Well, that’s history.
That’s the
past. That’s talking about what happened before. What we should be talking about
is what we’re going to do now.” The man who spoke those words is Sen. John
McCain, and the subject was the Iraq war and its origins in official falsehood, strategic
error and wishful thinking. Expect to hear him repeat those same dismissive
phrases again and again as the presidential campaign unfolds.
Understandably, the presumptive Republican nominee prefers to avoid
examining how our finest young people and vast amounts of our national treasure
came to be squandered in the Middle Eastern desert, since he was among the war’s
most excited advocates.
There were no weapons of mass destruction found
in Iraq (as some of us were not
surprised to learn) and, in particular, no nuclear weapons under construction as
advertised. There were no significant connections between Al Qaeda and the
regime of Saddam Hussein (as the Pentagon reaffirmed in a recent intelligence
analysis). There was no legal basis for an invasion. There was no population
inviting us to occupy their country as liberators. Yes, it’s all “history,” or
at least it will be someday, and the historians will properly record McCain’s
role in the fiasco with all due asperity. But on the fifth anniversary of the
war, it is a little too easy to dismiss everything that led us to this point as
“what happened before.”
With the Arizona senator fresh from a congressional trip to Baghdad—where
he preened for the photo ops along with two of his campaign co-chairs, Sen.
Joseph Lieberman and Sen. Lindsey Graham— this is certainly an appropriate
moment to evaluate the judgment of the politicians who have promoted the whole
enterprise and the consequences of their decision.
How Wrong They Were
How
mistaken were the war’s optimistic promoters in 2003? The official line on the
expected cost of rebuilding Iraq after ousting Saddam was just less than $2 billion,
according to testimony provided by Bush administration officials. That estimate
did not include the likelihood, according to Paul Wolfowitz, the then-deputy
secretary of defense, of whether Iraq’s oil reserves would cover the entire cost of invasion,
occupation and reconstruction. Five years later, the estimated cost of the war
to American taxpayers is well more than $2 trillion, including the care we must
provide for wounded Americans over the next few decades. Much of the Iraqi oil,
of which production remains sporadic, is being stolen and smuggled away.
The difference between an estimate of $2 billion and a cost of $2
trillion could be considered a significant miscalculation, even in a Republican
government. Yet those figures don’t quite reckon with the real costs, which
should include the rise in the price of oil from around $36 a barrel in March
2003 to well more than $100 a barrel this month. Some economists go further,
blaming the subprime mortgage collapse—and the ensuing deluge of bad paper that
may capsize the world economy—on the effects of the war.
What did we get
for all our money and blood? What diplomatic and strategic achievements can we
attribute to the war? The conflict over Israel and Palestine has grown more
intractable, with the rising influence of Hamas and Hezbollah. The influence of
Iran, an avowed enemy of the United
States, has risen across the region and penetrated deep into Iraq, where our occupation props up Tehran’s allies. The
U.S. military has been badly depleted and demoralized, while our global prestige
has dropped.
Still, McCain tells us—and reportedly assured the Iraqi prime minister—of his intentions if elected president. “What we’re going to do now is continue this strategy,” he said, “which is succeeding in Iraq and we are carrying out the goals of the surge …”
The
announced aim of last year’s troop escalation was to create sufficient stability
in Iraq to permit the Shia, Kurds,
Sunni and other political leaders to consolidate a government, provide decent
public services and begin reconciliation. Gen. David Petraeus, the
commander of U.S. forces there, has acknowledged that the progress toward those
objectives is far from satisfactory. Based on the originally stated purpose, the
surge isn’t succeeding. Predictably, the level of violence in Iraq is rising again, with the daily death toll in March so
far doubled from its low point in January.
It is telling when a
presidential candidate speaks so dismissively of history and urges us to ignore
“what happened before.” In this instance, it is a sign of bad faith and worse
judgment. © 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com.
Sat., Nov. 22, 2008, 9 PM - Midnight. Maxies Southern Comfort, 6732 W. Fairview Ave., Milwaukee, WI. No Cover. Check out www.libertybluegrassband.com for all the lastest info.