Archive for January, 2009

Why did we start the war in Afghanistan and travel in to Iraq?

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
iraq
Iysha M asked:


The started in the war in Afghanistan because of the terrorists. Then we went to Iraq why?
But we should not go to war over oil and money we should at least have a good reason to go to war not being idiots like our government is!!!!!!!

Lucy
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

How ‘cowboy’ Bush Actually Won the Iraq War (sic)!

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
iraq
Arindam Chaudhuri asked:


Hillary Clinton just two days back said that the Iraq war can’t be won. I really hope you didn’t get carried away reading it and started taking her seriously! She is still a first generation dynastic hopeful with her husband having no war experience. George Bush on the other hand is a seasoned second generation warring cowboy!! And trust you me he knows the game better than you can imagine. Let me explain you how the smoke ‘em out cowboy has actually won the war on Iraq… well at least as far as his schemes were concerned!!

It has been exactly five years since the time President George Bush went on a rampage on Iraq, hunting for those world threatening WMDs!! In these five years the world is testimony to the fact that the US could neither find any WMDs, nor could their intelligence establish any links between the Late Saddam Hussein and Al-Qaida, but in effect, on account of the ongoing American engagement, Iraq got completely devastated. Over 1.1 million Iraqis have been killed, some 2.2 million displaced, and more than 40% has been pushed to abject poverty. The worst affected are the children, 28% of whom are malnourished and some 11% are underweight.

The obvious question then is that when there weren’t any WMDs, any Al Qaida links, and on top of that, of late, there had been glimpses of apparent acceptance of mistake of engaging with Iraq by the President Bush himself, then why is it that American troops are still occupying Iraq? And why on the earth am I trying to say that George Bush has won the Iraq war? Well, the answer to this complex question lies in the burgeoning budgets of Pentagon and the financial statements of few of the biggest corporations of America – because all wars aren’t always won on the battlefields. The fact is that from almost USD 300 billion in 2001, the defence budget of the US has grown to a staggering USD 670 billion in 2008.

  So? Well, most of this increased budget – as you would guess – has been consumed by the American ‘war on terror’ and engagements with Iraq… and (and this is the big and) … finally got routed to the balance sheets of a few powerful American corporations, who had been historically renowned for pocketing war dividends. In fact, reports state that 1% of the companies (contractors of Pentagon) have won 80% of all the defence contracts, and the top 10 cornered a whopping 38% of all the money. If you were intelligent it shouldn’t have shocked you, because that’s what capitalism is all about… profits at all cost, even if it means increasing business at the cost of millions of innocent lives… In fact, as per reports, topping the list of these death merchants are - Lockheed Martin, followed by Boeing, Raytheon, Northorp Grumman and General Dynamics. So as bodies continued falling in Iraq, their profitability surged, and as building after building collapsed, their market cap swelled. It is amazing that even in this environment wherein there had been strong signals of American economic slowdown, these corporations have been perpetually posting profits, every quarter!! Reports also state that, between 2003 and 2007, the profitability of corporations like Boeing shot up by a mind numbing 467%! That’s not all, since the engagement with Iraq, shares of the American defence companies have nearly ‘trebled’ and they have been clocking almost a double digit revenue growth.

There have also been reports and news, stating that the contracts for reconstructing Iraq had already been issued to these companies, even before the first bomb was dropped on Iraq. And it is not about the big companies that have been reaping the dividends of war alone, as there are almost 100,000 other government contractors (including the likes of DynCorp International, Blackwater USA, MPRI) who are currently operating in Iraq, milking in millions of dollars. All this plundering aside, the core agenda of the key American loot is still left undone. And that is to get the Oil Law passed by the Iraqi government, which would put the final nail on the coffin by virtually allowing the ‘takeover of Iraqi oilfields by the private companies’. It always was the real reason for this war. As I have been stressing from day one, had Iraq been an apple producing country, the cowboys of the west would have never bothered about its existence even, forget the sovereignty of Kuwait or the fear of (nonexistent) WMDs. So, given this background, it doesn’t make any sense for President Bush to order the troops back from Iraq! Does it?? The cowboy general of the world’s largest imperialistic force still has a lot of loot to do… even if it is at the cost of the lives of another few million Iraqis and few thousand American soldiers and a cost of war which would take generations of Americans and Iraqis to mitigate. So my friends, make no mistake…President Bush has actually won the war that he set out for, and for the ones he played it out for.



Beth
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

How much is important for US the cooperation of others countries in Iraq war?

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
iraq
Alb90 asked:


I’m italian, and my country is present in Iraq for a “peaceful mission”, but our presence in there is really important for US?

Lucille
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

Give the Gift of Light to the Troops This Holiday Season

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009
iraq
stacey bent asked:


SunNight Solar, a renewable energy company based in Houston, is hoping to spread a bit of light to our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan this holiday season.

 

The company has put forth a call for support from its loyal customers and the American people. The group challenge is to help provide a solar flashlight for every serviceman and woman serving in the region. Donors will have the opportunity to purchase a light for the troops at www.warlights.com and to select a non-profit military support group from a list of approved recipient partners at the company’s website. Recipient partners include, Adopt-A-Platoon, Military Mom In Action, Operation Care & Comfort, Operation Troop Aid, Soldier’s Angels and The Hugs Project. The non-profit organizations will include the donated lights in holiday care packages they are preparing this season.

 

Highlighting the need of the troops were letters from military personnel, explaining that batteries… and light…are often hard to come by in places like Afghanistan and Iraq. Several letters came from medical personnel, working to save the wounded in volatile situations. While the US government certainly provides an abundance of conventional flashlights to the troops, as one serviceman wrote in, “Batteries are often hard to come by (okay nearly impossible) in the battlefield setting, so an alternative would be an absolute God send…” SunNight’s rechargeable batteries have an estimated life of 3-5 years even with daily use, so the soldiers would benefit both from the flashlight’s dependability and alleviation from problems associated with carrying around extra batteries, if any can be found.

 

One soldier writes, “My team and I are currently stationed in Iraq on a forward operating base that does not have street lamps or significant illumination.  It is pointedly called the “Dark Side” of FOB Warrior.  We have to use flashlights for everything (especially bathroom… port-a-johns have spiders and scorpions).  It’s a real pain burning through all the batteries too.  Such a waste when we get 12 hours of blazing sunshine everyday!  I haven’t seen clouds in months!”

 

A Marine writes, “I have spent 11 months in Iraq and am currently on my 4th year of a 5 year contract. One of the most difficult things to do in Iraq is not what you think it would be. It’s not the 125 degree heat, it’s not being away from your family, and it’s not constant layer of sand that is on everything. One of the most difficult things is trying to find decent indoor plumbing. Now you might be wondering what all of this has to do with a flashlight. Well when was the last time you saw a light bulb hanging up in the top of a port-a-john? Never, right? Well that is truly the main downfall of the port-a-john. …Because at night, you are out luck if you don’t have a good flashlight on you.”

 

While the initial cost for a solar flashlight is slightly more expensive than the typical conventional flashlight, when factoring in the cost of battery replacement, the overall cost savings (and benefit to the environment) are huge. A soldier concerned about the environment writes, “I try to set an example in my personal life through conservation–reduction, reuse, and recycling–whenever possible, however the nature of my career makes it fairly environmentally unfriendly.  I regularly search for ways to offset the large carbon footprint and energy expenditure necessary to fuel the defensive gears of our nation.”

 

A  US Air Force pilot points out in a humorous tone, “If I had the time to sit and crank a flashlight or shake it enough for legitimate illumination, our tax dollars certainly wouldn’t be getting a very good value”.  But in closing, he leaves the folks at SunNight with the chilling reality that, “the room lighting feature would be great for illuminating a dark corner of a poorly lit tent on a cold Afghanistan night. “ 

The founder of SunNight Solar, Mark Bent, is a former US Marine and State Department official who has served in both Iraq and Afghanistan so these responses hit hard.

 

SunNight Solar opened its doors for business in 2006 with a unique combination of goals. Close to the company’s core are deeply rooted humanitarian values which are expressed through its various social programs. The safety and welfare of women and children rank high on the company’s list of priorities. “Ideally”, says Bent, “We’ll gain enough support for this program to be able to provide a light to every service man and woman….with some surplus for the troops to distribute as gifts to the women and children living in these war torn areas.” Having served our country himself, Bent says that a “positive conclusion in Iraq and Afghanistan depends as much upon our national kindness as it does our force.”

 

For more information about SunNight Solar and its programs, please visit: www.sunnightsolar.com.



Bill
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

Stop the Nonsense Liberal

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009
iraq
Duane Shoemaker asked:


If you asked a liberal if they support the troops, they will immediately say "yes".  But do they really support the troops?  Try this the next time you talk to a liberal about our troops.  Ask them: "What are the successes that our troops are having in Iraq?."  The liberal will probably look at you as if you just challenged their patriotism and either walk away or just come back with a sarcastic comment about Pres. Bush. (Click here to see the proof) 

You see, if you really support our troops, you would KNOW what successes our troops are having.  You would encourage them to WIN the war.  You would look to the positive things that our troops are doing to bolster them to victory.  If you really want to succeed at something, you do so through positive reinforcement and not through negativity.

So the next time you converse with a liberal, tell them this:  Our troops have:

1.  Liberated a country from a terrible tyrant who ruined a culture and the infrastructure of a nation.

2.  Provided hope to a people who had been trodden down by fear and brutality.

3.  Offered freedom of speech and the pursuit of happiness to millions of suppressed people.

4.  Built water treatment plants, highways, hospitals, and schools to provide the basic human needs for a people who were neglected for many years due to the pride and ego of one tyrant.

5.  Provided medical assistance to men, women, and children who suffered from the lack of medical attention.

6.  Secured the future of our country by removing the possibility of terrorists who desire a safe haven to plan their attacks on United States of America Citizens.

7.  Established an Ally in the cause of freedom throughout the world.

8.  Gave hope to surrounding nations that freedom in the area is possible.

9.  Paved the way for future generations to enjoy similar freedoms that we enjoy today.

10.  Trained a military and police force that can protect and defend themselves from those who desire to destroy their way of life and freedom.

Yes, our Troops are having great successes in spite of what you hear in the bias liberal media.   It still amazes me that politics over shadows the truth about our men and women in the military.  Stop the nonsense by telling everyone about the good things that our troops are doing.  Please spread the word!

For more articles like this, visit www.patriotman.com



Fernando
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

Lucrative Jobs in Iraq - are You Ready?

Monday, January 19th, 2009
iraq
Alan Nelson asked:


looking for employment opportunities and considering the Middle East, then rest assured there are plenty of jobs in Iraq. Regardless of your skill set, jobs in numerous industries from semi-skilled to experts of the trade are readily available. Some of the many fields’ currently recruiting employees are: Food service worker - Throughout the country, numerous dining facilities exist on military installations. Help of all types are needed from food preparation to facility management. These facilities are open almost around the clock. Military personnel and civilians alike eat most (if not all) of their meals at these facilities. Many of them are very large and set up in a cafeteria type setting. As you can imagine, it takes a lot of personnel to manage these facilities. IT Professionals - Information Technology professionals are always needed to maintain and engineer computer networks and systems. This is a field that is in very high demand and can be quite lucrative. These professionals manage the various computer infrastructures throughout the country. It’s a plus if you have a US Security Clearance but not always necessary depending on the type of systems that you are supporting. Mechanics - As you can imagine, there are literally thousands of military and leased vehicles throughout Iraq and they all need to be maintained. The military installations are huge and personnel need to be transported from point to point. These mechanics need to be skilled to maintain all sorts of vehicles from standard cars and trucks to armored personnel carriers. Construction - You’ve probably heard in the news of the many construction projects in Iraq. If you have the skills, construction jobs in Iraq are available. Many companies from various nations have been awarded lucrative contracts to support the reconstruction efforts. Truck drivers - Always in high demand, truck drivers are needed to haul supplies to support the thousands of personnel at numerous installations. The truckers often carry cargo within the safer areas of the country which are patrolled by the military, but are also needed in the more dangerous regions. Translators - Of course linguists’ are always needed. If you are fluent in Arabic and willing to utilize you’re highly sought after skills, you can often demand a lot of money. Often these translators go out in the field with the military troops, but at other times they work within the confines of the bases. Security - Civilian security specialists are utilized throughout the Mideast to assist the military at numerous military installations as well as provide personal protection to high level individuals and dignitaries.

Arthur
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

America’s “Happiness Index” At New Low

Sunday, January 18th, 2009
iraq
Richard Stoyeck asked:


The other day it occurred to me that during Ronald Reagan’s run for the Presidency he created a “Misery Index”. This index represented a total of the rate of inflation, plus the prime rate, as an indicator of how the American people felt about how they were doing. No one has suggested resurrecting this index in recent years. My thought was to create a “Happiness Index”. How happy are you with the leadership of the country. The problem is that other than taking an outright poll, how do you determine happiness? Could you merely ask people if they are happy, or not with the way things are going?

Think about it for a moment, and try to objectively look at what’s been going on the last couple of years. For the last fifty years, the Republican Party successfully presented itself as the people’s choice for as a strong anti-communist party versus the former Soviet threat. Republican President after President was elected on the basis of toughness versus communism.

By 1992, communism was no longer an issue as Russia, and the satellites went democratic, and the Berlin Wall had fallen. Suddenly, the Republican Party felt its foreign policy legs come out from under it. The communist bogeyman which was real since 1917 was no longer an issue. A sitting Republican President, George HW Bush was defeated handily by Democratic Candidate, Bill Clinton who had NO foreign policy experience, or even an understanding of things foreign. During the campaign that followed, foreign policy was a NON-ISSUE. There was no communist bogeyman for the Republicans to pin their hopes on.

The tragedy of 9/11 changed everything. When the tragedy struck, the current President of the United States was handed terrorism on a silver platter as an issue. Terrorism could then be used as a replacement for communism as the next boogeyman. Anti-terrorism would serve as the underpinning of the Republican Party the same way anti-communism served for over 70 years.

The President attacked the Taliban in Afghanistan who had harbored Osama Bin Laden, and his allies for years. When it came to finishing the job, and surrounding Osama in the mountains of Tora Bora, Afghanistan, we let this mass murderer get away by leaving the job to foreign hired mercenaries, the anti Taliban Afkan nationals. I assume we simply did not want to take the American manpower losses that might have been demanded.

The President then committed the American army and wealth to destroying the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq. Our entry to this war was based on false premises. There were no weapons of mass destruction. We are now left with chaos and civil war in that country, and no EXIT STRATEGY. As Americans, not one of us, including the President has any idea how this war will finish. He, the President has now placed our country in the same position as we were in during Viet Nam – Quagmire.

When Americans enter a war, they need to know the objective. During WW II, it was the taking of Berlin in Europe, or the fall of Tokyo in Japan. In Viet Nam, there was no mission, except the ephemeral objective of keeping South Viet Nam from going communist. What does that mean? Depending on how you calculate it, the Viet Nam war went on for about 15 years. How long will Iraq take?

I believe the President has been notified by the American people in the recent Congressional election that he is on a “short leash” when it comes to Iraq. What is the objective in Iraq? It can’t be democracy any longer. These people do not understand democracy as we understand it. The concept of democracy in that part of the world has not existed in thousands of years.

Democracy is everybody’s SECOND choice in Iraq. The Shia and Sunni’s are killing each other on a daily basis in large numbers, some of which are unreported. Good, decent American troops, none of which are sons of any member of Congress, are dying in a war without an objective, except for “Stay the Course”.

These policies should be unacceptable to all of us as Americans. The Republican Party in Congress was a surrogate for President Bush in this election. The voters could not vent their ANGER at President Bush direct. The electorate chose instead, to vent their pent-up anger towards Republican incumbents, who took a “thumping” as the President said. Yes there were other issues like corruption, but Iraq was the emotional issue. Had President Bush been up for re-election, he would have been soundly defeated by even a paraplegic blind mute this time around.

Let’s get back to that “happiness index” I spoke about in the beginning of this article. Are any of us happier with the progress of our country over the last six years than we were before that period? Are we more optimistic about the future of our country now than we were a few years ago? Do any of us believe we are headed in the right direction, or even where we are headed at all?

I believe we are now facing MASSIVE UNRESOLVED PROBLEMS that if not addressed will get worse, and our present leadership is not even aware that they exist. America has moved from a farming economy pre 1900, to a manufacturing economy in the 20th century. It must now complete the move from a manufacturing economy, to a services / post industrial society in this the 21st century. This is going to be a tough move with big unanticipated downdrafts that can knock us for an economic loop.

China and the Asian rim want to manufacture everything, leaving us with nothing. Some of our brand name companies are more than willing to accommodate them. Nike manufactures nothing – everything comes from Asia. The massive oil companies in this country including Exxon, and others manufacture nothing – they are strictly distribution and marketing entities. GM and Ford can not compete against Asian manufacturing, and then there’s Wal-Mart, which really functions as a distribution arm for China. Eighty percent of everything Wal-Mart sells comes from China.

This President does not have his eye on the ball, and we are in danger of losing our economic fire power in the next decade. He is asleep at the switch, and must realize that we can no longer afford the loss of precious lives, and national wealth on wars without objectives in countries that none of us have ever been to.

We do not have a “Happiness Index” in this country, but if we did, I believe we are near a low in our emotional happiness in this country. Things have to change, and they have to change in a hurry. Time is NOT on our side. Other countries want to eat our economy for lunch, and displace us as the world’s only remaining superpower. This President would do well to act his act together, and start thinking about how to maintain national economic wellbeing in the face of the coming foreign economic threats that are looming.

Richard Stoyeck



Lorraine
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

What cultivating projects are good for a Marine deployed in Iraq?

Saturday, January 17th, 2009
iraq
Natasha N asked:


We were going to grow potatoes (since this year is the international year of the spud) but we just found out that there are a whole bunch of potatoes in Iraq already, so cultivating them would be kind of silly. I mean, doable, but silly.

What other kinds of edible plants can be cultivated easily in a climate like Iraq? The pot-in-pot system of cooling could probably be incorporated into this. Probably.

Earl

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

War in Iraq, George W. Bush

Friday, January 16th, 2009
iraq
Thomas J. Craughwell With M. William Phelps asked:


Accomplished? On May 1, President Bush triumphantly proclaimed the end of combat operations, and he did it with a theatrical flourish.  Attired in a Navy flight suit, the former Air National Guard trainee (Bush had actually cut short his flight training to participate in a political campaign) landed ceremoniously on the deck of the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln off San Diego.  Bush emerged from the plane under a banner stretched across the carrier’s super structure. “Mission Accomplished” the banner exulted. “We have difficult work to do in Iraq,” the president said. “Parts of that country remain dangerous…The War on Terror continues.” But, he went on, “In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”

But a growing opposition thought otherwise.  Rumsfeld had assured Bush that the war could be fought on the cheap.  Once the productive Iraqi oil fields were up and running, they would more defray the costs of the war and the occupation.  (As of spring 2008, Iraqi oil production was still below prewar output.)  A streamlined military force brandishing high-tech equipment would be all that was needed.  American forces could be reduced and hand off the job to Iraqis.

When Lieutenant General Eric Shinseki, the Army chief of staff, told Congress that “something in the order of several hundred thousand” military personnel would be needed, Rumsfeld was outraged.  The Army’s top officer was hounded into retirement.  The Pentagon leadership pointedly refused to attend the customary retirement ceremony.

And Americans were dying.  Bremer and the CPA, mostly made up of young and inexperienced recent college graduates but with impeccable political credentials, holed up in the heavily fortified and protected area of Baghdad, the Green Zone.

Beyond, chaos and danger reigned.  Snipers picked off individual soldiers.  Roads were sown with mines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs), which were designed to blow up and destroy the unprotected undercarriage of military vehicles when they passed over.  Personnel carriers were only lightly armored, another money-saving policy.  Besides, heavy armor was unnecessary, it was thought, with Iraq conquered and the population friendly.  Troops took to fashioning their own armor from scrap metal or persuaded families back home to provide it to them.

The Bombing of a Shrine. When Baghdad fell, Saddam Hussein was nowhere to be found.  As the coalition rounded up other former government leaders on their “Most Wanted” list, the supreme leader’s whereabouts remained a mystery.  Then, seven months after his statue fell in December 2003, a disheveled and filthy Hussein was discovered cowering in a tiny subterranean dugout — a “spider hole,” his captors called it — near his birthplace of Tikrit.  The all-powerful dictator who once had thirty-seven palaces was living in a few cubic feet underneath a mud hut.  Bush immediately went on television to trumpet his capture, “I say to the Iraqi people, ‘You will not have to live in fear of Saddam ever again.’”  But elsewhere, there was little to crow about.

Even the commander of U.S. ground forces acknowledged that a “low-key, guerrilla-type war” was underway.  Suicide bombers blew themselves up in marketplaces, city squares, offices, buses, and crowded streets, often taking as many as 100 fellow Iraqis with them.  In one horrifying instance, 140 Shiites enjoying a Shia festival were blown up.  Terrorist explosives reduced to rubble one of the most treasured shrines of Shia Islam, the Golden Mosque of Samarra with its gleaming dome, setting off a countrywide wave of violence between Sunnis and Shiites.  Trying to quell the rising insurgency that was morphing into a civil war.  U.S. troops fought pitched battles with Shiite militia in the teeming Sadr City district of Baghdad.  A month later, they were fighting Sunni insurgents for the city of Falluja.

Misled by the Iraq National Congress’s belief that Iraqis were united by their hatred of Hussein, American leaders had vastly underestimated the long standing enmity between the rival Muslim factions.  Meanwhile Bremer had undertaken to exterminate root and branch all vestiges of Hussein rule.  He outlawed Hussein’s Baath party and barred all members from the government payroll, even low-level clerks and drivers who had joined the party simply to protect their jobs.  “DeBaathification” eliminated much of the trained bureaucracy and brought normal government function to a standstill so that even mailing a letter became difficult.

Another Bremer edict disbanded the Iraqi army.  Four hundred thousand angry trained soldiers were suddenly turned onto the streets with no jobs or income, to demonstrate or bitterly join the insurgency-where, at least, they would be fed. 

The army was the only organization that could bring any kind of order to the country and perhaps stop the widespread looting, Bremer’s predecessor, an appalled General Garner noted.  ”You can get rid of an army in a day, Jerry,” he told Bremer.  ”It takes years to build one.”  (Bremer was to claim afterward that he didn’t disband the army; it had simply “dissolved.” And he said he took his action only after consulting the Pentagon.)

Despite these setbacks and growing antiwar sentiment, Bush was elected for a second term in 2004 and promised to prosecute the war until “victory.”  After the election, Powell went to the White House and submitted his resignation.  He had, he insisted, always intended to serve only one term.  Bush made no effort to keep him.

“We had a good and fulsome discussion,” Powell said in a press briefing afterward.  ”We came to the mutual agreement that it would be appropriate for me to leave at this time.”  Washington interpreted that as diplomatic double speak for “We aired our disagreements in loud and angry voices.”

Where are those WMDs? The bits of broken crockery that the “Pottery Barn Rule” had predicted continued to accumulate.  David Kay, named to head a diligent search to find those hidden weapons of mass destruction, failed to turn up a single specimen after two years of looking.  Nor could he uncover any evidence of any advanced plans to develop them.  The best he could document were a few vials of anthrax powder kept in scientists’ home refrigerators as souvenirs after the first Gulf War.

The aluminum tubes said to be designed for enriching and weaponizing uranium were actually for use in unforbidden short-range missiles.  The deal to buy yellow-cake uranium from the African nation of Niger, mentioned by Bush in his State of the Union address, was a hoax.  No evidence could be found of supposed meetings in Prague between Al Qaeda operatives and Iraqi diplomats.

Then came the revelation — with graphic, almost stomach-turning photos — that American soldiers had mistreated and tortured prisoners in the notorious Abu Ghraib prison.  The Congressional cry to take the troops out grew to a roar.  Democratic candidates swept the House and Senate in the 2006 elections.  With Bush’s popularity sinking to the low 20s in the polls, other Republicans stumbled over each other in haste to distance themselves from the president.  Rumsfeld was finally fired, and the Iraq Study Group, an elite panel of Washington wisemen co-chaired by former Secretary of State James Baker, normally a Bush acolyte, deemed the Iraq situation “grave and deteriorating.”

Instead of withdrawing troops, however, a defiant Bush increased them.  The “surge” of 30,000 reinforcements announced in 2007 was supposedly to allow the shaky, Shiite-controlled Iraqi government time and cover to solve contentious issues–such as sharing oil revenue and regional autonomy–and to train a viable army.

“As they stand up, we will stand down,” Bush repeated, almost like a mantra.  In the new army’s first test of standing up, Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki ordered an attack on Shiite militias in the port city of Basra.  More than 1,000 recruits deserted or fled the battlefield and had to be rescued by U.S. troops and airpower, with a ceasefire brokered by Iran.

Meanwhile, the country that Bush still insisted was the front fine in the “war on terror” lay in shambles, along with the lives of twenty-five million citizens.  Except for the Kurdish-held north and the “Green Zone” headquarters of the coalition, no part of the embattled nation could be considered secure.  (Later, in the spring of 2008, incessant rocket attacks shattered the supposed safety of the Green Zone.)  Cities cleared of resistance by coalition offensives frequently fen back into chaos when the troops moved on.  Historic Baghdad, the fabled city of flying carpets and Arabian Nights, was a nightmare of suicide bombing, IEDS, and ruins, with one million impoverished residents in ‘Sadr City,’ a Shiite enclave and a law unto itself.

More than one and a half million Iraqis, by official estimate, had fled, most of them huddled in squalid quarters in the unwelcoming cities of neighboring Jordan and Syria.  Another estimated two million were displaced within the country, fleeing wrecked homes to crowd in with relatives or live in makeshift tent villages.  Much of the educated population of what had once been the most developed country in the Middle East had decamped, including 12,000 of the country’s 34,000 physicians.  Living conditions for those remaining were abysmal. Whole neighborhoods were without adequate sewage or water.

In July 2007, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told Congress that most Iraqi cities had electricity only one to two hours a day.  On the fifth anniversary of the war, the nation’s electric grid was still producing less than 5,000 daily megawatts of power, less than when the war started.  Iraqis faced a scorching summer when  11,000 megawatts would be the daily minimum.  In oil-rich Iraq, oil to power generating plants was in short supply.  The bulk of it was being shipped abroad, the Iraqi government’s only source of revenue.  And an estimated 35 percent of the population was unemployed.  

The repeatedly fought-over city of Falluja, west of Baghdad, was a classic example of the war’s devastation.  Once a thriving city of 450,000, its surviving population was estimated in 2007 at fewer than 50,000.  Eighty percent of the buildings had been damaged in the fighting; half of them were completely destroyed.  Half of the homes were gone.  Those that remained were largely without water, electricity, or sewage.  There were no operating schools.  Buildings had been stripped by looters, including floor tiles and window frames.  Once Falluja had been known as “the city of mosques,” with more than 200 glittering temples of worship.  Only 60 remained intact.

The estimates of “collateral damage”-the Pentagon euphemism for civilian and noncombatant casualties-varied wildly.  In 2007, the Iraqi Ministry of Health gave a low figure of 151,000 Iraqis killed from war-related causes between February 2003 and June 2006.  A survey published in the British medical journal Lancet estimated 600,000 “excess” deaths-those above the normal attrition of population-for the period 2003-2006.  An Opinion Research Bureau report estimated the war had caused 946,000 to 1,033,000 violent deaths.  In one survey, researchers asked individual Iraqis if they had a civilian relative or friend who had been a war casualty.  Eighty percent of those interviewed said yes.

One unlamented casualty was Hussein.  After a tumultuous trial marked by raucous shouting at the judges of the special tribunal, the onetime strong man was unceremoniously hanged for ‘crimes against humanity’ on December 30, 2006.  Reactions predictably ranged from cheering to anger.  And yet the fighting went on.  And on.

In December 2005, Bush at last admitted that some intelligence on which the war had been fought was “wrong.”  But so what?  Bush insisted that the war was worthwhile and the decision to bring down Hussein was “the right thing to do.”  He would have made the same decision even if he had known more.  Powell, the obedient soldier, kept silent while writing his memoirs and giving motivational speeches.  But in 2007, he finally apologized for the United Nations speech.  “The intelligence I was given turned out to be inaccurate,” he told Barbara Walters.  ”That will always remain a blot on my record.”

The Historic Record. In 1971, Henry Kissinger asked Chinese foreign minister Zhou En-lai the historical impact of the French Revolution of 1789.  “Too soon to tell,” En-lai responded.

In the lame duck months of Bush’s presidency, in the midst of an election campaign, and with his popularity ratings cratering, by En-lai’s reckoning, it is at least 200 years too soon to assess Bush’s impact on history, and especially the Iraq invasion.

But writers, historians, politicians, office-seekers, and the world are trying already to size up the eight Bush years.  Some contend that Bush is simply “an amiable dunce” (as Clark Clifford dubbed Ronald Reagan), readily manipulated by Vice President Cheney, former Secretary Rumsfeld, and his political Svengali Karl Rove.  They say Bush is a president out of the loop, whose priorities were cutting brush on his ranch in Crawford, Texas, and getting a good night’s sleep.  Many Europeans share that view and believe Bush has destroyed the world’s trust in the United States–trust that will take decades to rebuild.  Others regard the Bush administration as visionary-the first to recognize an impending “clash of civilizations,” and begin to prepare America for it.  And meanwhile, to fight a preemptive war before the terrorist enemy got stronger.

How will the decision to invade Iraq be judged 50, 100, 200 years from now?  How will Bush’s record be written in the twenty-third century?  Where is Zhou En-lai when we need him?

The above is an excerpt from the book Failures Of The Presidents: From The Whiskey Rebellion And War Of 1812 To The Bay Of Pigs And War In Iraq

by Thomas J. Craughwell with M. William Phelps

Published by Publisher;  September 2008;$19.95US/$21.95CAN; 978-1-59233-299-1

Copyright © 2008 Author

Author Bio

Thomas J. Craughwell is the author of several books, most recently How the Barbarian Invasions Shaped the Modern World (Fair Winds Press, 2008) and Stealing Lincoln’s Body (Harvard University Press, 2007). He has written articles on history, religion, politics, and popular culture for the Wall Street Journal, American Spectator, and U.S. News & World Report. He lives in Bethel, Connecticut.

Journalist, lecturer, and  historian M. William Phelps is the author of eleven books, including his most recent, Nathan Hale: The Life and Death of America’s First Spy (Thomas Dunne Books, 2008). He lives in Vernon, Connecticut.



Crystal
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

What are some good items to send a woman stationed it Iraq?

Friday, January 16th, 2009
iraq
Jilly Bean asked:


My friend is over in Iraq and I just wanted to send her a small care package to let her know I am thinking about her and I can’t think if anything to get. I am sending chapstick and magazines, but I need more ideas! Thanks!

Martha
Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google