Shorter Liz Cheney Wash Po Op-ed: Osama bad. Hillary bad. Daddy good.
Shorter Dick Cheney CNN Interview: The operation was a success; unfortunately, the patient died.
Thursday, January 25, 2007
Monday, January 22, 2007
Apres Moi
Am I mistaken in getting a whiff of fatalism coming out of the Bush Administration? Certainly the news coverage suggests more than a usual cynicism about the administrations motives and actions. If I can sum up the general narrative, it seems to be that the last election has alerted the B/C apparatchiks that there may be consequences for the their actions, and their efforts now are to stave off those consequences as long as possible.
Item 1: Iraq. Every time Bush thinks about Iraq, he has visions of the helicopters taking off from the roof of the Saigon embassy. Jerry Ford's funeral must have brought this vision uncomfortably close. The cynical spin on the surge is that it is a feeble effort that will have poor if any results. It bears all the hallmarks of Bush's great adventure--poorly thought out, inadequately resourced, based on little or no intelligence and ungrounded in the reality of the situation. No matter how brilliant a general Petreaus is, he doesn't have a partner in the Iraqis. To the extent that it looks like this is the last hurrah, then he will have even fewer partners. But hard fighting--with the spike in American deaths that will result--will only make the political situation in the US worse. To the extent that there is any strategy at all, it must be to lose ugly, and blame the Democrats for failure. (If today's lame Washington Post op-ed piece by Liz Cheney is any indication, the only plan the B/C folks have is to hope that everyone will forget that they've been in charge for six years and they can blame the defeat on some Fifth Column of people who don't want to win. As if pointing out that Bush's great Iraq adventure is going down the tubes is the equivalent to wanting it to go down the tubes. With these people, telling the truth is always wrong.)
I don't think that will work. For almost 4 years, this has been entirely a Republican war. No Democrats were at the podium when Bush gave his "Mission Accomplished" speech. If the Democrats came out of Vietnam with the stink of military failure it was because the public knew that the war was Lyndon Johnson and Robert McNamara's war, that the Democrats dealt brutally with the voices within their own party that wanted the war to end. The party was ever after divided, the victim of its own pre-1968 rhetoric. Nixon failed to solve the Democrats problem. If the Democrats inherit this war, the public will understand in its marrow who lost it and will expect nothing more of the Democrats than an exit--honorable, if possible.
Second, things appear to be moving too fast on the ground. 20,000 troops might have made a difference in March of 2003, when the Iraqis looted and we simply stood by. Whatever is happening now, we are on the sidelines, powerful and dangerous to the players, but not their main concern. The two sides are squared off and fighting to the death; we're important only in so far as we can provide aid or can retard their efforts.
At this point, it is impossible to tell what victory would look like. What would failure look like? I believe when it comes it will be swift and terrible. No one has planned for reversals or how to get out--anyone in the military who had would have been cut off at the knees by Rumsfield and his cronies. What happens when one of the brigades gets isolated and slaughtered or captured? What happens if the Baghdad airport should fall to insurgents, or be cut off from the rest of Iraq? It sounds as if Petreaus figures its going to take him some time to get up to speed once he's in Baghdad. Best guess they are giving is that it will take at least six months to see results. (About the general on a white horse: the criticism of Petreaus on PBS tonight by Col. Douglas MacGregor (Ret.), U.S. Army, was withering--a history of failure in Iraq.) What's going to stop the downward spiral in the meantime?
What will we see--troops making a mad dash for Kuwait and Kurdistan? I recall the shock and dismay when Jimmy Carter's attempt to rescue the hostages crashed and burned in the desert. The public didn't give him any props for that one. But he was able to absorb defeat and move on. The Bushies are going to want to launch World War 3--even if they don't have anyone to launch it against. If it comes to this impasse, we're going to have major constitutional and institutional problems--who in the Pentagon is going to go along with some desperate measure?
Item 2: The missing DAs. Why is the Justice department firing successful district attorneys? It can't be just to put some political hack in to polish his/her resume, although that would be a bonus. It sure sounds like the they want to gum up the works on some investigations which will show how US security was for sale to the highest bidder. Investigations which will go from bought congressmen to bought CIA officials and to bought Defense Department officials. These are scandals that are all too close to the scandal that is the Iraq war.
The problem is that the administration only has hacks to put into these positions. That will only anger career staff and increase the leaks of misconduct. Will they be able to keep the lid on before there are calls that Alberto Gonzales be impeached for obstruction of justice?
Finally: the Scooter Libby Trial. Events at the trial today suggest that these crooks and liars may not be able to outrun the consequences of their actions. The Libby trial seems set to showcase an administration in meltdown. There was no more shameful and dangerous act these people committed than revealing an undercover CIA operative's name for a purely partisan reason. Now questions are being raised about whether Dick Cheney should resign. Liz had better be sharpening her pencil--she'll need to do better than sputter with outrage to win this battle.
Item 1: Iraq. Every time Bush thinks about Iraq, he has visions of the helicopters taking off from the roof of the Saigon embassy. Jerry Ford's funeral must have brought this vision uncomfortably close. The cynical spin on the surge is that it is a feeble effort that will have poor if any results. It bears all the hallmarks of Bush's great adventure--poorly thought out, inadequately resourced, based on little or no intelligence and ungrounded in the reality of the situation. No matter how brilliant a general Petreaus is, he doesn't have a partner in the Iraqis. To the extent that it looks like this is the last hurrah, then he will have even fewer partners. But hard fighting--with the spike in American deaths that will result--will only make the political situation in the US worse. To the extent that there is any strategy at all, it must be to lose ugly, and blame the Democrats for failure. (If today's lame Washington Post op-ed piece by Liz Cheney is any indication, the only plan the B/C folks have is to hope that everyone will forget that they've been in charge for six years and they can blame the defeat on some Fifth Column of people who don't want to win. As if pointing out that Bush's great Iraq adventure is going down the tubes is the equivalent to wanting it to go down the tubes. With these people, telling the truth is always wrong.)
I don't think that will work. For almost 4 years, this has been entirely a Republican war. No Democrats were at the podium when Bush gave his "Mission Accomplished" speech. If the Democrats came out of Vietnam with the stink of military failure it was because the public knew that the war was Lyndon Johnson and Robert McNamara's war, that the Democrats dealt brutally with the voices within their own party that wanted the war to end. The party was ever after divided, the victim of its own pre-1968 rhetoric. Nixon failed to solve the Democrats problem. If the Democrats inherit this war, the public will understand in its marrow who lost it and will expect nothing more of the Democrats than an exit--honorable, if possible.
Second, things appear to be moving too fast on the ground. 20,000 troops might have made a difference in March of 2003, when the Iraqis looted and we simply stood by. Whatever is happening now, we are on the sidelines, powerful and dangerous to the players, but not their main concern. The two sides are squared off and fighting to the death; we're important only in so far as we can provide aid or can retard their efforts.
At this point, it is impossible to tell what victory would look like. What would failure look like? I believe when it comes it will be swift and terrible. No one has planned for reversals or how to get out--anyone in the military who had would have been cut off at the knees by Rumsfield and his cronies. What happens when one of the brigades gets isolated and slaughtered or captured? What happens if the Baghdad airport should fall to insurgents, or be cut off from the rest of Iraq? It sounds as if Petreaus figures its going to take him some time to get up to speed once he's in Baghdad. Best guess they are giving is that it will take at least six months to see results. (About the general on a white horse: the criticism of Petreaus on PBS tonight by Col. Douglas MacGregor (Ret.), U.S. Army, was withering--a history of failure in Iraq.) What's going to stop the downward spiral in the meantime?
What will we see--troops making a mad dash for Kuwait and Kurdistan? I recall the shock and dismay when Jimmy Carter's attempt to rescue the hostages crashed and burned in the desert. The public didn't give him any props for that one. But he was able to absorb defeat and move on. The Bushies are going to want to launch World War 3--even if they don't have anyone to launch it against. If it comes to this impasse, we're going to have major constitutional and institutional problems--who in the Pentagon is going to go along with some desperate measure?
Item 2: The missing DAs. Why is the Justice department firing successful district attorneys? It can't be just to put some political hack in to polish his/her resume, although that would be a bonus. It sure sounds like the they want to gum up the works on some investigations which will show how US security was for sale to the highest bidder. Investigations which will go from bought congressmen to bought CIA officials and to bought Defense Department officials. These are scandals that are all too close to the scandal that is the Iraq war.
The problem is that the administration only has hacks to put into these positions. That will only anger career staff and increase the leaks of misconduct. Will they be able to keep the lid on before there are calls that Alberto Gonzales be impeached for obstruction of justice?
Finally: the Scooter Libby Trial. Events at the trial today suggest that these crooks and liars may not be able to outrun the consequences of their actions. The Libby trial seems set to showcase an administration in meltdown. There was no more shameful and dangerous act these people committed than revealing an undercover CIA operative's name for a purely partisan reason. Now questions are being raised about whether Dick Cheney should resign. Liz had better be sharpening her pencil--she'll need to do better than sputter with outrage to win this battle.
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Entitled to Enabling Behavior
One of the more curious arguments made by President Bush on behalf of his surge policy is the insistence that the Democrats who oppose the surge must put forward their own plan for victory.
The argument, as many have pointed out, is both logically and factually challenged. Factually, the Bush surge plan is not the only one on the table. The Baker-Hamilton Commission, Senator Joseph Biden and Congressman John Murtha have all proposed alternatives to the current policy. And why, logically, should the Democrats be the ones to pull Bush's bacon from the fire? Opponents of the war have argued from the beginning that it was a bad idea, that it would lead to sectarian violence and destabilize the region. Now US Senator Jim Webb made this argument explicitly in a Washington Post Op Ed in 2002, as did former Vice President Al Gore in a September 23, 2002 speech. Those who argued against the war were attacked in the most vociferous, no holds bars terms, dismissed as stupid and ignorant. The administration didn't hesitate to name undercover CIA operatives in an effort to silence critics. The administration can hardly expect those who worked so vigorously to silence to now buy into their failed enterprise.
So if the argument is patently absurd, what is going on? The prevailing view seems to be that this is mere rhetorical swordplay, and with the number of Republicans, from press secretary Tony Snow on down, repeating the talking points, that's probably part of what is going on.
But I think that there is something more. I think Bush genuinely believes that it is other people's job to bale him out when he gets in a fix. That is, after all, his life history. Drunk driving ticket? Fix it. Problem with the selective service? Nice berth in the National Guard comes along. Doesn't show up for duty? No problem. Oil business in financial trouble? Here comes Harken. Needs to bail on Harken? Wow, some sucker wants to buy my worthless stock. Couldn't win the popular vote in Florida. Hey, what's Jim Baker for?
This is why Bush (and alas, the rest of us) is in so much trouble in Iraq. There's no fix for this problem. They haven't had a policy, only a politics, for six years and even if they were up to the job of getting one, its too late. Bush's lame broken egg remarks to Jim Lehrer on PBS shows that the problem is dimly seeping into his consciousness, but he's still in denial.
The consequences is that this is going to end very very badly. Bush may not still be on the bottle, but he has an alcoholic's inability to change behavior until he hits bottom. Since hitting bottom is going to be worse than the helicopters taking off from the roof of the Saigon embassy. And since we--the country as a whole--have been his enablers, we're going to be there when the whole thing goes to smash.
The argument, as many have pointed out, is both logically and factually challenged. Factually, the Bush surge plan is not the only one on the table. The Baker-Hamilton Commission, Senator Joseph Biden and Congressman John Murtha have all proposed alternatives to the current policy. And why, logically, should the Democrats be the ones to pull Bush's bacon from the fire? Opponents of the war have argued from the beginning that it was a bad idea, that it would lead to sectarian violence and destabilize the region. Now US Senator Jim Webb made this argument explicitly in a Washington Post Op Ed in 2002, as did former Vice President Al Gore in a September 23, 2002 speech. Those who argued against the war were attacked in the most vociferous, no holds bars terms, dismissed as stupid and ignorant. The administration didn't hesitate to name undercover CIA operatives in an effort to silence critics. The administration can hardly expect those who worked so vigorously to silence to now buy into their failed enterprise.
So if the argument is patently absurd, what is going on? The prevailing view seems to be that this is mere rhetorical swordplay, and with the number of Republicans, from press secretary Tony Snow on down, repeating the talking points, that's probably part of what is going on.
But I think that there is something more. I think Bush genuinely believes that it is other people's job to bale him out when he gets in a fix. That is, after all, his life history. Drunk driving ticket? Fix it. Problem with the selective service? Nice berth in the National Guard comes along. Doesn't show up for duty? No problem. Oil business in financial trouble? Here comes Harken. Needs to bail on Harken? Wow, some sucker wants to buy my worthless stock. Couldn't win the popular vote in Florida. Hey, what's Jim Baker for?
This is why Bush (and alas, the rest of us) is in so much trouble in Iraq. There's no fix for this problem. They haven't had a policy, only a politics, for six years and even if they were up to the job of getting one, its too late. Bush's lame broken egg remarks to Jim Lehrer on PBS shows that the problem is dimly seeping into his consciousness, but he's still in denial.
The consequences is that this is going to end very very badly. Bush may not still be on the bottle, but he has an alcoholic's inability to change behavior until he hits bottom. Since hitting bottom is going to be worse than the helicopters taking off from the roof of the Saigon embassy. And since we--the country as a whole--have been his enablers, we're going to be there when the whole thing goes to smash.
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