Category Archives: Iraq War

Rummy Cute

[Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defence, left; Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War, right]

The recent resignation of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was so long overdue that it would be perverse to offer thanks to President Bush for accepting the obvious-beyond-belief relief of the event. There is hardly a negative adjective that has not been used to describe Rummy’s tenure at the Pentagon. Simply watching him sneer and jeer his way through a press conference, showing such uncompromising disdain for anyone who did not worship his version of the truth, explains how the Iraq debacle unraveled from the start.

It is tempting to compare Rumsfeld, as a close ally of the President, with Edwin M. Stanton, Lincoln’s irascible and controversial Secretary of War. As a Buchanan (not the modern-day conservative variety) Democrat who at first labeled Lincoln ” the original gorilla,” he later became a close confidante and supporter of President Lincoln, even though he did not always obey his commander-in-chief. Continue reading Rummy Cute

Antebellum and Our Civil Bellyache

What makes a civil war a “civil war”? Obviously it depends less on who is actually fighting it and more on what other people want to make of it. Several news organizations, most notably NBC and MSNBC, have bitten the bullet and started calling the current “conflict” in Iraq a bonified “civil war.” The Bush administration, still Cheney-ganged into thinking the good guys will rout the bad guys according to the neocon scenario, is loathe to call the debacle of our occupation a “civil war.” But at least there is no doubt in anyone’s mind that what we see is some kind of war, and not just a few rowdies on a Saddam-nostalgia binge. Continue reading Antebellum and Our Civil Bellyache

Gobble, Gobble, Gobble: How Bad Can It Get?

Yesterday millions of Americans celebrated Thanksgiving, an annual food-stuffing ritual commemorating an event in 1621 when the Plymouth Rock Pilgrims hosted the native Wampanoags for a three-day feast to offer thanks for the survival aid given by these gracious hosts. Before long, the Wampanoags and most other indigenous groups encountered by the European illegal aliens of the time were devastated by disease and outright genocide to the point they had little to give thanks for. George Washington enshrined the idea of a national day of Thanksgiving and set November 26 as the mark. During America’s Civil War Abraham Lincoln proclaimed it a national holiday for the last Thursday in November. When a country is embroiled in a terrible family-gutting war, why not broil a bird and give thanks you are still alive? Continue reading Gobble, Gobble, Gobble: How Bad Can It Get?

The Whistle Blower Stops Here

[President Bush Thursday in Billings, Montana, photo by Jason Reed, Reuters, left; President Bush speaking under a halo at the dedication of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship’s Youth Education Center in Dallas, Texas, 10/29/03, photo by Charles Dharapak, AP, right.]

Recent polls from a number of news organizations and independent groups make it clear that the Bush administration’s dragged-out, coalition-of-the-once-upon-a-time-willing war in Iraq can best be labeled “Mission Botched.” A Newsweek poll from October 26-27 indicated that twice as many American adults think the current strategy is losing ground (60%) as opposed to making progress (29%) in Iraq. Recent polls also indicate that despite the White House election strategy of not straying (even if not calling it staying) from the course, public opinion is singing the blues even in the red states. The reasons for this dissatisfaction with the way in which the war has been waged now cross party lines. The liberal vs. conservative, cut-and-run vs. lobby-and-don’t-tell mantras are increasingly (and fortunately) falling on deafened ears.

Continue reading The Whistle Blower Stops Here

The Century Mark

[A few of Jesus Montalvo’s 12 brothers and sisters in Mayaguez say he used to phone home from Iraq, asking them to sing him plenas — Puerto Rican ballads. This Christmas, their brother won’t be here to accompany them on the pandereta drum and the cuatro guitar. Those pictured (from left) are: Segismundo Lopez Montalvo, Leo Montalvo, Olga Montalvo and Clarissa Montalvo.]

Listening to NPR “Morning Edition” on my morning drive to the university, I learned that the death toll of U.S. servicemen this month in Iraq has reached 100. It is hardly more tragic just because a round number is reached. But it does give pause to those ardent defenders of our failed involvement in Iraq that insist we “are not there yet.” What is the threshhold of “there” that would convince unflinching “stay the course” advocates even when just about every marker indicates it is the wrong course? Continue reading The Century Mark

Second Thoughts

[Clocks ticking Iraq clock repairmen work at their shop on a Baghdad street (AFP/Karim Sahib) April 11, 2006]

In a commentary yesterday in the New York Times, columnist Nicholas D. Kristoff started off with a startling figure. “For every additional second we stay in Iraq, we taxpayers will end up paying an additional $6,300.” Most Americans make less than this in a month, which by my count for the 30-day variety has a total of 2,592,000 seconds. My math faculties start to break down with the thought of computing the cost per month of this war in seconds on the U.S. Budget. Continue reading Second Thoughts

Not Knowing the Enemy

In an eye-opening commentary in yesterday’s New York Times, Jeff Stein (the national security editor at the Congressional Quarterly) clues us into the clueless state of this administration’s national security apparatus. “Can you tell a Sunni from a Shiite?” he asked a number of counterterrorism officials and members of Congress. The responses, often dumbfounded “I dunno” looks, reveal one of the reasons the so-called war on terror is going so badly. “Too many officials in charge of the war on terrorism just don’t care to learn much, if anything, about the enemy we’re fighting. And that’s enough to keep anybody up at night.” Anybody, it seems, but our self-assured Bush League presidency. Continue reading Not Knowing the Enemy

“Hath Slain His Thousands”

… Saul hath slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands, and Saul was very wroth, and the saying displeased him; and he said, They have ascribed unto David ten thousands, and to me thousands: and what can he have more but the kingdom? I Samuel 18:7-8

Saddam was no King Saul and most certainly George Bush is no David (although perhaps the Democrats wish he would cast his eyes clintonesque on an intern named Bathsheba). But the sentiment of the ancient Israelite king renowned for slaughtering the Philistines (who incidentallty lived in what we now call Gaza) may be reverberating in the scandal-defying offices of Karl Rove. Earlier this year President Bush estimated the Iraqi dead after our invasion in the 30,000s. The site Iraq Body Count has yet to hit 49,000 for its maximum, as of today. So imagine the wrothness of Bush and Blair defenders when a respected medical journal, The Lancet, releases a study that puts the number of Iraqi casualties as close to 655,000 or 2.5% of the population in the study area. And this does not include deaths since last July. Continue reading “Hath Slain His Thousands”