIAL, National Catholic Reporter,
March 17, 2006
Bring the troops
home
Iraq is spiraling downward toward
total disaster.
As Jeff Severn Guntzels report in this
weeks issue demonstrates, some of Iraqs
most valuable human assets -- its intellectuals
and middle-class professionals, as well as
large numbers of the poorer and less educated
-- have left, perhaps for good, fleeing a deteriorating
civil society and persistent, unpredictable
violence.
Iraq was to be Exhibit A in the neoconservative
scheme for projecting American power into the
rest of the world at the start of the 21st
century, the first stop on the way toward asserting
U.S. authority and a new order in the Middle
East. As if the Middle East had not had enough
tampering by the West in the last century.
Save for an initial invasion against a military
force that was obviously uninspired, ill-equipped
and disorganized, little has gone well. That
is not surprising. The military mission in
Iraq has been hard to define, based from the
outset on manipulated intelligence and false
claims as well as the absurd belief that a
force trained to destroy could also build a
civil society.
Once it was clear no weapons of mass destruction
existed, the reason for the invasion moved
quickly among the stacked up justifications.
We were removing a dictator, protecting oil
fields, spreading democracy, fighting terrorists
connected to 9/11 (a tough sell, persistent
as Vice President Cheney was, since Iraq really
had nothing to do with 9/11) and later just
fighting terrorists (who have, since the war
has gone badly, found Iraq to be a land of
great opportunity).
All the differences notwithstanding, Iraq in
many ways has become the Vietnam of the new
century: An enemy difficult to find or to describe,
a land difficult to bring under control, a
cause difficult to articulate, a war that really
cant be won in any conventional sense.
The exodus from Vietnam occurred mostly by boat,
with the middle class often held up for every
cent by government extortionists before being
allowed to escape.
In Iraq, the exodus is to nearby countries, where
a semblance of security might be found, often
after shadowy kidnappers have extorted what
wealth might still exist.
This page has opposed the war all along, arguing
that the country was already under severe stress
from the initial invasion and more than 10
ensuing years of bombing and severe sanctions;
that as bloody as Saddam was, he was not singular,
or particularly dangerous to the outside, as
dictators go; that the world had agreed to
sanctions and to maintaining pressure on the
regime; that the inspectors had found no weapons
of mass destruction; that the countrys
military and infrastructure had been virtually
destroyed by our previous and ongoing military
operations; and that undesirable as Saddam
was, Iraq in many ways represented the most
progressive and least religiously extreme Arab
country in the Middle East.
Even so, we were willing to consider the arguments
of those who said that any quick retreat prior
to establishing some semblance of reliable
security would simply set up the conditions
for civil war and utter anarchy. That rationale,
however, becomes less convincing by the week.
The increase in sectarian violence, the apparent
ease with which assassins operate and with
which arms and personnel flow into and around
the country and the growing pressure from inside
the United States and among its few allies
to bring home the troops all make it unlikely
that the struggle in Iraq will come to a clean
conclusion any time soon.
With public confidence steadily declining in
the administrations approach both to
Iraq and the wider, ill-defined war on terror,
it also is unlikely that U.S. citizenry will
support the drain in lives and treasury required
to maintain any substantial presence in Iraq.
The invasion of Iraq, hindsight clearly shows,
was ill-conceived, based on false premises
and lacking consideration of deep cultural
forces that are not easily assuaged by the
Bush vision of democracy. What began more than
a decade and a half ago as a clear campaign
to protect access to oil resources in the region
has drifted from purpose to violent purpose
over the years.
Iraq is in tatters, and the United States doesnt
have the money or troops necessary to lock
down or secure an entire country for the foreseeable
future. It is time to articulate a clear path
of disengagement. It is time to bring our kids
home, to stop throwing more of them at a desperate
fight for unclear purposes.
National Catholic Reporter, March 17, 2006
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