January 16, 2004
Is Bush Doomed?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Fear
must be coursing through President Bush’s veins as he
realizes the Iraqi trap in which the
neocons have placed him. Bush is caught between an
Iraqi civil war and a wider insurgency.
Desperate to extricate himself from
the weekly carnage well before the November election,
Bush can neither deliver on his promise of
democracy via direct elections nor impose his plan
for an Iraqi assembly elected indirectly by caucuses.
If Bush delivers on his democracy
promise, the Shi’ites with 60% of the population will be
elected, and the country will break out in civil war.
If he tries to water down Shi’ite
representation with his plan for an assembly elected
indirectly by caucuses, the so far peaceful Shi’ites are
likely to join the violence.
If the Shi’ites become violent, the
insurgency would be too large to be contained by our
present occupying force. Moreover, the outbreak of a
general rebellion in Iraq would
spill over throughout the Middle East where
unpopular secular rulers are sitting on a smoldering
Islam.
Our puppet in Pakistan would likely
bite the dust. Israel would then face countervailing
Muslim nukes.
If you think more US troops are
needed now in Iraq, imagine how many more would be
required to deal with a wider conflagration.
Where would they come from? The US
military is already so thinly stretched that soon 40% of
the occupying troops will be drawn from the National
Guard and reservists, resulting in tremendous disruption
in the affairs of tens of thousands of families.
Pilots and troops are shunning the
cash bonuses offered for reenlistments. The troops
recognize a quagmire even if their neocon overlords
cannot. The only source of troops is the draft.
A Shi’ite insurgency that brought
back
the draft would deprive Bush of reelection. A civil
war with the prospect of a Kurdish state would bring in
the Turks. On January 14 Turkish prime minister Erdogan
said that
Turkey will intervene in the event of Iraq’s
disintegration.
The
Shi’ites and the Turks are forming an alliance as
both have the same interest in maintaining the
geographical integrity of the Iraqi state. The US
could come dangerously close to military conflict with a
NATO ally.
All of this was perfectly clear
well in advance of the ill-considered invasion. If Bush
wasn’t smart enough to see it, why didn’t his National
Security Advisor or his Secretary of State? How did a
handful of neocon ideologues hijack US foreign policy?
Bush did not campaign on a neocon
policy of conquest in the Middle East. There was no
public debate over this policy. The invasion of Iraq was
the private agenda of the neocons.
Why have the neocons not been held
responsible for their treason in abusing their
presidential appointments to substitute their personal
agenda for America’s agenda?
Bush has been the neocons' puppet
for so long that he is now stuck with responsibility for
their horrible mistake. With no way of his own to get
out of his trap, his arrogance toward the “
irrelevant”
UN and our doubting allies has disappeared.
Come bail me out, he pleads.
Bush, desperate to be extricated
before
doom strikes him is experiencing a reality totally
different from the chest-thumping of neocon
megalomaniacs, such as
Charles Krauthammer, who declared the US so powerful
as to be able to
“reshape, indeed remake, reality on its own.”
Bush now knows that he lacks the
power to deal with the reality of Iraq.
Indeed, Bush cannot even deal with
his own appointees.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul
Craig Roberts was Associate Editor of the WSJ editorial
page, 1978-80, and columnist for “Political Economy.”
During 1981-82 he was Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury for Economic Policy. He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution: An Insider’s Account of
Policymaking in Washington.