Going from bad to worse



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 15 Mar 2006 06:19:38 PM
Object: Going from bad to worse
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/blog/2006/03/going_from_bad_to_worse.html
Going from bad to worse
March 15, 2006
By DOUG THOMPSON
Nearly three years ago the United States of America took the
unprecedented step of invading a country that posed no immediate
threat to our security, launching a war based on fabricated
intelligence, false assumptions and outright lies.
Today, as that country plunges headlong into civil war, our leaders
continue to fabricate claims of improvements, make false promises of
progress and lie outright about our prospects.
Their missteps have cost thousands of American lives along with the
lives of tens of thousands of innocent civilians.
Because of the Iraq war, America is less safe than before September
11, 2001, more reviled throughout the world as an arrogant bully that
ignores its own self-professed concern for human rights or integrity,
and that has become a laughing stock among the intelligence agencies
of other nations.
While the Bush administration claims progress, insurgent attacks are
on the rise and Iraqis, in general, are worse off then they were
before the U.S. invaded three years ago.
The Brookings Institution, which tracks progress (or the lack of it)
in Iraq, reports power outages plague the country and fewer Iraqis
have electricity now than before the war.
Fewer have access to clean water or a sanitary sewer system.
"This winter is the first time I am generally discouraged about
economic trends in Iraq," Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow in foreign
policy studies at Brookings, told Lisa Zagalori of McClatchy
Newspapers this week.
"While there is some good news, for the first time there is no more
good news than bad news," he added.
The U.S. has spent $21 billion to supposedly rebuild Iraq and nobody
is really sure where the money went or what such spending has
accomplished, if any.
Retired Rear Admiral David J. Nash, who headed the office to oversee
reconstruction of Iraq, now admits that if there was a plan to rebuild
Iraq it never got to him and his office started with a "blank sheet of
paper."
After nearly three years, those on the ground in Iraq say that paper
is still blank.
Stuart Bowen Jr., special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction,
says the effort to rebuild Iraq is, by and large, a failure.
"The lethal environment in Iraq continues to pose extraordinary
challenges to reconstruction contractors," Bowen admits.
And that "lethal environment" is getting worse, not better.
"For the last 18 months, we've been in a low-grade civil war," says
former Associated Press and New York Times reporter Christopher
Albritton, now blogging from Iraq.
"The Askariya bombing kicked us up to 'medium-grade,' I guess you
might call it. Both Sunnis and Shi'a I've spoken with are waiting and
preparing for it, and that very preparation might make for a
self-fulfilling prophecy. For too many Iraqis, it's only a matter of
time."
Some American commanders on the ground saw the trouble coming but
their concerns were ignored at the Pentagon where the battle plan
called for dealing with the meaningless resistance from Saddam
Hussein's defunct Republican Guard while ignoring the more real threat
of the Fedayeen, the grassroots militant group that continues to fight
and disrupt today.
"The unexpected tenacity of the Fedayeen in the battles of Nasiriyah,
Samawa, Najaf and other towns on the road to Baghdad was an early
indication that the adversary was not merely Saddam Hussein's vaunted
Republican Guard," writes New York Times reporter Michael Gordon and
retired Gen. Bernard Trainor in their new book, Cobra II.
"But while many officers in the field assessed the Fedayeen as a
dogged foe, Gen. Tommy Franks and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
saw them as little more than speed bumps on the way to Baghdad," they
add.
A Mossad officer tells me the U.S. intelligence agencies never
understood Saddam Hussein or the Middle East and the CIA is a
"laughing stock" among other world spy organizations.
"CIA and NSA have become too dependent on high tech gizmos and
analysis and don't have enough feet on the ground in sensitive areas
to fully understand the mindset of their enemies," she says.
"They watch CNN and stare at their computer screens and think this is
how to gather intelligence. It is not."
Americans on the ground in Iraq aren't laughing.
They're dying and will continue to die in a war based on threats that
did not exist, launched by dishonest leaders with private agendas and
managed by Pentagon-bound generals who will not listen.
Iraq is not the only country worse off than before the invasion.
So is the country that invaded it, a once-proud nation turned
international bully, a nation that can no longer call itself the home
of the brave or the land of the free -- The United States of America.
______________________________________________________
Harry
.


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