Senin, 31 Januari 2005

The Truth is Out There


Doug
links to a  Seymour
Hersh
interview by Amy Goodman, whose contents are so self-expressive they
need no comment. Here are some of the things Hersh says:



We took Baghdad easily. It wasn't because be won. We took Baghdad because
they pulled back and let us take it and decided to fight a war that had been
pre-planned that they're very actively fighting. The frightening thing about
it is, we have no intelligence. Maybe it's -- it's -- it is frightening, we
have no intelligence about what they're doing. A year-and-a-half ago, we're up
against two and three-man teams. We estimated the cells operating against us
were two and three people, that we could not penetrate. As of now, we still
don't know what's coming next. There are 10, 15-man groups. They have terrific
communications. Somebody told me, it's -- somebody in the system, an officer
-- and by the way, the good part of it is, more and more people are available
to somebody like me.


... the amazing thing is we are been taken over basically by a cult, eight
or nine neo-conservatives have somehow grabbed the government. Just how and
why and how they did it so efficiently, will have to wait for much later
historians and better documentation than we have now, but they managed to
overcome the bureaucracy and the Congress, and the press, with the greatest of
ease. It does say something about how fragile our Democracy is. You do have to
wonder what a Democracy is when it comes down to a few men in the Pentagon and
a few men in the White House having their way. What they have done is
neutralize the C.I.A. because there were people there inside


I have a friend in the Air Force, a Colonel, who had the awful task of
being an urban bombing planner, planning urban bombing, to make urban bombing
be as unobtrusive as possible. I think it was three weeks ago today, three
weeks ago Sunday after Fallujah I called him at home. I'm one of the people --
I don't call people at work. I call them at home, and he has one of those
caller I.D.�s, and he picked up the phone and he said, �Welcome to
Stalingrad.�



This amazing interview closes with a flourish.



AMY GOODMAN: Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Seymour Hersh. This news
just in: 31 Marines have died in a helicopter crash in Iraq. To purchase an
audio or video copy of this entire program, click here for our new online
ordering or call 1 (800) 881-2359.



Time was that when you read about 'black helicopters',  'ghostly white
trains' and motherships it was in the context of a laughing academy. Now you can
listen to a Pulitzer-prize winner seriously describe how less than a dozen
changelings have taken over the entire US Government by ordering a transcript on
a toll-free number. Major credit cards accepted. Better yet, if you know the
home phone of a certain Air Force officer, he will tell you how to unobtrusively
bomb urban targets, so no one notices. Maybe it's like the silencers they have
for guns, only it works for 2,000 lb bombs.

Legitimacy Versus Informed Comment


Oxblog
asks whether Juan
Cole's latest post
on Iraq counts as informed comment. Cole said:



I'm just appalled by the cheerleading tone of US news coverage of the
so-called elections in Iraq on Sunday. I said on television last week that
this event is a "political earthquake" and "a historical first
step" for Iraq. It is an event of the utmost importance, for Iraq, the
Middle East, and the world. All the boosterism has a kernel of truth to it, of
course. Iraqis hadn't been able to choose their leaders at all in recent
decades, even by some strange process where they chose unknown leaders. But
this process is not a model for anything, and would not willingly be imitated
by anyone else in the region. The 1997 elections in Iran were much more
democratic
, as were the 2002 elections in Bahrain and Pakistan.



How's that again?












Juan Cole as quoted by
himself
Juan Cole as quoted in Reuters
I said on television last week
that this event is a "political earthquake" and "a
historical first step" for Iraq. 
"These elections are a
joke," said Juan Cole, a professor of modern Middle East history at
the University of Michigan. "The Bush administration has created
the worst possible advertisement for democracy because the perception
across the Middle East is that democracy means you get a country where
everything is out of control," he said.


Then he tells this story.



Moreover, as Swopa rightly reminds us all, the Bush administration opposed
one-person, one-vote elections of this sort. First they were going to turn
Iraq over to Chalabi within six months. Then Bremer was going to be MacArthur
in Baghdad for years. Then on November 15, 2003, Bremer announced a plan to
have council-based elections in May of 2004. The US and the UK had somehow
massaged into being provincial and municipal governing councils, the members
of which were pro-American. Bremer was going to restrict the electorate to
this small, elite group.


Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani immediately gave a fatwa denouncing this plan
and demanding free elections mandated by a UN Security Council resolution.
Bush was reportedly "extremely offended" at these two demands and
opposed Sistani. Bremer got his appointed Interim Governing Council to go
along in fighting Sistani. Sistani then brought thousands of protesters into
the streets in January of 2004, demanding free elections. Soon thereafter,
Bush caved and gave the ayatollah everything he demanded. Except that he was
apparently afraid that open, non-manipulated elections in Iraq might become a
factor in the US presidential campaign, so he got the elections postponed to
January 2005. This enormous delay allowed the country to fall into much worse
chaos, and Sistani is still bitter that the Americans didn't hold the
elections last May. The US objected that they couldn't use UN food ration
cards for registration, as Sistani suggested. But in the end that is exactly
what they did.



Salim Lone, the director of communications for Sergio Viera de Mello has
another version of events, which he tells in the Guardian.
In Lone's version, the Interim Governing Council (full title Iraq
Interim Governing Council
), which in Cole's narrative was unleashed by
Bremer on Sistani, was actually the brainstorm of "the late Sergio Vieira
de Mello".



In its search for greater legitimacy for its preferred Iraqi leadership,
the US has avoided the UN security council, since most of its members abhor
what is being done to Iraq. The US has instead chosen to work with individual
representatives. The first such UN involvement, when the late Sergio Vieira de
Mello headed the UN mission in Iraq, was the most effective. He was able to
persuade the then US proconsul, Paul Bremer, that he should appoint an Iraqi
Governing Council rather than an advisory body
. Even then, the anger about
the individuals and groups on this council, and for UN support for it, was
palpable in Iraq.


Nearly a year later, in another bid for UN support, Bush assured the world
that the interim government would be picked by Lakhdar Brahimi, Kofi Annan's
special representative. Brahimi spent weeks in Iraq consulting domestic groups
about who they felt should lead the country. But on the day the interim
government was to be appointed, a deal was struck by the Americans behind
Brahimi's back, to make the CIA-linked Ayad Allawi prime minister.



Lone's main beef is that America reneged on the arrangement that "the
interim government would be picked by Lakhdar Brahimi, Kofi Annan's special
representative". And who was sent to do the picking? Was it someone the
Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, who Cole says possessed the power to make or break
the White House would likely respect? Annan had sent Lakhdar Brahimi, who PBS
describes as "a Sunni Muslim, Brahimi ... with decades of experience as an Algerian diplomat."
Not to put too fine a point on it, according to a contemporaneous New
York Times
article by Edward Wong,  Brahimi was there to "pick a
secular Sunni politician to be president of the interim government ..."


So the helpless President George Bush, in the Cole version, submitted to
Sistani's fatwa with the mansuetude he should have displayed from the
first. Only this submission, according to Salim Lone's perspective, was a
mistake, because by allying themselves with Sistani, America had yoked itself to
a sectarian enterprise that will only deepen the hatred most Arabs and Muslims
feel for America.



The millions of Iraqis, as well as the UN electoral team and the Iraqi
election commission staff, who did participate in the process despite the
grave risk, deserve our respect. But it was a risk taken in vain. The election
was illegitimate, and cannot resolve the rampant insecurity resulting from the
occupation. The only way to stop the destruction of Iraq is to end the
occupation and enfranchise the Sunnis, who are leading the resistance because
they see the US as systematically excluding them from the role they deserve to
play in Iraq. ...


The US has little popular support in the country. It has, however, won the
support of the extremely influential Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who tolerates
an occupation most of his followers hate, with the single-minded sectarian
goal of having the majority Shia at the helm of power in Iraq. The occupation
has destroyed Iraq and is destabilising the world by exacerbating the deep
animosity that most Arabs and Muslims feel for the US. The Bush administration
is now provoking the Muslim world by threats against Iran. The rest of the
world looks on, mostly helplessly.



I'm feeling better already.

Minggu, 30 Januari 2005

Did We Win?


Juan
Cole
puts up this post.



Guerrillas launched mortar and suicide bomb attacks at polling stations
throughout Iraq on Sunday as thousands of Iraqis headed to the polls. As many
as 27 were dead by 1 pm Iraqi time, with several times that wounded.


Explosions rocked West, South and East Baghdad, as well as many cities
throughout the Sunni heartland--Baqubah, Mosul, Balad, and in Salahuddin
Province (7 attacks by noon). There was also an attack in the Turkmen north at
Talafar, and in the Shiite deep south at Basra. In Basra, Coalition troops
raided the al-Hamra Mosque. Four were killed and seven wounded in an attack in
Sadr City. These kinds of statistics were common in the election-poll attacks.


Turnout seems extremely light in the Sunni Arab areas, where some polling
stations did not even open. It was heavier in the Shiite south and in the
Kurdish north.



Cole earlier characterized the Iraqi electoral process as a "joke"
in a Reuters
article
.



"These elections are a joke," said Juan Cole, a professor of
modern Middle East history at the University of Michigan. "The Bush
administration has created the worst possible advertisement for democracy
because the perception across the Middle East is that democracy means you get
a country where everything is out of control," he said.



The Boston
Globe
reports that a lot of Iraqi voters have a lively sense of humor.



Baghdad, Iraq (AP) Iraqis danced and clapped with joy Sunday as they voted
in their country's first free election in a half-century, defying insurgents
who launched eight deadly suicide bombings and mortar strikes at polling
stations. The attacks killed at least 31 people. After a slow start, men and
women in flowing black abayas often holding babies formed long lines, although
there were pockets of Iraq where the streets and polling stations were
deserted. Iraqis prohibited from using private cars walked streets crowded in
a few places nearly shoulder-to-shoulder with voters, hitched rides on
military buses and trucks, and some even carried the elderly in their arms.


''This is democracy,'' said Karfia Abbasi, holding up a thumb stained with
purple ink to prove she had voted.



The BBC
reporter's notebook
gives area-by-area impressions of the voting.




































Area BBC Correspondent
Impressions
Basra "People have been literally streaming towards polling
stations. I have never witnessed this huge turnout for long time."
Mosul "In places with a Kurdish majority such as the Noor
and Masarif districts, there is a huge turnout."
Fallujah "The turnout to all these stations is very low."
Baghdad "We have seen voting here in the capital, and in the
streets close to the BBC office the atmosphere was almost
euphoric."
Arbil "We're not looking at vast crowds of people but this
particular polling station has been allocated 3,000 registered voters
and I would say we've probably seen the bulk of them passing through
already."
Al Amarah "From Basra to Al Amarah, to the northern most
sections of the British zone, thousands of people are lined up on the
streets. Even in the smaller provincial towns 400 kilometres from Basra,
towns like Ali al-Ghabi and Komait, where there are only a handful of
polling stations, the queues are several hundred deep."
Najaf "A lot of women turned out and their numbers dwarf
those of the men. I have seen very old people unable to walk, I have
seen blind people being led to the polling stations."


Turnout out has been low in Fallujah and higher in Basra and Mosul; in a very
narrow sense Cole's post has been accurate. But in a larger sense, his
appreciation was totally wrong. Think of what it means for anyone to dare vote
in Fallujah at all, despite the penalties prescribed by terrorists, some of whom
are certain to be kinsmen. And when was the time, at any Faculty meeting, that
the halt and the blind tramped in to vote (cars are banned from approaching the
polling precincts for security reasons) at the risk of death? If the electoral
process was a charade, it was one in which too many participated too willingly.


None of this means that the insurgency in Iraq has finally been beaten down
or that only plain sailing lies ahead. But the voter turnouts certainly suggests
that the electoral results will stick. It will be very hard to
de-legitimize the whole process or cast aside the ballots as if the elections
had never happened; not after the sacrifice that the Shi'ites, Kurds and the
Sunnis (the risk was all the greater for them) have endured simply to exercise
their choice. Commentators have pointed out that elected candidates may
subsequently express views which may be regarded as anti-American; but if the
US, which is the occupying power, is to be bound by the result, as is consistent
with the concept of the return of sovereignty to the Iraqi people, why should
'insurgents' or the Left be able to say 'I won't accept the elections as
legitimate'? While that will not prevent them from dismissing the elections or
making disparaging noises, all but the most obtuse will understand that they
can't be undone and will move on instead to the next point of criticism. Which
means the elections weren't a joke after all, except on Cole. And did we win?
Who knows? But many Iraqis think they did.

Sabtu, 29 Januari 2005

The Ministry of Truth


The Obsidian
Order
is applying the commonsense test to photos taken by Ali Jasim of
Reuters, Ali Al-Saadi of AFP and Khalid Mohammed of AP purporting to show a car
exploding in front of a high school scheduled to be a voting center. These
provide powerful visual proof of how 'insurgents' are winning in Iraq. The Obsidian
Order
observes that for openers, the car in the photos is not experiencing
any kind of high-order explosion; it is simply burning. (Hat tip: Glenn
Reynolds
)



What do you see? A car on fire, apparently not close to anything flammable.
We are told this is in front of a school, but we do not see the school. The
fire looks like petrol, probably in cans in the back of the vehicle, set off
with an incendiary WP shell (White Phosphorus - the white smoke and sparks).
... The key and blindingly obvious point: there are at least three
photojournalists from different outfits there exactly at the time it goes off!
Interpretation: ... this was staged



Staged? Staged? The Obsidian Order forgets that coincidences of this
type are normal in Iraq. An AP photographer also happened to be around
when Iraqi election workers were murdered on Haifa street. Some French
journalists just happened to be present when 'insurgents' attempted to shoot

down a DHL cargo plane. So why shouldn't three wire service photographers happen
to stroll by when a car 'explodes' in front of an obscure high school building
in Baghdad? But Chester
is not to be persuaded that everything is on the up-and-up. He observes that the
three wire service accounts differ from that provided by the Iraqi police.



One of the comments on the site says:



Fox news had the sequence on the TV tonight. FNC said the Iraq police had
shot up the car and stopped it -- the car caught fire -- then apparently a
bomb inside went off. When the camera pulled back, the police with their
guns raised were in the near filed framing -- as if they had been shooting
at the car.


So I am not sure what your point is. Looked to me like the Iraqi police
got their man before he could reach the school. FNC said a school was the
target, not that it was hit by the explosion.



Ah ha! There we have it! The reason the pictures look funny is because the
Iraqi security forces killed the attacker before he could properly position
his vehicle and the vehicle then sympathetically detonated. But wait! This is
good news right? Iraqi security forces disrupted an attack. Then why does the
Reuters caption under each photo read thus:



An Iraqi boy runs past a car just as it explodes in front of al-Nahdha
High School which was scheduled to be used as a voting centre in Baghdad,
January 28, 2005. Hours earlier in the same area in southern Baghdad, a car
bomb exploded next to a police station, killing four Iraqi civilians, police
said. REUTERS/Ali Jasim



Not only does Reuters refuse to acknowledge the success of Iraqi security
forces in every single caption, but they instead mention a completely
different bombing that was successful in killing innocents.



So what? The wire services have reported it and it must be true. The last
posts
have coincidentally dealt with Orwell's description of how
totalitarianisms manufacture a media-generated alternative reality to suit their ends. In 1984 real events are never reported by the Ministry of Truth; false events are manufactured out of whole cloth. The Party knows that "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past". Thankfully, these falsifications happen only in fiction. The car really exploded as three photojournalists were strolling by, even though the pictures show it is just burning. Honest it did.

Jumat, 28 Januari 2005

A Trip Down Memory Hole Lane


Mary
Madigan
at Michael
Totten's site
adds another nuance to our understanding of George Orwell's
'memory hole' concept. She reminds us that the practice of obliterating the past
in order to leave the field clear for the seeds of new thought is an ancient
practice. Her example is the Wahabi destruction of history.



Militias from the Islamic courts set up in the Somali capital, Mogadishu,
are destroying a colonial Italian cemetery. They are digging up the graves and
dumping human remains near the airport.


The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan says he was horrified to see a large number
of abandoned human skulls. Young boys were playing with one as a toy.
According to Sunni scholar Stephen Schwartz, grave desecration is a Wahhabi
tradition:


Saudi agents uprooted graveyards in Kosovo even before the war began there
in the late 1990s, and Wahhabi missionaries have sought to demolish Sufi tombs
in Kurdistan. Late in 2002, the Saudi government tore down the historic
Ottoman fortress of Ajyad in Mecca, causing outrage in many Muslim countries.



The grave desecrations are an obvious illustration of Orwell's dictum
that "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present
controls the past." Like the destruction of the Bamian
Buddhas
in Afghanistan, their effect is remove any recollection of a creed
or way of life that may have preceded Wahabism. Yet  it is one of Madigan's
quotes that shows how it affects the present.



Somali journalist Bashir Goth wrote about the influence of Saudi Arabia's
Wahhabi Islam in Somalia:



"Nowadays, it is sad to see� that the ideal harmony between Islam
and Somali culture is swept aside by a new brand of Islam that is being
pushed down the throat of our people - Wahhabism. Anywhere one looks, one
finds that alien, perverted version of Islam that depends on punctilious
manners more than it depends on deep-rooted faith. A strange uniformity�
has crept into the social manners of our people. The unique fashion and
identity of our people has changed forever. We have become a people without
fashion, without culture, and without identity�




An ongoing campaign to impoverish culture and thought was a pillar of the
totalitarian 1984;
something which was achieved largely through the censorship of language
resulting in a bowdlerized dialect called Newspeak. We would recognize it
instantly as modern 'political correctness'; and it is not surprising that the
Wahabis would use the technique as well to create 'a people without fashion,
without culture, without identity'. Orwell defined Newspeak in this way:



The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for
the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees of Ingsoc, but to make
all other modes of thought impossible. It was intended that when Newspeak had
been adopted once and for all and Oldspeak forgotten, a heretical thought -
that is, a thought diverging from the principles of Ingsoc - should be
literally unthinkable, at least so far as thought is dependent on words. Its
vocabulary was so constructed as to give exact and often very subtle
expression to every meaning that a Party member could properly wish to
express, while excluding all other meanings and also the possibility of
arriving at them by indirect methods. This was done partly by the invention of
new words, but chiefly by eliminating undesirable words and by stripping such
words as remained of unorthodox meanings, and so far as possible of all
secondary meanings whatever.



The chief ward against the temptation of 'thought crime' was doublethink,
here described by Orwell.



But it is also necessary to remember that events happened in the desired
manner. And if it is necessary to rearrange one's memories or to tamper with
written records, then it is necessary to forget that one has done so. The
trick of doing this can be learned like any other mental technique. It is
learned by the majority of Party members, and certainly by all who are
intelligent as well as orthodox. In Oldspeak it is called, quite frankly,
'reality control'. In Newspeak it is called doublethink, though doublethink
comprises much else as well.



Orwell's works themselves were not immune from this process of redaction. The
Newspeak Dictionary
drily observes that "Michael Moore Ends Fahrenheit 911 with a quote from
Nineteen Eighty-Four! - I was certainly pleased to see that M&M used the
words of Orwell to sum up his film. But unfortunately, it appears that the quote
really wasn't the
actual words of Orwell
!"












Orwell Michael Moore
"In accordance with the principles of doubthink it does not matter if the war is not real, or when it is, victory is not possible. The war is not meant to be won, it is meant to be continuous. The essential act of modern warfare is the destruction of the produce of human labour. A hierarchical society is only possible and the basis of poverty and ignorance. In principle, the war effort is always planned to keep society of the brink of starvation. The war is waged by the ruling group against its own subjects. And its object is not victory over Eurasia or Eastasia, but to keep the very structure of society intact."  "It does not matter if the war is not real, or when it is, victory is not possible. The war is not meant to be won, but it is meant to be continuous. A hierarchical society is only possible on the basis of poverty and ignorance. This new version is the past and no different past can ever have existed. In principle the war effort is always planned to keep society on the brink of starvation. The war is waged by the ruling group against its own subjects and its object is not the victory over either Eurasia or Eastasia but to keep the very structure of society intact"



Finally, Mary Madigan's piece on Wahabism mentions how the Saudi Arabian
ambassador called for the removal of an elected legislator in the country to
which he was accredited -- a case of a person protected by newspeak
attempting to shove someone down the 'memory hole'.



According to the German publication, Der Spiegel, the killer�s actual
target was Dutch legislator Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali immigrant. She and other
legislators were so unable to ensure their security against extremist death
threats, they had to leave the Netherlands to hide in the United States. In
short, a Western nation couldn't defend its own legislators against an
occupying paramilitary group. Fortunately, Hirsi Ali has returned. According
to Spiegel�s report:



Hirsi Ali made championing the cause of Muslim women her career and
eventually got elected to parliament. When the ambassador of Saudi Arabia
called for her to be removed from office because of her polemics against
Islam she just scored even more points with Dutch voters. In a survey of the
most-popular Dutch people in 2003, she landed in second place.



The Saudi ambassador felt he had the right to call for an elected
legislator to be removed from office. Who does he think he is?



Madigan should have patience. She will eventually understand that resistance
is futile. Orwell closed his classic novel with these
words
.



He gazed up at the enormous face. Forty years it had taken him to learn
what kind of smile was hidden beneath the dark moustache. O cruel, needless
misunderstanding! O stubborn, self-willed exile from the loving breast! Two
gin-scented tears trickled down the sides of his nose. But it was all right,
everything was all right, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory
over himself. He loved Big Brother.


The Wave of the Future


Joshua
Micah Marshall
thinks Simon
Rosenberg
should be the next DNC Chair.



As most all of you know, there's a heated race going on for the
chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee, something that hasn't
happened since before the Clinton era. The race will be decided in about two
weeks; but so far I've only done a handful of posts about it. ... If I were
one of the four-hundred-odd people who have a vote in this race, I'd be voting
for Simon Rosenberg. And I'd feel very strongly about the vote and cast it
without reservation.



Mr. Rosenberg's political ideas are on display in two of his speeches: "Where
We Are"
, "Some
Thoughts on Internet, Politics and Participation"
and an NYT article
called "Wiring
the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy"
all of which are linked to his site.
The NYT article describes the core of Rosenberg's thinking at length. It begins
through the eyes of a venture capitalist, Andy Rapaport, who thinks he knows how
to fix the Democratic Party.



Rappaport was surprisingly downcast about the party's prospects, which, he
said, would not be improved simply by winning back the White House. ...
''There is a growing realization among people who take very seriously the
importance of progressive politics that the Democratic Party has kind of
failed to create a vision for the country that is strongly resonant,'' he
said. ''And our numbers'' -- meaning Democrats as a whole -- ''are decreasing.
Our political power has been diminishing, and it's become common knowledge
that the conservative movement has established a very strong, long-term
foundation, whereas we've basically allowed our foundation, if not to crumble,
to at least fall into a state of disrepair. So there are a lot of people
thinking, What can we do about this?'' ...




Actually, Rappaport says he may be on to an answer. Last summer, he got a
call from Simon Rosenberg, president of the New Democrat Network, a
fund-raising and advocacy group in Washington. Would Rappaport mind sitting
down for a confidential meeting with a veteran Democratic operative named Rob
Stein? Sure, Rappaport replied. What Stein showed him when they met was a
PowerPoint presentation that laid out step by step, in a series of diagrams a
ninth-grader could understand, how conservatives, over a period of 30 years,
had managed to build a ''message machine'' that today spends more than $300
million annually to promote its agenda. Rappaport was blown away by the
half-hour-long presentation. ''Man,'' he said, ''that's all it took to buy the
country?''



There were two elements to the Roseberg-Stein Powerpoint presentation. The first
was the idea that it was possible to offer up parts of the liberal policy agenda
direct to ideological 'investors' and then sell that agenda to the country via a
powerful 'message machine'. The Republicans had done it! What remained was for
the Democrats to harness the same mechanism to a higher purpose.



Stein and Rosenberg weren't asking Rappaport for money -- at least not yet.
They wanted Democrats to know what they were up against, and they wanted them
to stop thinking about politics only as a succession of elections. ... In
March of this year, Rappaport convened a meeting of wealthy Democrats at a
Silicon Valley hotel so that they, too, could see Stein's presentation.
Similar gatherings were already under way in Washington and New York, where
the meetings included two of the most generous billionaires in the Democratic
universe -- the financier George Soros and Peter Lewis, an Ohio insurance
tycoon -- as well as Soros's son and Lewis's son. ... The plan is to gather
investors from each city -- perhaps in one big meeting early next year -- and
create a kind of venture-capital pipeline that would funnel money into a new
political movement, working independently of the existing Democratic
establishment. ...


Into this vacuum rushes money -- and already it is creating an entirely new
kind of independent force in American politics. Led by Soros and Lewis,
Democratic donors will, by November, have contributed as much as $150 million
to a handful of outside groups -- America Coming Together, the Media Fund,
MoveOn.org -- that are going online, door to door and on the airways in an
effort to defeat Bush. These groups aren't loyal to any one candidate, and
they don't plan to disband after the election; instead, they expect to yield
immense influence over the party's future, at the very moment when the power
of some traditional Democratic interest groups, like the once mighty
manufacturing unions, is clearly on the wane.



The key to defeating the 'Right Wing conspiracy' was freeing ideological
spenders from the constraints of the institutional Democratic Party. The New
Democratic Network aimed to duplicate Ronald Reagan's rebuilding of the
Republican Party. The way to go was to learn from the enemy.



Stein spent much of the spring of 2003 consumed with connecting the dots of
what Hillary Clinton famously called the ''vast right-wing conspiracy'' and
then translating it into flow charts and bullet points. The presentation
itself, a collection of about 40 slides titled ''The Conservative Message
Machine's Money Matrix,'' essentially makes the case that a handful of
families -- Scaife, Bradley, Olin, Coors and others -- laid the foundation for
a $300 million network of policy centers, advocacy groups and media outlets
that now wield great influence over the national agenda. The network, as Stein
diagrams it, includes scores of powerful organizations -- most of them with
bland names like the State Policy Network and the Leadership Institute -- that
he says train young leaders and lawmakers and promote policy ideas on the
national and local level. These groups are, in turn, linked to a massive
message apparatus, into which Stein lumps everything from Fox News and the
Wall Street Journal op-ed page to Pat Robertson's ''700 Club.'' And all of
this, he contends, is underwritten by some 200 ''anchor donors.'' ''This is
perhaps the most potent, independent institutionalized apparatus ever
assembled in a democracy to promote one belief system,'' he said.



There was optimism, at least in the beginning, that this process would could
drive George W. Bush from the White House in 2004 and create a Kerry presidency;
others were not so sure; nor did they care.



But if Kerry does not ascend to the presidency, and Democrats fail to make
significant gains in Congress, then the party and its various factions will be
as close to debilitating disunity and outright irrelevance as they have been
in almost a century. Leftist investors will see their opening -- a chance, at
last, to swoop in and save the party from empty centrism. The struggle for
control in 2008 will begin almost immediately.



In a memorandum distributed by the New Democractic Network, Rosenberg summarized
what he thought to be the salient components of the conservative revolution. The
Democratic Party had in its way, suffered a private and political 9/11 -- an
asymmetrical assault from the right -- due Rosenberg believed, to four reasons.



  1. The Republican/conservative alliance has built a superior information-age
    political machine.

  2. As an intellectually-based movement born when the Republicans were a true
    minority Party, their infrastructure is built on a foundation on the need to
    persuade.

  3. 9/11 gave the Republicans an opening that they have adroitly exploited.

  4. Bush�s brand of conservatism has had a particularly big impact in the
    South.

  5. The new Republican momentum with Hispanics is a grave threat.


From a superficial point of view, Rosenberg's analysis fits all the facts he
cares to acknowledge. But it begs the question of whether conservative ideas
have succeeded, at least in part, because they were more consonant with reality
than the 'progressive' ideas of the Left. It is not my intention to prove the
superiority of one ideology over the other; simply to point out that the very
possibility is excluded from Rosenberg's analysis; and by excluding the
possibility that Conservative ascendance might be due to a careful selection of
'correct' positions into their portfolio, the NDN is really assuming what must
be proved.


The book Reagan's
Revolution : The Untold Story of the Campaign That Started It All
(hat tip: Glenn
Reynolds
) points out that Reagan rebuilt the conservative movement, not by
putting the message machine on steroids, but by changing the message. One book
reviewer observed.



What is remarkable about Shirley's stirring account of the start of the
revolution is his description of the state of the GOP in 1976. The party
establishment had been practicing a move to the left strategy for years,
unhappy conservatives were beginning to talk about forming a third party, and
open talk about a "brain dead" Republican party devoid of ideas was
commonplace. As I read his book, I felt I was reading the description of the
Democratic Party of today.



Yet it was not simply changing the message, nor even improving its
dissemination that was the key to Reagan's success. Their real power came from
the fact that the ideas embodied in the message worked. It's possible,
however, that Simon Rosenberg is not Ronald Reagan. That observation at least,
would probably flatter both.

Colors to the Mast


The one unarguable virtue of Ted Kennedy's speech at the Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies
is that it nails his colors
to the mast. He wants America to begin pulling immediately out of Iraq after the
elections. Going in the first place was in his view a mistake, a strategic dead
end in which the Janaury 30 election is a compounded error; another step on the
road to another Vietnam. (Hat tip: the Command
Post
)



President Bush has left us with few good choices. There are costs to
staying, and costs to leaving. There may well be violence as we disengage
militarily from Iraq and Iraq disengages politically from us, but there will
be much more violence if we continue our present dangerous and destabilizing
course. It will not be easy to extricate ourselves from Iraq, but we must
begin. ... 


We all hope for the best from Sunday's election. The Iraqis have a right to determine their own future. But Sunday's elections are not a cure for the violence and instability. Unless the Sunni and all the communities in Iraq believe they have a stake in the outcome and a genuine role in drafting the new Iraqi constitution, the election could lead to greater alienation, greater escalation, greater death - for us and for the Iraqis.
...


A new Iraq policy must begin with acceptance of hard truths. Most of the
violence in Iraq is not being perpetrated - as President Bush has claimed - by
"a handful of folks that fear freedom" and people who want to try to
impose their will on people�just like Osama bin Laden." The insurgency
is largely home-grown. By our own government's count, the ranks of the
guerillas are large and growing larger. ...


The first point in a new plan would be for the United Nations, not the
United States, to provide assistance and advice on establishing a system of
government and drafting a Constitution. An international meeting - led by the
United Nations and the new Iraqi Government -- should be convened immediately
in Iraq or elsewhere in the Middle East to begin that process.



A less famous personage, Chaldean Bishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk, asserted the
contrary in an interview
which garnered only scant attention.



Q: Will elections on January 30 be meaningful despite the constraints of
ongoing violence?


Bishop Sako: Yes, because the current government is provisional but, after
the elections, it will be the result of popular vote. Iraqis have the
opportunity to choose their leaders, those they prefer. The elections are
something immense and new. Nothing of the kind has happened in the past 50
years: first because of clashes and revolts, then due to 35 years of
dictatorship. There has never been freedom of expression. But now, anything is
possible: If there are people and parties arguing and clashing, that is
because they are free to do so. Now, Iraqis must learn to discuss in a civil
manner. But the people of Iraq have never been trained for coexistence; they
have always lived in the midst of violence: three wars, a dictatorship, 13
years of embargo. This is why freedom is not used in a responsible way and
problems arise.


Q: How many people will turn out to vote next Sunday?


Bishop Sako: The televisions news is saying 80%. There are, of course,
people who are frightened by threats, but I say that achieving normality has
its condition, and this condition is the election process. I can say that many
people will cast their vote on Sunday.


Q: The Iraqi elections don't seem to be very popular in the West, with
Western media. How do you account for this skepticism?


Bishop Sako: Just yesterday the Pope asked the media to help people
understand the reality of things. The media is a big problem in Iraq: a lot of
lies and provocations are being written and broadcast. It's enough to think of
al-Jazeera and al-Arabiya that are misinforming a great deal, in what amounts
to utter fanaticism, which even Iraqi Muslim leaders themselves have
condemned. These television broadcasters are continuously trying to spark
violence against the Americans and even against Iraqis. They are throwing
terrorism and resistance into the same pot, but to me there is a clear
difference. Resistance is something noble; but two days ago a car bomb
exploded at a wedding -- 20 people died. Now I ask: Is that resistance? Those
20 victims were Iraqis, innocent men and women: Was that an act of resistance?
Is attacking a church or a mosque an act of resistance?


Q: Archbishop Casmoussa of Mosul was kidnapped last week and, upon his
liberation, asked that the Americans withdraw. What do you make of that?


Bishop Sako: I think Archbishop Casmoussa said what he did because he's
thinking of his situation in Mosul: With a very large Sunni majority, the city
is almost entirely against the American presence. But if the Americans leave
Iraq today, there will be civil war between Kurds, Arabs, Sunnis, Shiites,
Muslims, Christians. This is clear. For this reason, it is better that
Americans not leave now. There will soon be a new national government; an army
and police force is taking shape. Step by step a revival plan is going
forward, but it is not the result of some kind of magic. The U.S. must stay on
until Iraqis can take command of the nation. For the moment, they can't do
this, the necessary structures are not yet in place.



It is probably fair to point out that Bishop Sako is also nailing his colors
to the mast, a fact more impressive because he will have to live with the
consequences of his analysis. This is not the place to comment on Kennedy's
speech, merely to observe that his words should not be forgotten. They should be
memorialized, and if, as is expected, a large percentage of the Iraqi people go
down the path he has declared a cul de sac despite his dire warnings; and
participate in a 'joke' as Juan
Cole
put it, he should be reminded of it, not out of spite, but out of
justice, the same whose consequences will overtake George Bush if the contrary
happens; whose tide will overtake Bishop Sako and his parishioners should he
prove wrong.


And perhaps for the first time in history, Ted Kennedy's words will not be
forgotten. The emergence of the Internet has closed down the "memory
hole" within which the former apologists of Joseph Stalin, Kim Il Sung,
Fidel Castro and Saddam Hussein could hide their bad advice and from which they
could emerge at whiles to offer new sage advice. The term 'memory hole' itself
was coined by George Orwell who used it to describe the mechanism through which
the media manipulated historical memory. One of the tenets of the Party in Orwell's
1984 was that "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the
present controls the past", and the key to achieving mastery over history
was the liberal use of the 'memory
hole'
.



The book's hero, Winston Smith, works in the Ministry of Truth rewriting
and falsifying history. The Ministry writes people out of history -- they go
"down the memory hole" as though they never existed. The Ministry
also creates people as historical figures who never existed. ... O'Brien, a
member of the inner Party, pretends to Smith that he is part of the Goldstein
conspiracy against Big Brother. He asks Smith what he would most like to drink
a toast to. Smith chooses to drink a toast, not to the death of Big Brother,
the confusion of the Thought Police, or Humanity, but "to the past."
...


Because of his experience in the Spanish civil war that media reports of
the conflict bore no relation to what was happening, Orwell developed a great
skepticism about the ability of even a well intentioned and honest writer to
get to the truth. He was generally skeptical of atrocity stories. ... It
should be noted that Orwell worked for the BBC for a time, and the Ministry of
Truth is modeled to some extent on the BBC. Orwell noted that the BBC put out
false hate propaganda during World War II, and controlled history by censoring
news about the genocidal Allied policy of leveling German cities by saturation
bombing. Orwell's beliefs about the control of the past, including the recent
past, also derived from his experiences in the Spanish civil war, where he
found that "no event is ever correctly reported in a newspaper, but in
Spain for the first time I saw newspaper reports which did not bear any
relation to the facts."



Unfortunately for someone, whether it be Senator Kennedy, Bishop Sako or
George Bush, a monolithic media no longer controls collective memory. Recently Max
Boot
reminded Seymour Hersh of his past writing and what little resemblance
it bore to events. If Iraqis, in defiance of present-day O'Briens, can drink a
toast to the future, it is due in part to the new-found power to stand once
again upon the past. To all the custodians of the memory hole one can say, 'Who
acts in the present controls the future. Who manufactures fantasy becomes the
past.'

Rabu, 26 Januari 2005

Religious War: East and West


The underground diplomats at the

New Sisyphus
make an eloquent case for listening to those who want to kill
us, something which the Munich generation neglected to do to Adolph Hitler.



One of the most common observations about World War II was that if only
Western leaders had heeded what the National Socialist Worker's Party and its
leader Adolf Hitler were saying, they would have known of the grave danger
facing the world. After all, it's not as if the Nazi Party or its frenzied
Fuhrer tried to hide what they were about.  On the contrary, in speech
after speech, newspaper after newspaper and book after book, Hitler and other
senior Nazis laid out in some detail their plans for European domination, the
destruction of parliamentary democracy and the elimination of the Jewish
people.



But when we ourselves have supplied the rationale for our own condemnation
then listening to the indictments of the enemy is a waste of time. To the
question 'why does Bin Laden hate us', there are those who unhelpfully suggest
that we ask Bin Laden. Besides being unacceptable it is also unnecessary because
some already know why we should be hated. There is no need to listen further.
The New Sisyphus observes that while there are two competing explanations
for Islamic extremism, only one explanation is provided by the Islamic extremists
themselves.



The first group, the "Muslim Rage School," believes that the source of
Islamic Terrorism is the wide-spread anger in the Muslim world directed at the
West and at Israel. For partisans of this school, US policy towards Israel and
the Palestinians, US support for despotic Middle Eastern regimes, Western
economic outperformance of the Muslim world and anger towards US responses to
the 9/11 Attacks, all add up to one thing: a seething mass of justifiable rage
that presents itself, though a minority of those affected, as radical Islamic
Terrorism.  ... As a rule, this school's policy preference for defeating
Islamic Terrorism is to reduce the generators of the anger. Thus, the US must
bring and end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, atone for past actions
against the Muslim world, and generally radically change its long-standing
foreign policy towards the Middle East. Only then will there be peace. ...


The second school of thought, the Clash of Civilizations School, argues
that the source of Islamic Terrorism is the Muslim world's seething hatred of
the fundamental values of the West, and, since the U.S. is the standard-bearer
for the West at the moment, especially those of the United States. Adherents
of this school, like Victor Hanson and most neo-conservative thinkers, argue
that the value system of modern Islam produces a culture that is violently at
odds with Western values and, because of this, it wages asymmetric war against
the West when and where it can.



What is surprising is that Abu Musab Zarqawi categorically belongs to the
second school, which holds that America is to be destroyed for what it is. In an
audiotape released on January 23, 2005, Zarqawi puts forth a view which he has
repeated many times in the past, but which, like Mein Kampf, some are
determined never to hear. In the audio Zarqawi cursed democracy because it
promoted such un-Islamic behavior as freedom of religion, rule of the people,
freedom of expression, separation of religion and state, forming political
parties and majority rule. Freedom of speech was particularly evil because it
allowed "even cursing God. This means that there is nothing sacred in
democracy."


While these are not the only reasons for extremist Islamic hatred,
clearly if the fundamental characteristics of American society are sufficient
to mark it for destruction, then nothing will deflect the hatred of the enemy.
But
Joe Katzman at Winds of Change
argues that to some extent, the facts don't
matter, because the public debate over the War on Terror within the West is in
many respects as twisted as Zarqawi's. The debate, Katzman says, is dominated by
activists who are incapable of seeing anything outside the prism of their own
fantasies.



Al Qaeda may not be the only ones out there with a fantasy ideology ... If
you see activism as the default mode of politics, goes this thesis, you
shouldn't be surprised when it leads to anti-intellectualism, tolerance of
extremists, retreat into fantasy, and a self-defeating kind of partisanship
designed to make people feel better about themselves rather than produce
meaningful change. ... There's a strongly religious quality to a lot of
supposedly secular activism, in part due to the baby boomers' cultivated sense
of grandiosity.



Katzman uses
Lee
Harris
to illustrate how people saw what they wanted in the September 11
attacks, as if it were a giant Rorschach test. Harris knew it would never be
regarded as anything so simple as widebodied airliners killing thousands of
people.



I would like to pursue a line suggested by a remark by the composer
Karlheinz Stockhausen in reference to 9-11: his much-quoted comment that it
was �the greatest work of art of all time.� ... Stockhausen did grasp one big
truth: 9-11 was the enactment of a fantasy -- not an artistic fantasy, to be
sure, but a fantasy nonetheless.



Visions like Stockhausen's arose from a particular form of secular religious
exaltation, one that had nothing to do with practical politics. In striving to
explain it, Harris recalled an argument with a friend during his Vietnam protest
days over whether it made sense for demonstrators to block a commuter bridge and
alienate the public.



My friend did not disagree with me as to the likely counterproductive
effects of such a demonstration. Instead, he argued that this simply did not
matter. His answer was that even if it was counterproductive, even if it
turned people against war protesters, indeed even if it made them more likely
to support the continuation of the war, he would still participate in the
demonstration and he would do so for one simple reason -- because it was, in
his words, good for his soul. What I saw as a political act was not, for my
friend, any such thing. It was not aimed at altering the minds of other people
or persuading them to act differently. Its whole point was what it did for
him.


And what it did for him was to provide him with a fantasy -- a fantasy,
namely, of taking part in the revolutionary struggle of the oppressed against
their oppressors. By participating in a violent anti-war demonstration, he was
in no sense aiming at coercing conformity with his view -- for that would
still have been a political objective. Instead, he took his part in order to
confirm his ideological fantasy of marching on the right side of history, of
feeling himself among the elect few who stood with the angels of historical
inevitability. Thus, when he lay down in front of hapless commuters on the
bridges over the Potomac, he had no interest in changing the minds of these
commuters, no concern over whether they became angry at the protesters or not.
They were there merely as props, as so many supernumeraries in his private
psychodrama. The protest for him was not politics, but theater; and the
significance of his role lay not in the political ends his actions might
achieve, but rather in their symbolic value as ritual. In short, he was acting
out a fantasy.



Katzman shrewdly points out that "The Right is not immune to this kind of
'activism as ritual worship'", though he suggests that what we are really
worshipping is ourselves.



it seems that my generation is an extraordinary mixture of greatness and
narcissism, and that strange amalgam has affected almost everything we do. We
don't seem content to simply have a fine new idea, we must have the new
paradigm that will herald one of the greatest transformations in the history
of the world. We don;t really want to just recycle bottles and paper; we need
to see ourrselves dramatically saving the planet and saving Gaia and
resurrecting the Goddess that previous generations had brutally repressed but
we will finally liberate.... We need to see ourselves as the vanguard of
something unprecedented in all history: the extraordinarywonder of being us.



Bin Laden's vision of  a Global Caliphate and the Left's Worker's
Paradise have found a worthy foe in President Bush's campaign to bring freedom
to the world. Perhaps we should have expected that the new century would
resurrect the eternal questions.

Fyodor Dostoevsky
wound have understood the Boomers.



"Answer: why have we met here? To talk of my love for Katerina Ivanovna, of
the old man and Dmitri? of foreign travel? of the fatal position of Russia? of
the Emperor Napoleon? Is that it?"


"No."


"Then you know what for. It's different for other people; but we in our
green youth have to settle the eternal questions first of all. That's what we
care about. Young Russia is talking about nothing but the eternal questions
now; just when the old folks are all taken up with practical questions. ... Of
the eternal questions, of the existence of God and immortality. And those who
do not believe in God talk of socialism or anarchism, of the transformation of
all humanity on a new pattern, so that it all comes to the same, they're the
same questions turned inside out. And masses, masses of the most original
Russian boys do nothing but talk of the eternal questions! Isn't it so?"


Selasa, 25 Januari 2005

The Kissinger-Schultz Article 2

The consequences of having to include the base of the Sunni insurgency
in the political process yet get on with the process of building a unitary Iraq
were highlighted in this href="http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/middle_east/jan-june05/votes_1-17.html"
target="_blank">PBS
Online Newshour transcript (hat tip: href="http://instapundit.com/archives/020737.php"
target="_blank">Glenn
Reynolds). On opposite sides of the discussion were Larry Diamond of the
Hoover Institute and Brett McGurk, late of the CPA and one of the men who helped
draft the legal framework under which the elections are taking place.



LARRY DIAMOND: Well, Ray, I think Jeffrey Gettleman had it very well
analyzed when he said that we'll probably see a very high turnout in most of
the Kurdish constituencies and the Shiite constituencies in the South and
probably a very low turnout in most of the Sunni constituencies and
in al-Anbar
Province and Salahadeen Province and elsewhere. And this is going to create an
enormous imbalance in representation among groups in Iraq. And then the
question will be: How do you correct, after the election, for a system in
which the Sunnis may represent 15 to 20 percent of the population but may have
only been able to elect perhaps 3 to 5 percent of the seats in parliament.


BRETT McGURK: I think it's fair to assume that there will be a lower
turnout in some of those Sunni-dominated provinces because of the violence and
intimidation tactics. But I do think it's important to stress and the report
earlier said that the administration is starting to stress the process - but
it's not just the administration. ... And what I tried to explain in an op-ed
in the Washington Post about a week ago is that there are ample
institutional mechanisms in place for inclusion of Sunni groups post election
the way the three-member presidency council will be formed, each member must
receive super majority votes from within the national assembly.


LARRY DIAMOND: I think the fixes that Brett is talking about will be
important but inadequate. ... One of the concerns I think of many Sunni
political forces -- some of them which are clearly democratic and civic-minded
forces -- is that the Sunnis who are now being disenfranchised potentially in
this election be able to choose their own representatives.



McGurk went on to explain that the current electoral process was agreed to by
the UN. But Diamond was not persuaded that the elections would constitute an
adequate framework within which to select representatives who would build the
national framework for Iraq. He plumped for an extra-electoral process, or at
least a supplementary one:



I think there will need to be a national conference or dialogue, Ray, in
which they bring in the wide range of Sunni groups that met in Tikrit late in
December and have formed a coalition and elected a leadership and think about
amending the constitution to provide for supplementary election of some number
of seats either indirectly or directly from the provinces if their proportion
of the turnout is much, much less than in other sections of the country.



But if the fear of a 'Shiite-dominated bloc extending to the Mediterranean'
and the policy need to maintain a unitary Iraq by accommodating the minority
Sunnis is allowed to repeatedly veto the efforts of those who, after all, have
agreed to participate in the American-sponsored process, then the precise thing
that Kissinger and Schultz fear may emerge from the frustrations of the opposite
quarter. The only thing worse than Sunni disaffection is a Shi'ite and Kurdish
belief that they have been betrayed. The storm petrels are already
flying. target="_blank">Reuters
reports:



An Iraqi Arab party based in Kirkuk said on Monday it was boycotting
Jan. 30 polls because thousands of Kurdish refugees would be allowed
to vote,

reigniting a row over the election in the northern city. The United Arab Front
said it would not participate in the national polls and Kirkuk provincial
elections scheduled on the same day because around 70,000 Iraqi Kurds who have
returned to the area in recent months were being allowed to vote in Kirkuk.
...


The question of who should be allowed to vote in Kirkuk, a strategic oil
city with an uneasy ethnic mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen, has caused bitter
arguments ahead of the polls. Many Kurds regard the city as part of their
territory in northern Iraq. But during his rule Saddam Hussein pursued an
"Arabisation" policy in the city, displacing Kurds and moving
thousands of Arabs there from other parts of Iraq. Kurdish parties had
initially threatened to boycott the polls unless returning Kurdish refugees
were allowed to vote in Kirkuk.
They later said they would take part in
the elections after receiving assurances that Kurds could vote there, but that
has angered the city's large Arab and Turkmen communities.



The Kissinger-Schultz Article


An article jointly authored by Henry Kissinger and George Schultz in the Washington
Post
entitled Results, Not Timetables, Matter in Iraq argues that
a definite timetable for an American withdrawal in Iraq is not as important as
the attainment of a definite goal which represents success. They argue that it
is the achievement of the goal which is vital.



A precipitate American withdrawal would be almost certain to cause a civil
war that would dwarf Yugoslavia's, and it would be compounded as neighbors
escalated their current involvement into full-scale intervention. ... We owe
it to ourselves to become clear about what post-election outcome is compatible
with our values and global security.



Much of the article focuses on the what they believe to be the desirable
endpoint of the political process, of which the elections on January 30 are but
a part. Their recommendations implicitly assume that Iraq must be preserved as a
multiethnic, unitary state. Kissinger and Schultz believe that the minimum
outcome should be:



The Constituent Assembly emerging from the elections will be sovereign to
some extent. But the United States' continuing leverage should be focused on
four key objectives:



(1) to prevent any group from using the political process to establish
the kind of dominance previously enjoyed by the Sunnis;

(2) to prevent any areas from slipping into Taliban conditions as havens and
recruitment centers for terrorists;

(3) to keep Shiite government from turning into a theocracy, Iranian or
indigenous;

(4) to leave scope for regional autonomy within the Iraqi democratic
process.




The article repeatedly warns against letting the almost foregone Shi'ite
majority ride roughshod over the Sunnis, however bitter their memories; however
brutal the campaign by "insurgents" against them has been. The one
thing that must never be permitted, in Kissinger and Schultz's view is "a
Shiite-dominated bloc extending to the Mediterranean"



The reaction to intransigent Sunni brutality and the relative Shiite quiet
must not tempt us into identifying Iraqi legitimacy with unchecked Shiite
rule. The American experience with Shiite theocracy in Iran since 1979 does
not inspire confidence in our ability to forecast Shiite evolution or the
prospects of a Shiite-dominated bloc extending to the Mediterranean. A
thoughtful American policy will not mortgage itself to one side in a religious
conflict fervently conducted for 1,000 years.



This proposition should be read in conjunction with Gerecht's The
Islamic Paradox
, who observed that a Shi'ite dominated Iraq is not
necessarily the same as a clerically dominated Iraq, which must certainly
be Kissinger and Schultz's meaning for their injunction to make any sense at
all, for Iraq by ethnic composition will be Shi'ite dominated by definition.
Gerecht wrote:



So, is there a Sunni parallel to the political evolution among the Shiites?
Inside Iraq, it is easy to find Arab Sunnis who want to see democracy triumph.
If for no other reason, fear of a Shiite dictatorship appears to inspire a
certain Sunni willingness to embrace some kind of a democratic order. ...
Given the widespread Sunni-led violence in Iraq, particularly among the
hard-core takfiri fundamentalists, we can lose sight of the fact that the
Sunnis will still likely follow the Shiite lead, however reluctantly. ... Arab
Sunnis today realize they are vastly outnumbered by �the other side.� ...
Even if Sistani dies, the Hawza will remain a more influential force than any
association of Sunni clerics. And both Arab Sunnis and Shiites regularly
remark about the lack of revenge killing since the fall of Saddam Hussein even
though the pursuit of revenge (intiqam) for perceived wrongs is a leitmotif of
Iraqi Arab culture. ...



The Kissinger-Schultz requirement to keep the Sunnis in play, no matter how
they may subject themselves to old Ba'athist influences creates a problem for
the counterinsurgency strategy, especially if has to be addressed within the
requirement of preserving a unitary Iraq. Kissinger and Schultz say:



It is axiomatic that guerrillas win if they do not lose. And in Iraq the
guerrillas are not losing, at least not in the Sunni region, at least not
visibly. A successful strategy needs to answer these questions: Are we waging
"one war" in which military and political efforts are mutually
reinforcing? ... Do we have a policy for eliminating the sanctuaries in Syria
and Iran from which the enemy can be instructed, supplied, and given refuge
and time to regroup?



Here lies the core of the problem. The policy of keeping the Sunnis within
Iraq at all costs in conjunction with the Kissingerian imperative that the
insurgency be 'defeated', not merely contained,  sets up a potential
contradiction, one that Gerecht has already foreseen. Unless the Ba'athists and
their backers in Syria are to be implictly given veto power over the birth of a
democratic Iraq, either the risk of widening the war, or decisive closure, even
if it means partition, must be accepted.



But democracy in the Middle East obviously does not rise or fall on the
participation of Iraqi Sunnis.
The principal question is then whether
Sunni Islam writ large is able to embrace a democratic ethic? Democracy could
triumph in Iraq because the Iraqi Shiite community wills it, but if
representative government does not spread to the Sunni nation-states, where 85
to 90 percent of all Muslims live, then the nexus between dictatorship and
Islamic extremism is little changed.



Yet despite these remaining questions, the Kissinger-Schultz article
indicates that the post-Saddam regime is already fait accompli. That is
already a sign of strategic success. It is far from clear the proposition that
"guerrillas win if they do not lose" is a valid axiom. There are
hundreds of guerilla groups throughout the world that will never 'lose' yet we
never hear of them, perhaps in part because the press does not care about them.
Yet  Kissinger and Schultz are undoubtedly correct in maintaining that the
only way forward is through success and not via some arbitrarily selected date
on the calendar.

Senin, 24 Januari 2005

A Leap in the Dark


Ruel Marc Gerecht's book
The
Islamic Paradox
(hat tip: reader DL) argues that America must nerve
itself to spreading democracy in the Islamic world even though it will probably
result in the emergence of anti-American governments largely hostile to Israel.



... the march of democracy in the Middle East is likely to be very
anti-American. Decades of American support to Middle Eastern dictators helped
create bin Ladenism. Popular anger at Washington�s past actions may not fade
quickly, even if the United States were to switch sides and defend openly all
the parties calling for representative government. Nationalism and
fundamentalism, two complementary forces throughout most of the Middle East,
will likely pump up popular patriotism. Such feelings always have a sharp
anti-Western edge to them. That is what Professor Lewis called �the clash of
civilizations.�64 Fourteen hundred years of tense, competitive history is not
easily overcome, but this antagonism can diminish.



Gerecht's book is a fascinating look at the evolution of American political
policy in Iraq, centering on the CPA's slow discovery that Westernized
intellectuals -- the sort policymakers and the press love -- represented nothing
in the way of popular sentiment. He recounts how attempts to create a new Iraqi
democratic framework based on caucuses foundered on the rock of Islamic
structures, which -- and this is the crux of his argument -- had been slowly
becoming democratic themselves in reaction to Middle Eastern dictatorships.
Nothing short of elections at which the various Islamic structures could run as
political parties would do. The result was that the while the January 30 Iraqi
elections became the genuine goal of the majority of the people of Iraq, the
form
of government which it is likely to produce may bear little
resemblance to previous conceptions of democracy.


Gerecht relentlessly points out how Khomeini's Iran eventually became the most
pro-American country in the region, free of the anti-Americanism of Cairo simply
because the Iranians were left to discover for themselves that the 'Koran did
not hold all the answers'; at least, not to fixing potholes or delivering
electricity. He constrasts it to the elder Bush's decision to support the
military junta in Algeria against fundamentalist Islamists, who would by now be
discredited or just another party had they been allowed to take over the reins
of government. "Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East Edward
Djerejian�s famous defense of the first Bush administration�s fear of Islamic
extremism -- 'one man, one vote, one time'-- defined clearly Washington�s
discomfort with the possibility that free elections could empower Muslim
fundamentalists, who could be zealously anti-American and ultimately
antidemocratic." That was a mistake, he believes, which George W. Bush is
unlikely to repeat. Written before the November elections, the book's main
concern was that a Kerry victory would result in a 'quick withdrawal strategy';
a return to the traditional preference for short-term 'stability' over a
long-term commitment to democracy.



Only a quick-withdrawal policy advanced by a determined Kerry
administration, admittedly a possibility given Senator Kerry�s deep-rooted
Vietnam-era sensibilities, could shatter American perseverance. But Kerry
would run against the 9/11 understanding widely held, if not publicly
confessed to, by many of the Clintonites who would staff his administration.
They know that running from Iraq�by declaring a victory over Saddam Hussein
and getting out�would be seen throughout the Muslim Middle East as an enormous
defeat for the United States. Bin Ladenism, which psychologically kicked into
high gear after President Clinton�s �Black Hawk Down� retreat from Somalia,
could be supercharged by a rapid American departure.



Although Gerecht doesn't say directly, the key factor which enables America
to confidently face democratic regimes of all sorts, even the kinds that are
anti-American, is the availablity of raw power, the kind which permits it to
deal with skeptical and even hostile Shi'ite clerics in Iraq today. The kind of
power that became available once the Soviet Union had rotted away, plus the will
in Washington to exercise it. That power, plus the natural divisions in the
Islamic world, has made America simply too big not to deal with.



"We need the Americans, but the Americans need us. Democracy in the Middle
East will not be possible without us," quietly intoned Sayyid Ali al-Wa�iz, a
senior Shiite cleric of Baghdad�s Kadhimayn shrine, one of the holiest in
Iraq. Dressed in white, weak, if not dying, from twenty-three years of
detention, the son and grandson of grand ayatollahs, al-Wa�iz smiled softly as
he tried to sit up in his bed. "We don�t want to repeat the revolution of 1920
[when Shiite clerics rose against the British occupation]. We want democracy
this time and we want the coalition troops to go home safely."



This kind of commitment to the outcomes of  the democratic process, even
if they are unwelcome, represents a very considerable risk. Unnoticed in

Peggy Noonan's
critique of President George W. Bush's Second Inaugural
Speech as having 'too much God' was the fact that it invoked a wholly different
paradigm from Ronald Reagan's

City on a Hill
. Bush's peroration did not come from Winthrop, but from the
Declaration of Independence. Reagan had asked:



And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure,
and happier than it was 8 years ago. But more than that: After 200 years, two
centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow
has held steady no matter what storm. And she's still a beacon, still a magnet
for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places
who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.



But as the shining city stood, so too would the outer dark continue to enfold
it. In

Winthrop's original formulation
, America was condemned to be a City
on a Hill; forced to keep the fires lit against the night. "For we must
consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill, the eyes of all people are upon
us; so that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have
undertaken, and so cause Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall
shame the faces of many of God's worthy servants, and cause their prayers to be
turned into curses . . ." On the day the light failed, other, dark spirits would
alight beneath the extinguished torch. But the Declaration of Independence
contained a new element; the suggestion that the flame could not be contained,
because all men could be kindled by it. Logically it was the flame, not
the torch of liberty, that was invincible; that once released could not be
restrained. The light would go to the nations, until the darkness was no more.
It was an altogether more dangerous proposition. There were hints in Bush's

Second Inaugural Speech
that he understood or at least had thought about
the sheer hazard of it.



Freedom, by its nature, must be chosen, and defended by citizens, and
sustained by the rule of law and the protection of minorities. And when the
soul of a nation finally speaks, the institutions that arise may reflect
customs and traditions very different from our own. America will not impose
our own style of government on the unwilling. Our goal instead is to help
others find their own voice, attain their own freedom, and make their own way.
...


... Some, I know, have questioned the global appeal of liberty though this
time in history, four decades defined by the swiftest advance of freedom ever
seen, is an odd time for doubt. Americans, of all people, should never be
surprised by the power of our ideals. Eventually, the call of freedom comes to
every mind and every soul. We do not accept the existence of permanent tyranny
because we do not accept the possibility of permanent slavery. Liberty will
come to those who love it.


... We go forward with complete confidence in the eventual triumph of
freedom. Not because history runs on the wheels of inevitability; it is human
choices that move events. Not because we consider ourselves a chosen nation;
God moves and chooses as He wills. We have confidence because freedom is the
permanent hope of mankind, the hunger in dark places, the longing of the soul.
When our Founders declared a new order of the ages; when soldiers died in wave
upon wave for a union based on liberty; when citizens marched in peaceful
outrage under the banner "Freedom Now" they were acting on an ancient hope
that is meant to be fulfilled. History has an ebb and flow of justice, but
history also has a visible direction, set by liberty and the author of
Liberty.


When the Declaration of Independence was first read in public and the
Liberty Bell was sounded in celebration, a witness said, "It rang as if it
meant something." In our time it means something still. America, in this young
century, proclaims liberty throughout all the world, and to all the
inhabitants thereof. Renewed in our strength tested, but not weary we are
ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom.



Actual foreign policy is unlikely to be formed in such absolutist terms. The
usual considerations of national security and commercial gain will probably play
a large part in concrete decision making. But unless the 'proclamation of
liberty throughout all the world' is wholly rhetorical, it undoubtedly represents
a step into uncharted paths.



Update


Interested readers may want to read this closely related piece by Victor
Davis Hanson in Commentary Magazine entitled Has Iraq Weakened Us? 
Hanson argues that Iraq has opened up new strategic opportunities. (Hat tip: Powerline)



There are lessons here for those who claim that American flexibility has
become increasingly constricted and American choices all but foreclosed. In
fact, as Iraq comes slowly under control, the opposite prognosis is at least
as likely to be the case. Precisely because of proven American resolve in
Iraq, the United States now commands both military and diplomatic options --
well short of another Iraq-style invasion -- that were not at its disposal
previously. ...


The U.S. might, to begin with, pressure the UN Security Council to go
beyond its recent call for Syria to end its occupation of Lebanon by demanding
internationally supervised elections, to follow immediately upon the departure
of the Baathists. ... Other equally bold diplomatic initiatives could be
undertaken, their credibility similarly enhanced by the operations in
Afghanistan and Iraq. For example, the present Middle-East-aid policy of the
United States is a relic both of the cold war (pump oil and keep out
Communists) and the 1979 Camp David agreements (subsidize Egypt). Such
short-term measures, carrying the odor of entreaty if not of bribery, hardly
reflect our current aim of promoting consensual government. With both Saddam
and the Soviets gone, granting weapons and money to the regime in Cairo�nearly
$50 billion since 1979�is becoming counterproductive. What advantages the
United States receives in �moderation� is overshadowed by the venomous
anti-Americanism that is the daily fare of millions of Egyptians, whipped up
and manipulated by state-sponsored clerics and media.



One may argue that VDH is making a virtue out of a necessity, that however
one slices it, a commitment in Iraq soaks up troops that prevent deployments
elsewhere. Chester
explores this issue at length in a comprehensive review of Mark Helprin's
growing criticism that the Bush Administration has not fully mobilized America's
military resources to provide it with the margin of strength necessary to pursue
its strategic goals. Chester calls it a 'conservative critique of the war'. An
excerpt from Helprin says:



From the beginning, the scale of the war was based on the fundamental
strategic misconception that the primary objective was Iraq rather than the
imagination of the Arab World, which, if sufficiently stunned, would tip
itself back into the heretofore easily induced fatalism that makes it hesitate
to war against the West. After the true shock and awe of a campaign of massive
surplus, as in the Gulf War, no regime would have risked its survival by
failing to go after the terrorists within its purview. But a campaign of bare
sufficiency, that had trouble punching through even ragtag irregulars, taught
the Arabs that we could be effectively opposed.



But Helprin's accusation that the Bush strategy suffers from the "fundamental
strategic misconception that the primary objective was Iraq rather than the
imagination of the Arab World" is immediately denied -- I will not say
refuted -- by Gerecht, who sees the emergence of an Arab and democratic Shi'ite-dominated
state as a fundamental shift in the political foundations of the entire region,
if not to very currents of Islam itself. While Helprin may well be right about
US defense being underfunded, it is at least worth considering whether the
approach of establishing a democratic process in Iraq is not at least as
strategically imaginative as the implied alternative of serially conquering of
Syria and Iran; or at least threatening to.


It seems clear at least, that Abu Musab "Z-Man" Zarqawi considers
the elections an existential threat, which he would not have done had they been
an irrelevancy and a dead end. Austin
Bay
writes:



Z-Man�s been suckered. Z-Man is the troops� nickname for Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
Al Qaeda�s jefe in Iraq. Z-Man has declared a �fierce war� on democracy.
Z�s taken Bush�s bait -- except the President's �bait� of promoting
democracy and declaring war on tyranny and 0ppression isn�t mere bait, it�s
essential American values. ...


The media and blogosphere have been focusing on the philosophical and
theoretical elements of Bush�s speech and America�s �democracy on the
offensive� strategy. But the strategy seeks to address a very concrete
issue: �technological compression.� Technological compression is a
fact of 21st century existence�and it is the superglue bonding American
foreign policy idealism and foreign policy pragmatism. I think my Weekly
Standard article of January 3, 2005 frames it accurately: �Technology has
compressed the planet, with positive effects in communication, trade, and
transportation; with horrifyingly negative effects in weaponry. Decades ago,
radio, phone cables on the seabed, long-range aircraft, and then nuclear
weapons shrunk the oceans. September 11 demonstrated that religious killers
could turn domestic jumbo jets into strategic bombers -- and the oceans were
no obstacles. �Technological compression� is a fact; it cannot be
reversed. To deny it or ignore it has deadly consequences.�



And it is because technology has compressed the planet that events in
Iraq escape the bounds of locality and have a bearing on the entire region.
Clearly, the debate over the grand strategy in Iraq is far from settled, but
there are no arrogant ignoramuses on either side.


(Trivia. The word "Z-Man" is a relic from a 1960s movie entitled Beyond
the Valley of the Dolls
written by none other than the Roger Ebert.
The age of the movie is given away by the fact that Z-Man is terrifyingly
revealed to be a transvestite before the final scene, a development which would
have earned Ebert condemnation from the European Union or some such today.)

Minggu, 23 Januari 2005

Armaggedon


Neil Prakash, AKA blogger
Armor Geddon
and a 1ID Armor Officer, won the

Silver Star
for his actions in Baquba, Iraq. These are extracts from his
profile on Blogger.



Liverpool H.S. '98

Johns Hopkins '02 Neuroscience

Armor OBC Grad '03

Ranger School Grad '03

Currently enrolled in School of Hard Knocks



An account of the action from an obviously proud Indian community may be
found in

The Times of India
. In part it reads:



Although unable to rotate the turret, Prakash continued in the lead,
navigating with a map and manoeuvring his tank in order to continue engaging
the enemy with the main weapon system and his .50 calibre machine-gun. He
watched as men on rooftops sprayed down at his tank with machine-guns and
small arms. "I just remember thinking, 'I hope these bullets don't go in this
one inch of space,'" said Prakash. "Looking out the hatch, I'm spraying guys
and they're just falling. They would just drop - no blood, no nothing. We just
kept rolling, getting shot at from everywhere."


By battle's end, the platoon was responsible for 25 confirmed destroyed
enemy and an estimated 50 to 60 additional destroyed enemy personnel, the US
Army said. Prakash was personally credited with the destruction of eight enemy
strong-points, one enemy re-supply vehicle, and multiple enemy dismounts. ...


Prakash, who comes from a family of doctors (his mother, father and older
brother are all physicians) was set to follow in their footsteps at Johns
Hopkins when he attended an orientation course for reserves. He was awed by a
stylish colonel in a Stetson and spurs and resolved to join the forces.
Although born in India and maintaining strong ties to the Indian community, he
was raised in Syracuse, New York, in what he says is a very patriotic American
household.