Decider Bush's Czar is a Joke. Gen. Fix-it or Gen. Exit?



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 18 May 2007 09:37:28 AM
Object: Decider Bush's Czar is a Joke. Gen. Fix-it or Gen. Exit?
From a Seattle Times editorial, 5/18/07:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/editorialsopinion/2003711437_czared18.html
Gen. Fix-it or Gen. Exit?
Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute takes on the oddest job in Washington.
Ostensibly, he is President Bush's war czar to oversee fighting in
Iraq and Afghanistan, but he really has been promoted to a hopeless,
futile position.
None of the descriptions appended to his task sound accurate.
He is a three-star general in a four-star world, and he will be a
deputy national-security adviser.
Emphasis on deputy.
He will not have the unlimited power of a czar or the authority of a
referee to call operational or policy fouls.
Lute will attempt to coordinate a war with no discernible strategy.
Why is this job necessary going into the fifth year of a disastrous
conflict?
The question may sound as if it answers itself, but it begs another
question:
Where is the president, variously self-described as the commander and
the decider for the war?
Did the secretary of defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, secretary of
state and Lute's immediate boss, national-security adviser Stephen
Hadley, fall off the face of the Earth?
Lute will not manage any of those folks, nor is he likely to boss
around senior commanders in the field.
One cannot imagine Army Gen. David Petraeus deferring to a
junior-ranking interloper in Washington, D.C.
Creation of the job reveals a sad truth and hearty measures of wishful
thinking.
For four bloody years of fighting in Iraq, key players in the top
military and civilian tiers of the Bush administration would not or
could not talk to one another.
Lute is a desperate attempt to bridge those gaps.
Subject to Senate confirmation, he will make the best of a job with no
direct budget authority and no control over the civilian and military
tasks needed to advance a war policy that is not defined by the
administration.
Lute does bring superior skills in operations, coordinating and
carrying out complicated assignments.
He is the perfect choice to start lining up the C-130 transports for
removing troops and equipment from Iraq.
Maybe he was not hired to be Gen. Fix-it, but more as Gen. Exit.
________________________________________________
Harry
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