January 11, 2007
Still One More Card to Play
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
Wednesday night, George Bush seemed
to play his last card in the Iraq war. It was not
impressive. Consider.
First, he warned of the awful
consequences of a U.S. defeat: "Radical Islamic
extremism would grow ... in strength and gain new
recruits. They would be in a better position to topple
moderate governments, create chaos in the region and use
oil revenues to fund their ambitions. Iran would be
emboldened in its pursuit of nuclear weapons."
Bush then warned of the awful
consequences of the Baker commission proposal to
"announce the phased withdrawal of our combat forces."
"(T)o step back now would force a collapse of the
Iraqi government, tear the country apart and result in
mass killings on an unimaginable scale." [Full
text]
Twin those two warnings, and what
is Bush saying?
His critics favor a course in Iraq
that risks the fall of Baghdad, Iraq torn apart,
slaughter of our friends, a surge in Islamic terror, the
toppling of moderate Arab states, chaos in the Gulf,
billions in oil revenue flowing to al-Qaida killers and
a nuclear Iran.
And how do we avert so monstrous a
calamity?
A "surge" of 21,500 troops,
15 percent of the U.S. forces already in Iraq, to pacify
the capital. And even that troop commitment is "not
open-ended."
This is just not credible. For, if
the situation is as dire as Bush says and the potential
disaster as horrific as he describes, the logical course
would be to treble the number of troops in Iraq and
commit to fight indefinitely.
How explain the disconnect? Is Bush
absurdly exaggerating the consequences of a pullout?
No. U.S. strategic interests in the
Middle East are indeed at risk because of the hubristic
folly of our political elite in putting them there, when
they launched this insane war.
But Bush cannot now commit to fight
to victory, because the war is lost in the United
States. Two-thirds of the American people are unwilling
to make the sacrifices to save Iraq. Though they do not
want a defeat and may not realize the consequences of a
defeat, they are willing to risk a defeat, rather than
continue to read of American kids being IED'ed to death
and dismemberment in Baghdad and Anbar. The people want
out and are saying to hell with the consequences.
That is the political realty that
underlay the president's modest proposal of a "surge"
to avert what he warns is a strategic disaster.
But Bush has to know the card he
played is not going to save the pot into which he has
plunged his legacy, the credibility of his country and
America's standing as a superpower.
Which leads me to believe Bush has
yet another card to play, an ace up his sleeve. What
might that be?
Midway through his speech, almost
as an aside, Bush made a pointed accusation at and
issued a direct threat to -- Tehran.
To defend the "territorial
integrity" of Iraq and stabilize "the region in
the face of extremist challenge," Bush interjected,
"begins with addressing Iran and Syria."
"These two regimes are allowing
terrorists and insurgents to use their territory to move
in and out of Iraq. Iran is providing material support
for attacks on American troops. We will disrupt the
attacks on our forces. We will interrupt the flow of
support from Iran and Syria. And we will seek out and
destroy the networks providing advanced weaponry and
training to our enemies in Iraq."
Now, any networks providing
"advanced weaponry and training" to jihadists and
insurgents are outside Iraq. Otherwise, they would have
been neutralized by air strikes already.
So, where are they? Answer: inside
Syria and Iran. And Bush says we are going to "seek
out and destroy" these networks.
Which suggests to this writer that,
while the "surge" is modest, Bush has in mind a
different kind of escalation -- widening the war by
attacking the source of instability in the region:
Tehran.
"I recently ordered the
deployment of an additional carrier strike group to the
region," said Bush. "We will deploy ... Patriot
air defense systems to reassure our friends and allies."
But there is no need for more
carrier-based fighter-bombers in Iraq. And the
insurgents have no missiles against which anyone would
need Patriot missiles to defend. You only need Patriots
if your target country has missiles with which to
retaliate against you.
What Bush signaled in the clear
Wednesday is that air strikes on Iranian "networks"
are being planned. That would produce an Iranian
response. That response would trigger U.S. strikes on
Iran's nuclear facilities, for which Israel and the
neocons are howling.
And should this scenario play out,
what would
Hillary, Biden,
Kerry, McCain, Giuliani, and even Pelosi and
Obama do? Hail Bush as a Churchill. At first.
And Bush would have another legacy
than a lost war in Iraq. Like Menachem Begin, only
big-time, he would have his own Osirak.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.