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Chicago Sun Times, July 29, 2005
Neck
Deep in the Big Muddy
by Andrew Greeley
The Big Muddy is deeper and darker. Two Pentagon
reports this week show just how muddy. In a
survey of the morale of soldiers in Iraq, the
Pentagon found that more than half said that
morale in their units was either "low"
or "very low." Morale was especially
low, as one would have expected, among the
National Guard and Reserve units. Only half
of them said they had "real confidence"
in their ability to carry out their mission,
probably because they were not trained for
the kind of war in which they are involved.
Another report raises questions about the development
of the Iraqi fighting units. Half of the police
units are still in training and cannot conduct
combat operations. The other half, and two-thirds
of the army battalions, are only partially
capable of combat and then only with the help
of Americans.
The American military, representing the combat
power of the world's "Only Superpower,"
is patently unable to stop the murderous suicide
bombers and seems clueless about a strategy
that might stop them. Would-be "martyrs"
have paralyzed our forces. One cannot use tanks
or jets or predator planes or artillery, much
less nuclear weapons, against a stream of dedicated
young fanatics sneaking across a porous border.
In the meantime, the Iraqi parliament, working
erratically on their constitution, has decided
to abrogate most of the rights of women in
their preliminary constitution and to subject
them to "Religious Law." That means
in the new "democracy" that we are
supporting in Iraq women will be more subject
to male oppression than they were under Saddam
Hussein. This is what our young men and women
are dying for in Iraq?
People with yellow ribbons say we must support
our troops. I agree completely. The best way
to support them is to get them out of a war
justified by falsehoods and carried out by
incompetents who have tried to do it on the
cheap with no idea of what they would have
to face after Saddam's regime was knocked over.
We must stay the course, President Bush says,
but he won't specify what the course is.
One hears from the media military experts there
will be a drawing down of troop numbers next
summer. That would just in time for the November
election. The administration may then have
decided to follow the Warren Austin advice
during the Vietnam war -- proclaim victory
and go home. They had better have a large supply
of helicopters available around the U.S. embassy
so we don't have photographs of large numbers
of our allies desperately trying to climb on
when the last copter takes off -- as they did
in Saigon.
The suicide bombs in Iraq kill Iraqis, but they
are aimed at American occupation and will end
only when the occupation ends. Conservative
columnists and editorial writers are screaming
that the suicide bombers in London are not
angry over Iraq; they rather want to destroy
our way of life. But their own testimony seems
to be that they are protesting the treatment
of Muslims in Iraq and Palestine. Tony Blair,
the loyal junior partner in the Anglo-American
alliance, is paying the price for this crazy
war. When the coalition leaves Iraq the bombings
in England will stop just they will in Iraq.
The screamers will say that means the "martyrs"
will have defeated us. That's precisely right.
They are in the process of defeating us in
a war that we cannot possibly win, the war
that Bush needed so he could become a wartime
president. Many of those who say the war was
a mistake in the first place still argue that
it would be wrong to leave now. Unless the
Bush administration can find a way to stop
the suicide bombers -- other than the president's
"disgust" -- we have no choice but
to get out of the Big Muddy now.
What idiocy not to expect that the attacks on
Israel by suicide bombers would spread because
of the war and occupation in Iraq. Why is anyone
surprised? The president tells us that they
"disgust" him. Hooray for him. His
supporters call them crazy fanatics as they
may well be. But calling them names and demanding
that the world denounce them will not put a
stop to their attacks. They are beating us,
and we are apparently unable to stop them,
save by promising to stay the course. That
is terribly frustrating to Americans, but that's
a price they must pay for a criminal war.
© 2005 Chicago Sun Times
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