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Nature & Politics
by Alexander Cockburn
The General Came to Washington
Blend a war and a presidential campaign and you have a recipe for
200-proof mendacity, as the Petraeus hearings during the week of Sept.
17 triumphantly proved.
Take the war first. Into the witness chair in the Senate chamber marched
General Petraeus, the blaze of ribbons on his chest suggesting actual
combat experience somewhat longer than the modest four years his record
discloses. He was once shot in the chest, it's true, but that was in a
military exercise in the US when a soldier's gun went off by accident.
Many senior army and navy officers loathe the toadying Petraeus.
According to an amusing column by Gareth Porter of IPS, Admiral William
Fallon, chief of the Central Command (CENTCOM), "derided Petraeus as a
sycophant during their first meeting in Baghdad last March, according to
Pentagon sources familiar with reports of the meeting. Fallon told
Petraeus that he considered him to be 'an ass-kissing little
chickenshit' and added, 'I hate people like that,' the sources say."
Mechanically, the General read through testimony freshly vetted and
re-written by Vice President Cheney, a man well aware that despite the
utter absence of any supportive evidence and owing much to his own
untiring falsehoods on the matter, 33 percent of all Americans,
including 40 percent of Republicans and 27 percent of Democrats, believe
Saddam Hussein was personally involved in the 9/11 al-Qaeda attacks.
Hence Petraeus' testimony had a reference in almost every paragraph to
al-Qaeda terror groups in Iraq, even though prudent estimates put total
al-Qaeda membership in Iraq at 1,500 at most, thus furnishing some five
percent of the Sunni resistance. Nor of course did the General omit
frequent references to the malign role of Iran.
The General spoke glowingly of his Surge. He marched the senators
through graphs and flowcharts, whose soaring curves and bars spelled out
Order and Progress, just like the Brazilian national flag.
In fact it's hard to demonstrate there's ever really been a surge, as
the Pentagon military analyst cloaked under the pseudonym Herman
Mindshaftgap concisely demonstrates at the CounterPunch website. Right
now the US is at a highpoint, with 162,000 troops in Iraq. But that's
not far above the 160,000 deployment level at the end of 2005. Moreover,
there's a steady decline in the Coalition of the Willing, which now
stands at 11,500, falling at an average of 575 a month. Total Coalition
troops in Iraq total 173,500, well below the peak of 183,000 at the end
of 2005.
General Petraeus loosed off his volleys of bogus numbers and the
senatorial candidates for presidential nomination returned fire in
carefully prepared but equally meretricious salvos. There were five such
candidates on display: Clinton, Obama, Biden, Dodd (all Democrats) and
the Republican McCain.
This doesn't count General Petraeus himself who, according to Patrick
Cockburn's Sept. 20 CounterPunch story, disclosed his own presidential
ambitions to an Iraqi official two years ago, though he apparently
confided to the Iraqi that a 2008 run would be premature. He probably
hopes he'll be running against President Clinton in 2012. Candidate
Clinton whacked presumptive candidate Petraeus with Coleridge's
definition of "dramatic truth." To believe his report, she said, would
require "the willing suspension of disbelief," a line which duly made
its way onto the front pages and news headlines, as did Candidate
Obama's theatrical question, "At what point do we say, Enough?"
Mrs. Clinton's problem is that she very willingly suspended disbelief in
2002. When it came time to deliver her Senate speech in support of the
war, she reiterated some of the most outlandish claims made by Dick
Cheney. In this speech she said Saddam Hussein had rebuilt his chemical
and biological weapons program; that he had improved his long-range
missile capability; that he was reconstituting his nuclear weapons
program; and that he was giving aid and comfort to Al Qaeda. The only
other Democratic senator to make all four of these claims in his floor
speech was Joe Lieberman. But even he didn't go as far as Senator
Clinton. In Lieberman's speech, there was conditionality about some of
the claims. In Senator Clinton's, there was none, though even the
grotesque war hawk, Ken Pollack, advising Senator Clinton prior to her
vote, had told her that the allegation about the Al Qaeda connection was
"bullshit."
Later, as the winds of opinion changed, Senator Clinton claimed--and
continues to do so to this day--that hers was a vote not for war but for
negotiation. In fact, the record shows that only hours after the war
authorization vote Senator Clinton voted against the Democratic
resolution that would have required Bush to seek a diplomatic solution
before launching the war.
Barack Obama, lagging in the polls behind Mrs. Clinton, rushed to Iowa
on Sept. 19 to savage his prime rival for her war vote. "Despite--or
perhaps because of--how much experience they had in Washington, too many
politicians feared looking weak and failed to ask hard questions. I
opposed this war from the beginning. I opposed the war in 2002, I
opposed it in 2003, I opposed it in 2004, I opposed it in 2005," Obama
declared, in Clinton, Iowa. All the Democrats flourish urgent schedules
for withdrawal. General Petraeus says that 30,000 troops can go home
next summer, owing to the Surge's splendid success.
Realists in military circles reckon the overall situation in Iraq is
worsening, from the point of view of the United States, and that by next
spring, as one puts it, "the active-duty Army and Marine Corps will
start to break under the current load." Forces will decline, unless Bush
orders a real surge next year in involuntarily mobilized reservists. He
won't do that. The war is lost, but like many a lost war, it will last a
very long time. Acting President Bush made that clear in his Sept. 13
address to the nation (small portions thereof). Candidate Petraeus may
well have the chance in 2012 to tax President Clinton about the
"stalemate in Iraq."
I doubt if anyone involved in the Iraq disaster will be well received by
the voters, even years down the road.
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