WE ARE SENDING IN MORE TROOPS -- IT IS A SHAME
January 11, 2007 / Editorial / NY Times
The Real Disaster
President Bush told Americans last night that failure in Iraq would be a disaster.
The disaster is Mr. Bush’s war, and he has already failed. Last night was
his chance to stop offering more fog and be honest with the nation, and he did
not take it.
Americans needed to hear a clear plan to extricate United States troops from
the disaster that Mr. Bush created. What they got was more gauzy talk of victory
in the war on terrorism and of creating a “young democracy” in Iraq.
In other words, a way for this president to run out the clock and leave his mess
for the next one.
Mr. Bush did acknowledge that some of his previous tactics had failed. But even
then, the president sounded as if he were an accidental tourist in Iraq. He described
the failure of last year’s effort to pacify Baghdad as if the White House
and the Pentagon bore no responsibility. In any case, Mr. Bush’s excuses were tragically inadequate. The nation
needs an eyes-wide-open recognition that the only goal left is to get the U.S.
military out of this civil war in a way that could minimize the slaughter of
Iraqis and reduce the chances that the chaos Mr. Bush unleashed will engulf Iraq’s
neighbors.
What it certainly did not need were more of Mr. Bush’s open-ended threats
to Iran and Syria.
Before Mr. Bush spoke, Americans knew he planned to send more troops to pacify
lawless Baghdad. Mr. Bush’s task was to justify that escalation by acknowledging
that there was no military solution to this war and outlining the political
mission that the military would be serving. We were waiting for him to detail
the specific
milestones that he would set for the Iraqis, set clear timelines for when they
would be expected to meet them, and explain what he intended to do if they
again failed. Instead, he said he had warned the Iraqis that if they didn’t come through,
they would lose the faith of the American people. Has Mr. Bush really not noticed
that the American people long ago lost faith in the Iraqi government — and
in him as well? Americans know that this Iraqi government is captive to Shiite
militias, with no interest in the unity, reconciliation and democracy that
Mr. Bush says he wants.
Mr. Bush said yet again that he wanted the Iraqi government to step up to the
task of providing its security, and that Iraq needed a law on the fair distribution
of oil money. Iraq’s government needs to do a lot more than that, starting
with disarming the sectarian militias that are feeding the civil war and purging
the police forces that too often are really death squads. It needs to offer
amnesty to insurgents and militia fighters willing to put down their weapons.
It needs
to do those things immediately.
Iraq’s Shiite-dominated government has heard this list before. But so long
as Mr. Bush is willing to back that failed government indefinitely — enabling
is the psychological term — Iraq’s leaders will have no reason
to move against the militias and more fairly share power with the Sunni minority.
Mr. Bush did announce his plan for 20,000 more troops, and the White House
trumpeted a $1 billion contribution to reconstruction efforts. Congress will
debate these
as if they are the real issues. But they are not. Talk of a “surge” ignores
the other 132,000 American troops trapped by a failed strategy.
We have argued that the United States has a moral obligation to stay in Iraq
as long as there is a chance to mitigate the damage that a quick withdrawal
might cause. We have called for an effort to secure Baghdad, but as part of
the sort
of comprehensive political solution utterly lacking in Mr. Bush’s speech.
This war has reached the point that merely prolonging it could make a bad ending
even worse. Without a real plan to bring it to a close, there is no point in
talking about jobs programs and military offensives. There is nothing ahead
but even greater disaster in Iraq.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company