[Mb-civic] Once Upon a Time In Baghdad . . . - Eugene Robinson - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Apr 4 04:02:30 PDT 2006
Once Upon a Time In Baghdad . . .
<>
By Eugene Robinson
The Washington Post
Tuesday, April 4, 2006; A23
"If only . . . " used to be nothing more than the wish of a fairy tale
protagonist who was out of options, as in "If only a handsome prince
would arrive and save the day," or "If only a brave huntsman would
happen by and perform some Abu Ghraib-style interrogation on this big,
bad wolf that just ate Grandma." Now, thanks to George W. Bush and his
court of wizards, "if only . . . " is also a subtle yet comprehensive
strategy for war-fighting, insurgency-quashing, nation-building and all
the other urgent business they've bungled in Iraq.
Condoleezza Rice made a surprise trip to Baghdad over the weekend to
advance the Fairy Tale Doctrine, pressuring Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jafari to stop all the maneuvering and go ahead and form a
government, preferably one that doesn't make it a crime to be Sunni
Muslim. You see, if only the Iraqis can put together a government,
everything will be just fine.
Okay, she didn't quite say that all would be sweetness and light. But by
jetting to Baghdad without telling anybody in advance, taking along
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and freezing al-Jafari with her
most intimidating Ice Queen faux-smile, she clearly reinforced the
administration's view that cobbling together a new government is the
next magic bullet that is going to rescue the Iraq adventure from an
utter debacle.
The Bush administration would like to see a government of "national
unity," as if such a thing existed in today's Iraq. Perhaps in the
fanciful Baghdad of the Arabian Nights there's a genie who can cross his
arms, blink his eyes and conjure a gentle breeze that spreads harmony
across the land. If they find him, they should make him prime minister.
Bringing disaffected Iraqis into the government is supposed to deprive
the bloody insurgency of popular support. It's worth noting that on
Sunday, as Rice began her visit, at least 50 people were killed
throughout Iraq in mortar attacks, death-squad executions, bombings and
other forms of mayhem.
It's also worth noting that we've heard the Bush administration's "if
only . . . " predictions so many times that it's hard to take them
seriously.
The war started with the premise that if only we could depose Saddam
Hussein, all sorts of wonderful benefits would accrue. We would
eliminate the threat of attack by his weapons of mass destruction --
except Hussein turned out not to have any. We would strike a mortal blow
against our terrorist enemies -- except there turned out to be no
connection between the Iraqi dictator and Sept. 11, 2001. Our troops
would be greeted as liberators -- except it turned out that many Iraqis
saw them as occupiers.
If only Iraqis would go to the polls and show the world a stirring
portrait of democracy in action, the nascent insurgency would wither
away -- except that when Iraqis voted, the insurgency grew. If only the
Iraqis could write a constitution, that would marginalize the insurgents
-- except the insurgency grew some more. If only Saddam Hussein were
made to sit in the dock like a common defendant, the insurgents would
lose faith -- except his histrionics seemed, if anything, to hearten his
die-hard followers. If only the Iraqis would go to the polls and vote
again -- except the violence has now worsened into sectarian killing
that threatens to blow the place apart.
And of course there was the biggest "if only . . ." of all, the one
about how invading Iraq and turning it into a pro-Western democracy
would touch off a wildfire of pro-Western democracy throughout the
Middle East. Well, we did manage to get Hamas elected in the Palestinian
territories and strengthen religious parties almost everywhere else.
History will take a while to render a final judgment on this one, but
early returns are anything but promising.
Now the administration is fixated on the peace and prosperity that will
surely take root throughout ancient Mesopotamia if only a bunch of
self-interested Iraqi politicians grudgingly settle on a division of
spoils that can, with a straight face, be called a "government of
national unity." The Bush people keep moving the finish line, and the
Iraqis keep reaching it, and the insurgency not only persists but takes
on new, more ominous dimensions.
The tit-for-tat atrocities by Sunni and Shiite death squads are
threatening to devolve into the kind of revenge killings that take on a
momentum of their own, because they do not need any underlying political
logic to sustain them. It becomes: You kill my brother, I kill your
brother -- until we run out of brothers.
If only the Fairy Tale Doctrine guaranteed a happy ending. Tragically,
in the real world, it doesn't.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/03/AR2006040301713.html?nav=hcmodule
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