Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Loss by Default in Iraq

Andrew Sullivan:

While the media is obsessed parsing the ad libs of someone on no ballot this fall, something truly ominous has just happened in Iraq. The commander-in-chief has abandoned an American soldier to the tender mercies of a Shiite militia. Yes, there are nuances here, and the NYT fleshes out the story today. But the essential fact is clear. In a showdown for control of Baghdad, the Iraqi prime minister took orders from Moqtada al-Sadr, and instructed the U.S. military to withdraw from Sadr City. The American forces were trying both to stabilize the city but also to find a missing American serviceman. He is still missing. Money quote from the WaPo:

The move lifted a near siege that had stood at least since last Wednesday. U.S. military police imposed the blockade after the kidnapping of an American soldier of Iraqi descent. The soldier's Iraqi in-laws said they believed he had been abducted by the Mahdi Army as he visited his wife at her home in the Karrada area of Baghdad, where U.S. military checkpoints were also removed as a result of Maliki's action.

The crackdown on Sadr City had a second motive, U.S. officers said: the search for Abu Deraa, a man considered one of the most notorious death squad leaders. The soldier and Abu Deraa both were believed by the U.S. military to be in Sadr City.

The U.S. military does not have a tradition of abandoning its own soldiers to foreign militias, or of taking orders from foreign governments. No commander-in-chief who actually walks the walk, rather than swaggering the swagger, would acquiesce to such a thing. The soldier appears to be of Iraqi descent who is married to an Iraqi woman. Who authorized abandoning him to the enemy? Who is really giving the orders to the U.S. military in Iraq? These are real questions about honor and sacrifice and a war that is now careening out of any control. They are not phony questions drummed up by a partisan media machine to appeal to emotions to maintain power.

And where, by the way, is McCain on this? Silent on Cheney's "no-brainer" on waterboarding. Silent recently on Iraq. But vocal - oh, how vocal - on Kerry. It tells you something about what has happened to him. And to America.

I'm not sure what to think about Maliki's move and the US' acquiescence. I suspect that, from the US point of view, this was an attempt to demonstrate that the Iraqi government is developing some sort of autonomy, something that sets up potential changes for the US occupation. If that's the case, it was badly botched - nothing new there.

If, on the other hand, this is truly Maliki acting "autonomously" and the US not being in a position to say otherwise, it is clear that the US occupation is not only a violent failure, but also fundamentally directionless, biding time for some insane political reason with a policy that amounts simply to dealing with situations as they arise.

Of course, when that autonomous action is, in fact, directed by Moqtada al-Sadr, it is quite clear - apart from all other indicators (such as numbers of deaths, civil war, growing insurgency, political maneuvering re Iran, etc.) - that the US has lost this war.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

apropos of all this, here's an e-mail that just landed in my box. So, I invite y'all to select, copy & paste the following:


Citizens for a Secure America
(see names below)

A CALL-TO-ACTION!


TO WOMEN VOTERS ACROSS AMERICA
REGARDLESS OF PARTY:

Citizens for a Secure America is a group of women and men who are especially concerned about this election. Women can take back the direction and stiffen the spine of America's anti-terrorism policy, and we want to help them do that.

Women make up the majority of voters. As mothers, daughters, sisters, wives -- women particularly want to protect their families from terrorism. 2004 election results showed that women -- far more than men -- worried about homeland security, and that security was the key issue for swing women voters who voted Republican. And yet America is neither as safe as it should -- or could -- be. The 9/11 Commission has given failing grades to the Administration, and in a recent poll of bipartisan terrorism experts, 83% conclude that America is less safe than it was before 9/11.

If women vote together for a Democratic Congress on November 7th we can make America safer. Please send this message right away to 50 women you know.

For five years, the Republicans, controlling every branch of federal government, have failed to take any of the following steps essential to protecting Americans:


1. Set effective standards for aviation security, port security, transportation security, cyber-security, infrastructure security, border security and communications security

2. Mandate enforceable security standards for chemical, nuclear, oil and liquefied natural gas plants around the country, resisting industry opposition to such standards

3. Work with other countries to establish effective inspection of all cargo containers entering our country and moving from ports to populous areas

4. Establish security systems for mass transit

5. Supply health facilities in the 150 largest metropolitan areas with adequate vaccines, medications and trained personnel to meet a bio-terror attack

6. Map out, for major metropolitan areas, evacuation routes to avoid a repeat of the disastrous incompetence that destroyed New Orleans

7. Stockpile treatment for radiation sickness, anthrax and other likely forms of biological or chemical attack

8. Fund specialized intelligence units (like New York City's) in all 150 major metropolitan areas

9. Reduce our nation's dependence on foreign oil

10. Build contacts with moderate Muslims

11. Move our national focus back to combating al Qaeda instead of the civil war in Iraq

12. Encourage alternative and forward-looking ideas on combating terrorism


America is not as safe as it should -- and could -- be.
Republican leadership has let us down.
It is time to turn them out!


Signed,


Kenneth Bacon
President, Refugees International; former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs
Rand Beers
President, National Security Network
Wendy Benchley
Councilwoman, Princeton Borough, NJ
Eileen Moran Brown
Chancellor/Founder, Cambridge College
Robert Del Tufo
US Attorney, Carter administration; former NJ Attorney General
Robin Duke
Ambassador to Norway, Clinton administration
Pamela Eakes
Founder, Mothers Against Violence in America
Kristina Ford
Former Executive Director, New Orleans City Planning Commission
Cynthia Friedman
Co-chairman, Women's Leadership Forum
Peter Georgescu
CEO Emeritus, Young & Rubicam
Barbara Gimbel
Political activist
Kate Hughes
Co-ordinator, Citizens for a Secure America
Nicholas Katzenbach
Attorney General, Johnson administration
Stephanie Kugelman
Vice chairman and Chief Strategic Officer, Young & Rubicam
Richard Leone
Former Chairman, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Anne Martindell
Ambassador to New Zealand and Western Samoa, Carter administration
Sally Minard
Chair, New York State Women's Leadership Forum
Neil L. Rudenstine
President Emeritus, Harvard University
William Rugh
Ambassador to the U.A.E. and Yemen, Carter administration
Betty Warner Sheinbaum
Artist
Stanley Sheinbaum
Economist, political activist
Anne-Marie Slaughter
Dean, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Elisabeth Sifton
Senior Vice President, Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Jean Kennedy Smith
Ambassador to Ireland, Clinton administration
Fritz Stern
University Professor Emeritus, Columbia University
Theodore Sorensen
Policy Advisor to President John F. Kennedy
William vanden Heuvel
Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, Carter administration