Ted Rall: 'How we lost the Iraq war'
Posted on Wednesday, April 16 @ 09:35:33 EDT
After Saddam, the Deluge
By Ted Rall, Yahoo
NEW YORK--We wanted it to be true. It wasn't.
Anyone who has seen a TV taping knows that tight camera angles exaggerate crowd
sizes, but even a cursory examination of last week's statue-toppling propaganda
tape reveals that no more than 150 Iraqis gathered in Farbus Square to watch
American Marines--not Iraqis--pull down the dictator's statue. Hailing "all
the demonstrations in the streets," Defense Secretary Rumsfeld waxed
rhapsodically: "Watching them," he told reporters, "one cannot
help but think of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Iron
Curtain."
Hundreds of thousands of cheering Berliners filled the streets when their
divided city was reunited in 1989. Close to a million Yugoslavs crowded Belgrade
at the end of Slobodan Milosevic's rule in 2000. While some individual Iraqis
have welcomed U.S. troops, there haven't been similar outpourings of approval
for our "liberation." Most of the crowds are too busy carrying off
Uday's sofas to say thanks, and law-abiding citizens are at home putting out
fires or fending off their rapacious neighbors with AK-47s. Yet Americans wanted
to see their troops greeted as liberators, so that's what they saw on TV.
Perhaps Francis Fukuyama was correct--if it only takes 150 happy looters to make
history, maybe history is over.
Actually, they were 150 imported art critics. The statue bashers were militiamen
of the Iraqi National Congress, an anti-Saddam outfit led by one Ahmed Chalabi.
The INC was flown into Iraq by the Pentagon over CIA and State Department
protests. Chalabi is Rumsfeld's choice to become Iraq's next puppet president. Photos
at the indispensable Information Clearing House website place one of
Chalabi's aides at the supposedly spontaneous outpouring of pro-American Saddam
bashing at Firdus Square.
"When you are moving through this country there is [sic] not a lot of
people out there and you are not sure they want us here," Sgt. Lee Buttrill
gushed to ABC News. "You finally get here and see people in the street
feeling so excited, feeling so happy, tearing down the statue of Saddam. It
feels really good." That rah-rah BS is what Americans will remember about
the fall of Baghdad--not the probability that Buttrill, part of the armed force
that cordoned off the square to protect the Iraqi National Congress' actors, was
merely telling war correspondents what they wanted to hear. In his critically
acclaimed book "Jarhead," Gulf War vet Anthony Swofford writes that
Marines routinely lie to gullible reporters.
ABC further reported: "A Marine at first draped an American flag over the
statue's face, despite military orders to avoid symbols that would portray the
United States as an occupying--instead of a liberating--force." Yet another
lie. As anyone with eyes could plainly see, American tanks are festooned with
more red, white and blue than a Fourth of July parade. And that particular flag
was flying over the Pentagon at the time of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. The
Defense Department gave it to the Marines in order to perpetuate Bush's lie that
Iraq was involved in the 9-11 attacks.
Patriotic iconography is a funny thing. I've known that the Iwo Jima photo was
fake for years, but it nonetheless stirs me every time I see it. Firdus Square's
footage will retain its power long after the last American learns the truth.
It was a fitting end for a war waged under false pretexts by a fictional
coalition led by an ersatz president. Bush never spent much time thinking about
liberation, and even his exploitation is being done with as little concern as
possible for the dignity of our new colonial subjects.
What a difference a half-century makes! American leaders devoted massive
manpower and money to plan for the occupation of the countries they invaded
during World War II. What good would it do, they asked, to liberate Europe if
criminals and tyrants filled the power vacuum created by the fleeing Nazis?
Thousands of officers from a newly-established Civil Affairs division of the
U.S. Army were parachuted into France on the day after D-Day, while bullets were
still flying, with orders to stop looting, establish law and order (news - Y!
TV) and restore essential services.
As priceless ancient Sumerian jewelry and Assyrian sculptures were being carried
away on donkeys and carts, archeologist Raid Abdul Ridhar Muhammad tried to
convince Marines manning a nearby Abrams tank to stop the looters. "I asked
them to bring their tank inside the museum grounds," he told The New York
Times. "But they refused and left."
This Administration's policy of perpetual war has become a case study in
entropy, the distinctly pessimistic notion that no matter how bad things get we
can figure out a way to make them worse. Entropy triumphed in Afghanistan, as
the world's worst regime was replaced by dozens of thuggish warlords. The end of
Saddam Hussein comes as welcome news, even if it's merely the accidental
byproduct of a barely-disguised oil grab. But as Iraq's cities burn and its
patrimony is hustled off into the black market and its women wail and the rape
gangs rule the night, it's hard to escape the conclusion that we've lost this
war as well.
Ted Rall is the author of "Gas War: The Truth Behind the American
Occupation of Afghanistan," an analysis of the underreported
Trans-Afghanistan Pipeline project and the real motivations behind the war on
terrorism. Ordering information is available at amazon.com and
barnesandnoble.com.
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