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Subject: What arrogance and stupidity?
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 10/26/2006 11:01:17 PM
What arrogance and stupidity?
By Linda S. Heard, Special to Gulf News
What could US State Department official Alberto Fernandez possibly
have meant when he blamed his own government for "arrogance" and "stupidity"
in Iraq? The White House is so overcome with disbelief that its spokesmen
are claiming Fernandez' words were lost in translation as he was, after all,
speaking in Arabic for the benefit of Al Jazeera's viewers.
That must be it then. Fernandez probably meant "conceited" and just
plain "dumb" when we take into the account the richly textured nuances of
the Arabic language. But let's stick with the official version. According to
the Encarta Dictionary, "arrogance" equates to "a strong feeling of proud
self-importance that is expressed by treating other people with contempt or
disregard". How does that fit?
Some might say invading on a fabricated tissue of mendacity, moving
viceroys into presidential palaces, dismantling an entire army, dismissing
civil servants, distributing crony reconstruction contracts, inserting
puppet governments, shooting civilians at checkpoints, sexually abusing
prisoners, torturing, murdering and raping could be construed as a
teeny-weeny bit "arrogant".
Moving on to "stupidity" which the Encarta defines as a "lack of
intelligence, perception, or common sense" it seems to me that the Bush
administration is guilty as charged. The belief that Iraqis would relish
being referred to as "rag-heads" by their trigger-happy occupiers and turn
into Sweden overnight showed an extreme lack of intelligence, perception and
common sense on the part of Washington's armchair warriors.
Now a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee Senator Jack Reed
has added a new addition to the pessimistic lexicon describing Bush's Iraq
policy as a "failure".
Anarchy and chaos
Waging a war of choice and sacrificing 665,000 lives - not to mention
$336 billion - in the name of democracy when all that has been achieved is
anarchy and chaos could, indeed, fall into the failure category.
Aficionados of the neoconservative creed may still believe the end is
worth the means but, in truth, the future looks gloomy. According to the
United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), more than three million Iraqis forced
to flee their homes are facing "a very bleak future".
At the same time, Iraq's health service has disintegrated due to the
deaths of over 2,000 doctors and nurses while 18,000 medical personnel have
fled.
Billions earmarked to reconstruct clinics and hospitals have
disappeared into the ether and essential equipments and drugs are simply not
available. Patrick Cockburn, writing in the Independent, says Iraq's
hospitals are now "a battleground in the bloody civil war".
Even America's Commander-in-Chief George W. Bush is no longer able to
spin the situation on the ground. During a television interview, he
hesitantly agreed with New York Times' columnist Thomas L. Friedman's
comment (published also in Gulf News on October 19 titled "Barney and
Baghdad") that Iraq was the "jihadist equivalent" of the Tet Offensive in
Vietnam - credited for turning public opinion against the war .
The president was only making the point that "the enemy is trying to
affect the psyche of Americans", later explained one of the loyal White
House spinmeisters in a valiant attempt at damage control.
But there surely comes a point when no amount of sugar-coating will
work. A leaked report from the Iraq Study Group, set up by Congress and
headed by James Baker, rejects the argument for "staying the course". It
even goes as far as to suggest Iraq's neighbours, Iran and Syria, should be
drawn into the equation. America's allies are emerging out of their
sycophantic stupor too.
Terrorist threat
A respected Australian former diplomat Richard Woolcott said the war
has increased the terrorist threat to his country. While calling for an
urgent exit strategy he accused the US, Britain and Australia of "having
made a catastrophic foreign and security policy blunder" that has them
"trapped in a dilemma of their own making".
Head of the British Army General Sir Richard Dannatt went a step
further calling for the withdrawal of occupation troops whose presence, he
says, exacerbates security problems.
"We are in a Muslim country and Muslims' views of foreigners in their
country are quite clear," he said. "As a foreigner, you can be welcomed by
being invited into a country, but we weren't invited, certainly by those in
Iraq at the time. Let's face it. The military campaign we fought in 2003
effectively kicked the door in."
Finally someone at the top has not only got it but is prepared to put
his neck on the line to deliver the message. In the face of so much
overwhelming evidence and analysis put forward by respected diplomats,
generals, intelligence agencies and think tanks will Bush reconsider his
strategy?
Despite conferring with his top advisers and generals last week, the
answer is a resounding no. The mission is "clear and unchanging" said Bush.
"Our goal is victory" and we will "not pull our troops off the battlefield
before the mission is complete".
Where is Alberto Fernandez when he's needed? If that isn't arrogance
and stupidity then I don't know what is. How many Iraqi civilians and
soldiers need to be sacrificed just to save George W. Bush's face? With the
mid-term elections on the horizon let's hope Bush and the loyalists within
his government and party get to pay a long overdue price.
Linda S. Heard is a specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She can
be contacted at lheard@gulfnews.com
--
"The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or
religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence.
Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do." - Samuel P.
Huntington
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