April 19, 2007
By winston
It is all theatre for W to steal every last red state vote he can. All of W's bullying about fully-funding the war is a waste of time. Gates says that ""The debate in Congress . . . has been helpful in demonstrating to the Iraqis that American patience is limited." Petraeus anticipates that the US troops will be starting their phased withdrawal in around 6 months, which is what the Democrats are considering.
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It is all theatre for W to steal every last red state vote he can. All of W's bullying about fully-funding the war is a waste of time. The crony he picked to replace Rumsfeld is already lashing out at Big bro 43 and supporting the Democrats desire to consider a phased redeployment as the article "Gates Says Iraqi Shake-Up Could Aid Reconciliation" at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/17/AR2007041700441.html details quoting Gates "The debate in Congress . . . has been helpful in demonstrating to the Iraqis that American patience is limited," Gates told Pentagon reporters traveling with him in Jordan. "The strong feelings expressed in the Congress about the timetable probably has had a positive impact . . . in terms of communicating to the Iraqis that this is not an open-ended commitment."
Other than having another crony turn on him and applauding the loyal opposition party's plea for consideration of a phased redeployment of our troops-there is a long list of them and Gonzales will soon be added to that infamous list, General Petraeus anticipates that the US troops will be starting their phased withdrawal in around 6 months anyway. This is essentially the same time frame that the Democrats want. Why is W condemning the Democrats for bringing attention to what will probably happen in 6 months regardless of W's histrionics? GOP thugs get more votes when they are threatening the security of other people and scaring US red staters.
The article "US commanders admit: we face a Vietnam-style collapse" at http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,,2023866,00.html states "According to the US military's revised counter-insurgency field manual, FM 3-24, written by Gen Petraeus, the optimum "troop-to-task" ratio for Baghdad requires 120,000 US and allied troops in the city alone. Current totals, even including often unreliable Iraqi units, fall short and the deficit is even greater in conflict areas outside Baghdad.
"Additional troops are essential if we are to win," said Lt-Col John Nagel, co-author of the manual, in an address at the US Naval Institute in San Diego last month. One soldier for every 50 civilians in the most intense conflict areas was key to successful counter-insurgency work."
They don't have nearly enough troops to win, and since this is a pretty simple equation in which the duration of time needed to quell the violence raises exponentially if enough troops aren't in place, Petraeus expects the surge to fail-therefore Petraeus anticipates bailing out of Iraq.
The article continues that his group of advisors know this as it "is struggling to overcome a range of entrenched problems in what has become a race against time, according to a former senior administration official familiar with their deliberations.
"They know they are operating under a clock. They know they are going to hear a lot more talk in Washington about 'Plan B' by the autumn - meaning withdrawal.
They know the next six-month period is their opportunity. And they say it's getting harder every day."
See, the enemy knows that the US can't stay in Iraq forever. We don't have enough troops or money to continue much longer, or political support for the daily atrocities emanating from Iraq. About the only people who don't realize this are the apathetic red staters.
The March 1, 2007 article "Surge - or huge muddle?" at http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,2029612,00.html states that "Luckily, Petraeus, though he may not have his military act together just yet (he's been there less than month), has no intention of leading an ever-larger body of America's finest soldiers down a bloody blind alley. He said yesterday, as he has before, that only politics, not policemen and paratroopers, will finally settle Iraq.
That is a message to Nouri al-Maliki, the leadership of Sciri, the Shia party, Moqtada al-Sadr and the Sunni parties and elders, and to ordinary Iraqis to the extent that they have any control over events, that they had better get focused, and quick....
But this process, however successful (and it is still a long shot) cannot last indefinitely. If it bears fruit, Petraeus will gradually switch to the "go long" handover strategy, which prioritises reconciliation and reconstruction - jobs, schools, electricity, all the things the last four wasted years have failed to deliver.
If the surge isn't working come Labor Day, Petraeus has already said he'll go to Congress and say so, loud and clear. He is not the guy to carry on a hopeless fight. Nor will he want to take the fall for Iraq."
Is al-Maliki making headway in meeting his political reforms that W demanded of him? Of course not! It is really quite simple. al-Maliki is not only being asked to finish his political compromises--which haven't been formally spelled out, but also he doesn't want to appease the Sunnis, so he'll drag his feet. Since there are no deadlines he can always say that progress is slow, but he's making good speed at achieving his goals, and who can say otherwise? Actually since nothing is written no one can say anything meaningful regarding whether al-Maliki is making political reforms or not.
W hitched the US to the weak al-Maliki. W probably identified with the incompetence of al-Maliki. It was never a promising decision.
The article "Six Sadr Loyalists Quit Cabinet in Challenge to Iraqi Premier" at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/16/AR2007041600638.html explains that "In the first major shake-up of Iraq's fragile coalition government, six ministers loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr pulled out of the cabinet on Monday over Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's refusal to set a timetable for an American troop withdrawal from Iraq.
The action frees Maliki to pick qualified people to fill ministries that are widely seen as ineffective, corrupt and sectarian. Yet it could also deepen tensions with Sadr within the government and on the streets, which could thwart U.S. and Iraqi efforts to bring about political reconciliation and stability, Iraqi officials and analysts said....
Bahar al-Araji, a Sadr legislator said they would no longer have to support Maliki's decisions and their action would give them greater power in parliament.
"We are free because we are not in the government," Araji said. "If the prime minister doesn't do what we want, we can do something to the prime minister. We can make him leave the government."
Haider al-Abadi, a legislator from Maliki's Dawa party Abadi expressed concern that Sadr's legislators, if they do not get what they want, could leave the ruling coalition and the parliament.
"The danger is that they could leave the political process or take to the streets and disrupt the security plan," said Abadi, referring to the two-month-old security offensive to pacify Baghdad. "We need to move very quickly to fill the positions. The situation on the ground is not very good."
It's ironic isn't it? Sadr wants deadlines from al-Maliki because he assumes that al-Maliki will allow the US troops to remain forever without having clearly delineated deadlines. Sadr probably understands al-Maliki's psyche better than W does. Why doesn't W demand clearly delineated deadlines also?
So half of Petraeus's concerns, that of the Iraqis inability to enact political reforms is failing so badly that its main architect, al-Maliki might lose his job as the US infidel's hand-picked stooge. If al-Maliki loses his gig we can all guess at the delays originating from that. The fact that Sadr might allow his "Death Squads" more freedom to commit violence now that he has taken his cabinet ministers out of al-Maliki's government is not a positive sign either.
Petraeus's other concern--that of pressure from the US political system to withdraw seems prescient also.
What are the Democrats asking for? The article "Standoff on Iraq" at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/15/AR2007041500782.html examines the vile role that W is playing. He's the commander-in-chief and he's willing to make partisan political gain at the expense of our dear boys and girls trapped in his insane Iraq war. He has no decency!
It states "President Bush and congressional leaders are due to meet this week to discuss possible compromises on strategy and funding for the war in Iraq. Neither side has been sounding conciliatory; that the talks are taking place at all may be due to the chorus of senior statesmen who have been pointing out that a standoff that delays funding for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan will only hurt the country.
Unfortunately, the wise men themselves don't agree on a way out. Lee Hamilton, the Democratic co-chairman of the Baker-Hamilton commission on Iraq policy, published an article on the opposite page last month that was supportive of a House plan to mandate the withdrawal of most U.S. troops from Iraq by September 2008. His Republican counterpart, James A. Baker III, followed with a piece opposing timetables or deadlines for the removal of troops, which are also written into the Senate version of the war funding bill. The crucial difference between Mr. Bush and the Democratic leadership is quite similar to that between Mr. Baker and Mr. Hamilton. All share the goal of handing responsibility for Iraq to the Iraqi government and army and withdrawing U.S. combat forces as quickly as possible. The difference is whether the drawdown should happen according to a timetable drawn up in Washington and disconnected from events in Iraq, on the theory that a continuing American military presence won't much change the direction of events; or whether it should be linked to progress on the ground, in the hope that the United States still can influence events and leave behind an Iraqi regime capable of defending and sustaining itself.
One way out of the dispute is what Mr. Baker and Mr. Hamilton arrived at. Their bipartisan report set a date for the withdrawal of combat forces-March 2008 but only as a goal."
If they aren't laboriously specified how does anyone know if the political reforms are being made satisfactorily and how does someone hype up the biggest event in any war-the withdrawal of combat forces and then deflate it as only being a goal?
Why all of the incendiary language coming from W then when what he and the Democrats want are the same, except for semantics?
The article "Final War Funding Bill in Works" at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/16/AR2007041601099.html puts the numbers to the polls that W and Rove are constantly comparing. It states "Congress and the White House will move this week toward a final showdown over a contested war funding bill, with most Americans trusting Democrats over President Bush to set Iraq policy but with sentiment deeply divided over Congress's push to set a deadline for withdrawing U.S. forces...
The president has taken advantage of Congress's spring recess to pound Democrats over their legislation, which would impose benchmarks for the Iraqi government to meet; create strict rules for resting, equipping and training combat troops; and set a 2008 date for the final withdrawal of U.S. troops. Despite those efforts, Bush has lost a little ground to Democrats, who in February were trusted by 54 percent to set Iraq policy."
The red staters can see Big bro 43's failed policy for what it is. That's why they trust the Democrats, not W!
When the bickering between the Senate and House ends "The final version is also expected to include House language that would establish binding benchmarks-such as the passage of an oil-revenue-sharing law and the quelling of sectarian violence-for the Iraqi government to meet to ensure full U.S. military support into next year.
But on troop-withdrawal language, negotiators are likely to bend toward the Senate bill, which says troop withdrawals must begin within 120 days after bill passage but sets a date of March 31, 2008, only as a goal for final withdrawals."
Since we are in the 4th month 120 days from now will be autumn-which is also when Petraeus predicts the phased redeployment will begin.
The article "Why I Declined To Serve" at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/15/AR2007041500564.html?nav=hcmodule explains that W failed at crafting a coherent Middle East policy. He is labeling surge--which is a tactic, as a policy, because he is incompetent. It states "Today, because of the war in Iraq, this nation is in a crisis of confidence and is confused about its foreign policy direction, especially in the Middle East...
What I found in discussions with current and former members of this administration is that there is no agreed-upon strategic view of the Iraq problem or the region."
Regarding W's failure to develop a Middle East policy it continues "The third strategy takes a larger view of the region and the desired end state. Simply put, where does Iraq fit in a larger regional context? The United States has and will continue to have strategic interests in the greater Middle East well after the Iraq crisis is resolved and, as a matter of national interest, will maintain forces in the region in some form. The Iraq invasion has created a real and existential crisis for nearly all Middle Eastern countries and created divisions among our traditional European allies, making cooperation on other issues more difficult. In the case of Iran, we have allowed Tehran to develop more policy options and tools than it had a few years ago. Iran is an ideological and destabilizing threat to its neighbors and, more important, to U.S. interests.
Of the three strategies in play, the third is the most important but, unfortunately, is the least developed and articulated by this administration.... Activities such as the current surge operations should fit into an overall strategic framework. There has to be linkage between short-term operations and strategic objectives that represent long-term U.S. and regional interests, such as assured access to energy resources and support for stable, Western-oriented countries. These interests will require a serious dialogue and partnership with countries that live in an increasingly dangerous neighborhood. We cannot "shorthand" this issue with concepts such as the "democratization of the region" or the constant refrain by a small but powerful group that we are going to "win," even as "victory" is not defined or is frequently redefined."
W failed at his job-creating policy for the Middle East. Since he wanted to get votes he fired his colossal failure at Secretary of Defense, Rumsfeld, stole a role from the military--developing the surge operation and labeling it as a policy, and hunted far and wide to come up with someone, Petraeus, who would go along with the surge. Come the fall he will be lauding the success of his Iraq occupation-no matter how desperate the reality on the ground is, and overseeing the phased redeployment of our troops from Iraq-at the request of Petraeus, without crediting the Democrats for their work.
The article "The Truth Congress Is Owed" at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/16/AR2007041601409.html?nav=hcmodule explains it succinctly, in W's own team's word as "In response to Congress, for example, White House deputy press secretary Dana Perino said at a recent briefing: "We said, 'There's no need to authorize subpoenas, because we have-even though we don't have any responsibility to you, and you don't have any specific oversight over the White House, we are willing to have our four officials that you've asked for to go up and have an interview with members of Congress. . . .' "
No American president has ever attempted to make such a broad claim, and no precedent provides a legal justification to support that perspective.
W thinks he is king. Kings do what they want and don't have to answer to anyone. A king he is not--and he'll have his day before the US judicial system, probably without Gonzales to help him.
Authors Bio:
Winston Smith is an ex-Social Worker. I worked in child welfare, and in medical settings and in homeless settings. In the later our facility was geared as a permanent address for people to apply for welfare. Once they received that we could send them to facilities in which their welfare paid the bill and provided enough for a meager existence. We also referred people to vocational rehabilitation services. Many of the people who came to us were people who were clearly emotionally ill, but Reagan's slashing of the services for these people caused them to become homeless. One woman I dealt with-St. Jane, believed she was in direct communication with God, urinated freely without using the facilities and she had 47 bags of trash which were prized possessions. She got welfare and was sent to a facility were she could survive. The rule was that our facility could be used 1 time only as we had too many people who thought that the services that we provided we would lift them from the dire straights that they were in. Well, we provided our services for St. Jane around Thanksgiving. On Christmas Eve she was back with her 47 bags of trash and wanted to stay at our facility. I informed my superior of this situation, but we declined to provide services for St. Jane. She slept in front of our facility in a snowstorm. The local rag took the picture and excoriated us for what we did. The local welfare department asked her where she would like to live. St. Jane said Chicago because she liked the wind. She knew on one there. She and her 47 bags of trash of were carted onto a train for the windy city and never of again. The local welfare department was glad to get shed of her. Social welfare in the mid-1980's was geared to blame the victim. Ill people were sent home from hospitals were no one was going to help them because social welfare budgets were slashed by Reagan. Bush 41's â"thousand points of lightâ" was just another way to shaft the weakest in our society. Bush 43's faith based initiative was just another attempt to reduce social welfare services. Reagan's â"Just say Noâ" was the pinnacle of hypocrisy. No services for those who desperately needed them under the guise of tough love.
Obviously I became burnt out by too much indifference regarding our weak and weary. I couldn't look at desperate people and could not get myself to say that what I could offer them wouldn't really help themâ"”it would only get them out of my office to be another person's problem, until the local welfare department carted them away.
I had little interest in politics until the illegal Iraq War started. Growing up in the 1960's caused me to understand that the GOP used war to attract right-wing extremists to vote for them. When â"Tricky Dick'sâ" secret plan to end the Vietnam War unfolded into elongating our presence there for 8 years I knew that I would never believe a GOP war-monger again. I dislike Obama's plan to escalate our presence in Afghanistan and see it as a craven attempt to placate the GOP. Maybe he'll reduce the GOP's attacks against him, but it will at the expense of alienating his base.