It is now clear that the proper name for the
war going on in Mesopotamia is the "Republican War." Never before
has a political party so decisively asserted ownership of a foreign war.
The Republicans refuse to share it with the Democrats, who, despite their many
resolutions, have yet to call for a complete withdrawal of American forces. Democrats
have not come close to proposing to cut off the war funding, which is the only
way the war can be ended.
Yet Republicans act like jealous suitors and seem to want to keep the war as their
very own. They have killed every single proposal to alter the strategy or the
tactics. They even killed a bill that would have done nothing more than guarantee
that American soldiers would get a rest period at home equal to the time spent
in the war.
Killing that bill, which had nothing to do with withdrawal or timetables for withdrawal,
clearly proves that Republicans do not support the troops. They support the war.
There is a huge difference. Little Lindsey Graham, the Republican senator from
South Carolina, has become so possessive of the war that he seems on the edge
of hysteria.
He seems frightened to death of what will happen when Americans leave. In fact,
nothing much will happen except that Iraqis will concentrate on killing each other
rather than killing Americans and each other. Most normal people would consider
that a positive development for us.
The Republicans and their shrinking number of warmonger supporters have long since
forgotten that the Republican War is an illegal war, a war of aggression launched
against a country that had not attacked us or ever threatened to attack us. They
have conveniently forgotten how the Republican War was sold to the American people
with outright lies. They ignore the fact that the war was bungled from Day One
and that ordinary Americans have paid a terrible price for those blunders.
If ever there were a valid reason to shed the label "Republican," the
nutty administration and its war-loving allies in the House and Senate have provided
it. They seem to have lost their collective minds. They know darn well what their
general du jour, David Petraeus, is going to say in September: "Gosh, fellows,
things are looking up, but give us another five years. Or maybe 10."
That would be insanity to the third power. The Iraqis are killing us on the cheap
with secondhand AK-47s, rifle grenades and homemade bombs created out of old artillery
shells. We are using the most expensive weapons in the world, wielded by the most
expensive army in the world, to kill them by the small handful. I don't know what
the insurgency has cost, but the Republican War has cost us half a trillion dollars,
and all we have to show for it are 3,600 graves, several thousand wounded, a civil
war and a corrupt, ineffective civilian government. The Iraqi supply line stretches
around the corner; ours stretches 7,000 miles. The Iraqis know what their mission
is; our soldiers don't have the foggiest notion of why they are still there.
Even to put the best face on it, we replaced a dictatorship and allowed the Iraqis
free elections and time to adopt a constitution. At that point, the president
should have said: "We've done our part. Now you're on your own. Goodbye."
But no, he didn't do that, because his intention is for the Republican War to
never end and for our troops to become a permanent part of the Iraqi landscape.
George W. Bush is by no means the first Westerner to make a fool of himself by
overestimating his powers and underestimating the determination of the people
of the Middle East to rid themselves of foreign conquerors.