Posted on Sun, Jul. 06, 2003
Editorial | Bring reality on
Continued hubris in high places heightens risks for U.S. soldiers in Iraq.
"Bring 'em on"?
U.S. soldiers are dying and dodging guerrilla bullets in a hot and hostile
country and their commander-in-chief says, "Bring 'em on"?
Mr. President, do you live in a play house or the White House?
No matter how Ari Fleischer tries to spin it, childish taunts such as that
are not the calibrated words demanded of the United States president at this
turn of history's wheel.
Calibrated does not mean sterile or soft. But a president's words have
global impact. And these words have people here and abroad scratching their
heads about this war that's supposedly over, but clearly continues.
The President's macho quip rankles in particular because American troops
have been put at greater risk by the awful U.S. planning for Iraq
post-Saddam. From the moment U.S. forces so ably captured the Iraqi capital,
it was the United States' legal and moral obligation to act as provider and
protector of the Iraqi citizens with whom the President always said we had
no quarrel.
Instead, there's been as much chaos as calm, as much pillaging as progress.
As of Thursday afternoon, combat deaths since the May 1 "end" of the war
stood at 25 American and 14 British soldiers.
The tumult has led the U.S. reconstruction chief in Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, to
request more troops and civilian personnel.
That recommendation slammed headlong into a familiar problem: the
unwillingness of top administration officials to let reality intrude on
their hubris. In fact, the President's quip came as he ridiculed those who
suggest more troops are needed to stabilize Iraq.
Vice President Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz assured America before the war that
Iraqis would gladly welcome U.S. troops. They assumed Iraqis would
gratefully accept the Iraqi exiles the Bush team had handpicked as Saddam's
replacements. They predicted a smooth transition to democracy requiring no
help from individual nations or the United Nations, and little investment of
American dollars, thanks to Iraqi oil riches.
The reality evolving on the ground is vastly different from that gauzy
picture. Yet those officials still seem loathe to admit any mistakes.
So here are a few items, call it a get-real list, to get the Bush team's
head out of the clouds and into the hot and hostile reality where U.S.
soldiers bravely toil on:
Get real about the number of U.S. troops needed to establish and maintain
order for months to come. Retiring Army Chief of Staff Eric Shinseki
estimates that as many as 300,000 soldiers might be needed. (Current troop
size is about 158,000.)
Get real about the full scope of reconstructing Iraq - its cost and
duration. Repeating a sound bite - "As long as it takes, and not a moment
longer" - is no answer. It's political camouflage. Americans don't expect
exact promises, just reasonable estimates. The U.N. Development Program says
reconstruction could cost $30 billion over two-and-a-half years (not
including the tab for U.S. troops). The Council on Foreign Relations
projected $20 billion a year for at least 10 years. Is that true? If so,
then...
Get real about cutting taxes. The incumbent is the only president in the
nation's history to cut taxes in the middle of a hot war. Now, the only
thing soaring higher than presidential rhetoric about freedom is the
country's deficit. And those tardy Iraqi oil revenues have been spent
several times over by U.S. planners. So...
Get real about spurning the value of the United Nations. Responses from U.S.
pleas for help from other nations have been skimpy. Officials in India
reportedly want a "better understanding" of U.S. plans for Iraqi civil order
and democracy before committing. Who can blame them?
Get real about the democratic aspirations you unwisely inflated among the
long-oppressed, divided Iraqi population. Sure, it would have been smarter
to get electricity flowing, the streets safe, courts and banks operating
before launching into risky elections. But now America has made promises.
Reneging on them only puts its troops at greater peril.
The trick here is to persuade people without jobs, water or phones to be
patient. One hint: Don't use he-man colloquialisms that suggest you see the
situation as Americans vs. Iraqis.
Finally, get real about admitting mistakes, about reliance on wildly
optimistic scenarios. That's the only path to effective remedies.
So much rides on this gamble. Not just the future of Iraq, though that alone
is vital. American credibility. Middle East peace. The war on terror.
Despite the White House's hype and flim-flammery, there were decent
arguments to fight this war. The initial battle was swiftly won. But America
may now stand on the edge of blunders of colossal scope.
At such moments, an American president needs to do better, much better,
than: "Bring 'em on."
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/editorial/6239952.htm
--
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired,
signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and are not clothed."
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
April 16, 1953
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