THE
MISSION CREEPS
BY JOHN TULLY
THE LOS ANGELES SUN
JUNE 1 2004
The Today Show, America's number one
source for morning infotainment seemed almost obsessed by two stories
in the Fall of Two-Thousand Two. Elizabeth Smart, a young girl from Utah
had been abducted from her home by a man at gunpoint that summer and
it continued to be a big story. In October, seemingly random citizens
of the Washington D.C. metropolitan area were being gunned down by a
mysterious shooter.
Remember?
Katie and Matt stoically opened the show almost every morning with these
two stories.
At the same time, a war in Iraq was looming and the shadow of a vote
in Congress giving the President authorization to use military force
was creeping forward. The vote was even more crucial because the midterm
elections were just ahead in November and the GOP was playing the Patriot
card like the pros they are.
The Bush administration had strolled into power promising anyone within
earshot that they would be exactly the opposite of everything the Clinton
administration was and added that the "W" missing from some
computer keyboards was not funny.
They vowed to be different from President Clinton: different on the Palestinian/Israeli
conflict, and a plan of disengagement was put in place as a way to "back
off" and let the two sides work it out for a while.
Mr. Clinton had "coddled" North Korea they said, and now the
Bush White House was going to get tough. Moscow and Beijing would know
who the new boss was with the plan going forward to build a missile defense
shield.
Throw out Kyoto because it's bad for business and bad for America, and
by the way, tell the domestic bad guys that John Ashcroft was putting
law and order back into the Justice Department where it belonged.
Presidential transition teams notwithstanding, the grownups were now
in charge, and in the first nine months of this new administration they
made that fact perfectly clear.
Then the whole world watched in horror as airplanes struck New York,
D.C. and Pennsylvania.
This was truly a call to leadership for Mr. Bush.
But perhaps as a sign of things to come, his initial statements thereafter
and his address in the pit at Ground Zero on a bullhorn was almost universally
praised by the mainstream media though neither speech had much substance
or style. Various pundits declared that simply "everything had
changed."
The rest is history.
Two wars, three tax cuts, and the whole world is watching in horror.
Sixty miles outside of Kabul, Afghanistan the Taliban have taken over
again. Opium production has tripled by some accounts, sure to sweep obscene
amounts of heroin into Europe this year. The same conditions that led
the country to harbor Al-Qaeda before that war are present once again
and we have too few troops there to do the job.
Iraq and Afghanistan have taken close to a thousand lives and wounded
at least five-thousand troops. There have been over thirteen-thousand
medi-vacs or medical evacuations-mostly American forces. The Bush administration,
while publically trying to form a coalition of countries willing to put
boots on the ground in Iraq for violations of the United Nations Security
Council resolution 1441, had privately trashed that very same U.N. as "irrelevant" at
every opportunity.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld scoffed and sneered his way through
press conferences, dismissively declaring that he knew where the Weapons
of Mass Destruction were, and did we mention that the U.N. is irrelevant?
And FRANCE.
The CIA, DIA, FBI, independent intelligence, Congressman Jim McDermott,
The Dixie Chicks and The Pope all expressed concern about the attack
on Iraq but the administration pooh-poohed all dissent. While Prime Minister
Tony Blair was getting absolutely grilled by the House of Commons, the
U.S. Congress was eerily silent and on the first day of the War on Iraq
Kent Conrad seemed to be all alone on the Senate floor as he lamented
the lack of even a basic budget for the conflict and it's aftermath.
There was a complete breakdown of even basic diplomacy shown by President
Bush, failing to privately convince skeptical nations to join him in
the fight as his father had done in the first Gulf War and using words
like "crusade" "bring 'em on" and "axis of evil" to
further alienate the Muslim world.
The mealy-mouthed-chicken-hawk-think tankers in Northwest D.C. kept the
pot stirring as well with talks of regime change, disarmament and virtual
screaming about resolution 1441. Despite the evidence of dissipating
mustard and sarin gas over the last ten years in Iraq, continued flyovers,
sanctions and inspections, we were told there may be nuclear program-related
activities; the ultimate McGuffin of the war debate. While the term imminent
threat was never officially used, the talk of a nuke mushroom cloud not
being our smoking gun got the point across stoutly. Throw in chatter
about forty-five minute deployment and unmanned aerial vehicles and the
cake was baked.
The military and diplomatic tracks never intersected. Spring came around,
and the U.S. demanded that Saddam destroy his conventional Al -Samoud
missiles even while almost 100,000 troops were amassed on Iraq's border
and CNN was reporting that the first attack was only days away. "Might
as well go in now that we've gone in" was all the noise that week.
President Bush of course had the complete support of Congress to go right
ahead in, and everyone north of MacArthur Boulevard knew he didn't really
have to go back for more approval. That crucial vote in Congress, that
blank check, is now brought up whenever there is criticism of the war
and rightly so. Because not one of these Senators or Congressmen were
really pressed by the Press on this vote, they showed no guts in standing
up to the march to Baghdad. Perhaps if the morning shows and popular
media had pumped up the voting issue and specific plans for post-war
Iraq like the Laci Peterson/MichaelJackson/Elizabeth Smart/Sniper stories
with full saturation coverage a real debate would have resulted.
We'll never know.
In the middle of a War on Terrorism The United States Of America invaded
a sovereign Muslim nation of twenty-five million people. Because there
were no real plans for the occupation, and no substantive debate about
it, we've got eighteen year-olds from Cedar Rapids, Iowa negotiating
foreign policy on the streets of Fallujah.
This arrogant smug administration has made our country less safe. We've
lost credibility and our moral standing in the world. Most importantly
there can be no doubt that this invasion has created more terrorists
that hate America.
Goodness Gracious.
©2004 NY HERALD
SUN |
ALSO PUBLISHED IN:
THE SMIRKING CHIMP
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