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23 October 2007

There's One Small Problem

Regarding this article by Deroy Murdock at National Review.

Mr. Murdock tries to show that the "surge" is working in Iraq (this article was released prior to General Petraeus' report to congress). He shows that it's working by highlighting some tangible metrics as reported by the Army Corps of Engineers, such as:

  • America has paved 38 new roads. Once 41 total projects are done, Iraqis will ride 265 miles of fresh thoroughfares
  • ACE announced Wednesday that it completed a $266 million facility to bring drinking water to 500,000 Iraqis
  • America stayed busy building or rehabilitating 77 primary healthcare centers and 16 hospitals, through August 20
  • U.S. troops through August 29 had renovated or built 810 schools, supplying classrooms for 324,000 students
  • American forces have helped female Iraqis thrive in engineering, business, and law enforcement

While no one will doubt the nobility of such acts, one can't help but wonder where the Iraqis are in all of this. Not just on the side of enjoying the fruits of our labors (and money and soldiers' lives). I would be much more encouraged if there were any points showing the progress Iraqis have made in doing any of these things themselves.

In this review that appears in the current Claremont Review of Books, in the part regarding Mugged by Reality by John Agresto, the reviewer notes the author's desire "to make sense of the colossal 'failure of good intentions' that he witnessed there."

More from the article that addresses my concern of the Iraqis not doing the doable themselves:

When you add the illiberal propensities of Islam to the cultural effects of a status-based society, socialism, and tyranny, the Iraqis do not exactly look like Jacksonian democrats. Agresto provides a careful, thoughtful analysis of the cultural damage done. Iraq's traditional society of clans and tribes, consumed by a "constant concern with rank, place, and honor," breeds a "culture of entitlement" in which work is despised and accountability shunned. Saddam's government added a "culture of dependency" by addicting everyone to food handouts, subsidized housing, free education, free health care, free electricity, and virtually free gasoline (three cents a liter; like Iran, Iraq exports oil and imports gasoline, making the subsidy doubly ridiculous). And his tyranny engendered a "culture of fear and hesitation" across the board.
The cumulative effect of these factors is an Iraqi character that is not fit for self-government, at least not yet and probably not for a very long time, according to Agresto. "Hard as it is to say," he declares, "still it must be said, that it did not seem that the majority of Iraqis had, or had yet, the souls of free people." He dismisses as "happy talk" President Bush's various assurances to the contrary. All human beings desire to be free? Most Iraqis would choose security over freedom, "and many others would choose being Islamic and submissive to Allah's word over being free any day." All men desire to live as democrats? Most Iraqis "would rather be governed by religious leaders of their own sect than by their neighbors."


Another excellent article in the magazine, "American Statecraft and the Iraqi War," Angelo M. Codevilla notes:

Common sense says that weapons in some hands serve our purposes, while weapons in other hands work against us. But U.S. soldiers were ordered to disarm Iraqis on all sides. Our troops were not to be on anybody's side, but rather to foster reconciliation, supposing that the population was eager for it, and to target the few irreconcilables, supposedly spread evenly among all groups. Over and above the unreality of these apolitical suppositions ..., the inescapable consequences of U.S. leader's failure to identify our enemies was that it forced American soldiers to treat every Iraqi as one. Because American soldiers occupying Iraq were not sent to kill anyone in particular (ed. note: the real job of the military), many paid with their lives for not being trigger-happy enough, while in turn many Iraqis died when soldiers, for whom self-preservation became the default mission, proved too trigger happy.

On April 25, 2007, as U.S. casualties in Iraq neared 30,000 and the U.S. government was rushing more troops to patrol Baghdad's streets, Major General Robert H. Scales, Jr., former commandant of the U.S. Army War College, recited to the Senate Armed Services Committee what had become the military's mantra: we need culturally aware soldiers who can solve complex social problems. "A corporal standing guard in Baghdad or Fallujah can commit an act that might well affect the strategic outcome of an entire campaign... . Killing power is of no use unless a soldier on patrol knows who to kill." Nodding senators agreed with the general that the job of telling friend from foe belongs to the soldiers in harm's way, not to those sitting in safety regulating, equipping, and ordering them! This abdication, this downward buck-passing and all its consequences, is the logical outcome of President Bush's sending troops around the world without telling them clearly whom they should kill.


And further:

Itemizing the instances of the occupation's military malpractice is beyond my scope here. Note simply that most U.S. casualties result from roadside bombs--mines. Military manuals are clear about minefields: if they cannot be avoided, they must be cleared and crossed once. The notion of driving around in replenished minefields, day after day, year after year, is contrary to military common sense. So is the notion of "nation-building." Armies don't build nations.*


If only someone would tell that to President Bush and Deroy Murdock.

*In the last block quote, italics are in the original, bold was added by me.

Creepy Picture


Mitt Romney prepares to do...something.

05 October 2007

Hitchens Piece

A very well done article by Christopher Hitchens about a young man who cited Mr. Hitchens as one of the reasons he enlisted in the US Army.

Lieutenant Mark Daily died in Iraq in January 2007.

Your son, my lord, has paid a soldier's debt;
He only lived but till he was a man;
The which no sooner had his prowess confirm'd
In the unshrinking station where he fought,
But like a man he died.

...

Your cause of sorrow
Must not be measured by his worth, for then
It hath no end.

12 September 2007

Important News About Alzheimer's Patients




This is why the Onion rocks.

08 September 2007

Trillin Poem

A TRANSCRIPT: PHONE CONVERSATION BETWEEN THE 9/11 COMMISSION AND THE WHITE HOUSE CONCERNING THE COMMISSION'S BLISTERING REPORT CARD ON HOW WELL ITS RECOMMENDATIONS HAVE BEEN FOLLOWED

COMMISSION:
So firemen can talk to cops,
You must provide a frequency.
The fact that this has not been done
Is government delinquency.

WHITE HOUSE:
Iraq is coming right along.
We're confident we'll win this war.
The way to honor lads we've lost
Is to stick it out (and lose some more).

COMMISSION:
Disaster funds are handed out
By pork, not risk, and, by the way,
The loose nukes that so worried us
Are getting looser every day.

WHITE HOUSE:
Our troops are making progress now,
And trained Iraqis have increased.
We win battles that we fight.
We've taken some towns twice at least.

COMMISSION:
Still, airfreight cargo goes unchecked,
And information goes unshared.
We told you then, we tell you now:
The USA is unprepared!

WHITE HOUSE:
Saddam--that evil, awful man--
Is captured, living in a cell.
Democracy will spread from there.
The Middle East will soon be swell.

COMMISSION:
We have to say, upon reflection,
There's something wrong with this connection.

--Calvin Trillan,
26 December 2005
A Heckuva Job

31 August 2007

McTiddie

The only thing entertaining to come from the eye noise that is Jerry Maguire.

19 August 2007

Amen, Brother

In his Tuesday Morning Quarterback column of 10 August 2007, Gregg Easterbrook writes the following:


Turning to the United States Constitution, George W. Bush said in Washington in 2007, "I don't think Congress ought to be running the war." The Founding Fathers said in Philadelphia in 1789 [*], "The Congress shall have the power to ... declare war, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water." The founders were quite clear that they wanted Congress running wars, among other things declaring only Congress could approve funds "to raise and support armies" and that congressional approval for military spending might
last no longer than two years

What are "letters of marque and reprisal?" The writers of United States Constitution assumed the new nation would have a permanent navy but no standing army: If an army was needed, it would be raised and funded on a two-year basis. Yet the framers knew international circumstances might call for military action short of sending an army into battle. Letters of marque grant to mercenaries -- at the time, it was normal for nations to retain soldiers-for-hire -- the right to act in America's name for a specific purpose, such as taking back some thing or location seized by privateers. Letters of reprisal could confer on the Navy, or on mercenaries, color of the flag to conduct a specific retaliation in America's name. The modern meaning of "letters of marque and reprisal" is "commando raids and air strikes."

So the Founding Fathers did not merely grant Congress sole power to declare war -- they expected Congress to be involved in the conduct of war, by such means as issuing specific instructions regarding what could and could not be attacked on land or water. The Commander in Chief clause of the Constitution mainly serves to make clear that the executive is superior to the military -- the framers did not want the
U.S. military resisting civilian control, as did some European militaries of the era. Bush and other modern presidents of both parties have behaved as though the Commander in Chief clause locates in them unilateral authority for all use of force: the Founding Fathers would be horrified to learn that Bush and other modern
presidents act as though they have unchecked powers in matters of war. Here's
the text of the United States Constitution, which all Americans including our current president ought to take a few moments to familiarize themselves with.



*=Minor quibble--the constitution was written in 1787. It became the law of the land in 1788 by ratification and the government was seated in 1789.

Emphasis added