Sunday, December 03, 2006

Quote of the day: In this corner, the prez of these United States; out there somewhere, that bum Reality (why haven't Karl and Josh fired his ass?)

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"Civil war? Sectarian violence? A phase? This much is certain: The dead in Iraq don't give a damn what we call it."
--Frank Rich, in his NYT column today

So, Frank Rich agrees with Mags that Chimpy the Prez has gone off the rails! I'm not so sure, but there's no question in my mind that we now have a Decider who has no meaningful contact with reality, except when it bumps into him, which has been happening qute a lot lately, and he says ouch.

My point of disagreement is whether Chimpy's divorce from reality represents any change in his relationship with it. This isn't central to Rich's argument, though, and is a mere matter of interpretation anyway, so I'm going to save it for a separate post.

To return for a moment to the matter of the almost eerie, for-all-the-marbles stakes of the domestic debate over applicability of the phrase "civil war," Rich also makes this terrific point:

The intensity of the squabble showed the corrosive effect the president's subversion of language has had on our larger culture. Iraq arguably passed beyond civil war months ago into what might more accurately be termed ethnic cleansing or chaos. That we were fighting over "civil war" at this late date was a reminder that wittingly or not, we have all taken to following Mr. Bush's lead in retreating from English as we once knew it.

[Note: In what I believe is a DWT first, today's Frank Rich column is presented with--one can only hope--all of its many links present and working. Reading the text in the newspaper, you would have no idea that it's peppered with links, which basically function as footnotes, not just giving you access to a source for the information but allowing you to explore it at greater length. Probably it's possible to import the text into the blog with the links, but I don't know how to do that. What I've done instead is to systematically recode them! And now that I've done it once, I can tell you that your're never going to see me do it again.]


December 3, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist

Has He Started Talking to the Walls?
By FRANK RICH

IT turns out we've been reading the wrong Bob Woodward book to understand what's going on with President Bush. The text we should be consulting instead is "The Final Days," the Woodward-Bernstein account of Richard Nixon talking to the portraits on the White House walls while Watergate demolished his presidency. As Mr. Bush has ricocheted from Vietnam to Latvia to Jordan in recent weeks, we've witnessed the troubling behavior of a president who isn't merely in a state of denial but is completely untethered from reality. It's not that he can't handle the truth about Iraq. He doesn't know what the truth is.

The most startling example was his insistence that Al Qaeda is primarily responsible for the country's spiraling violence. Only a week before Mr. Bush said this, the American military spokesman on the scene, Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, called Al Qaeda "extremely disorganized" in Iraq, adding that "I would question at this point how effective they are at all at the state level." Military intelligence estimates that Al Qaeda makes up only 2 percent to 3 percent of the enemy forces in Iraq, according to Jim Miklaszewski of NBC News. The bottom line: America has a commander in chief who can't even identify some 97 percent to 98 percent of the combatants in a war that has gone on longer than our involvement in World War II.

But that's not the half of it. Mr. Bush relentlessly refers to Iraq's "unity government" though it is not unified and can only nominally govern. (In Henry Kissinger's accurate recent formulation, Iraq is not even a nation "in the historic sense.") After that pseudo-government's prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, brushed him off in Amman, the president nonetheless declared him "the right guy for Iraq" the morning after. This came only a day after The Times's revelation of a secret memo by Mr. Bush's national security adviser, Stephen Hadley, judging Mr. Maliki either "ignorant of what is going on" in his own country or disingenuous or insufficiently capable of running a government. Not that it matters what Mr. Hadley writes when his boss is impervious to facts.

In truth the president is so out of it he wasn't even meeting with the right guy. No one doubts that the most powerful political leader in Iraq is the anti-American, pro-Hezbollah cleric Moktada al-Sadr, without whom Mr. Maliki would be on the scrap heap next to his short-lived predecessors, Ayad Allawi and Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Mr. Sadr's militia is far more powerful than the official Iraqi army that we've been helping to "stand up" at hideous cost all these years. If we're not going to take him out, as John McCain proposed this month, we might as well deal with him directly rather than with Mr. Maliki, his puppet. But our president shows few signs of recognizing Mr. Sadr's existence.

In his classic study, "The Great War and Modern Memory," Paul Fussell wrote of how World War I shattered and remade literature, for only a new language of irony could convey the trauma and waste. Under the auspices of Mr. Bush, the Iraq war is having a comparable, if different, linguistic impact: the more he loses his hold on reality, the more language is severed from its meaning altogether.

When the president persists in talking about staying until "the mission is complete" even though there is no definable military mission, let alone one that can be completed, he is indulging in pure absurdity. The same goes for his talk of "victory," another concept robbed of any definition when the prime minister we are trying to prop up is allied with Mr. Sadr, a man who wants Americans dead and has many scalps to prove it. The newest hollowed-out Bush word to mask the endgame in Iraq is "phase," as if the increasing violence were as transitional as the growing pains of a surly teenager. "Phase" is meant to drown out all the unsettling debate about two words the president doesn't want to hear, "civil war."

When news organizations, politicians and bloggers had their own civil war about the proper usage of that designation last week, it was highly instructive--but about America, not Iraq. The intensity of the squabble showed the corrosive effect the president's subversion of language has had on our larger culture. Iraq arguably passed beyond civil war months ago into what might more accurately be termed ethnic cleansing or chaos. That we were fighting over "civil war" at this late date was a reminder that wittingly or not, we have all taken to following Mr. Bush's lead in retreating from English as we once knew it.

It's been a familiar pattern for the news media, politicians and the public alike in the Bush era. It took us far too long to acknowledge that the "abuses" at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere might be more accurately called torture. And that the "manipulation" of prewar intelligence might be more accurately called lying. Next up is "pullback," the Iraq Study Group's reported euphemism to stave off the word "retreat" (if not retreat itself).

In the case of "civil war," it fell to a morning television anchor, Matt Lauer, to officially bless the term before the "Today" show moved on to such regular fare as an update on the Olsen twins. That juxtaposition of Iraq and post-pubescent eroticism was only too accurate a gauge of how much the word "war" itself has been drained of its meaning in America after years of waging a war that required no shared sacrifice. Whatever you want to label what's happening in Iraq, it has never impeded our freedom to dote on the Olsen twins.

I have not been one to buy into the arguments that Mr. Bush is stupid or is the sum of his "Bushisms" or is, as feverish Internet speculation periodically has it, secretly drinking again. I still don't. But I have believed he is a cynic--that he could always distinguish between truth and fiction even as he and Karl Rove sold us their fictions. That's why, when the president said that "absolutely, we're winning" in Iraq before the midterms, I just figured it was more of the same: another expedient lie to further his partisan political ends.

But that election has come and gone, and Mr. Bush is more isolated from the real world than ever. That's scary. Neither he nor his party has anything to gain politically by pretending that Iraq is not in crisis. Yet Mr. Bush clings to his delusions with a near-rage--watch him seethe in his press conference with Mr. Maliki--that can't be explained away by sheer stubbornness or misguided principles or a pat psychological theory. Whatever the reason, he is slipping into the same zone as Woodrow Wilson did when refusing to face the rejection of the League of Nations, as a sleepless L.B.J. did when micromanaging bombing missions in Vietnam, as Ronald Reagan did when checking out during Iran-Contra. You can understand why Jim Webb, the Virginia senator-elect with a son in Iraq, was tempted to slug the president at a White House reception for newly elected members of Congress. Mr. Bush asked "How's your boy?" But when Mr. Webb replied, "I'd like to get them out of Iraq," the president refused to so much as acknowledge the subject. Maybe a timely slug would have woken him up.

Or at least sounded an alarm. Some two years ago, I wrote that Iraq was Vietnam on speed, a quagmire for the MTV generation. Those jump cuts are accelerating now. The illusion that America can control events on the ground is just that: an illusion. As the list of theoretical silver bullets for Iraq grows longer (and more theoretical) by the day--special envoy, embedded military advisers, partition, outreach to Iran and Syria, Holbrooke, international conference, NATO--urgent decisions have to be made by a chief executive who is in touch with reality (or such is the minimal job description). Otherwise the events in Iraq will make the Decider's decisions for him, as indeed they are doing already.

The joke, history may note, is that even as Mr. Bush deludes himself that he is bringing "democracy" to Iraq, he is flouting democracy at home. American voters could not have delivered a clearer mandate on the war than they did on Nov. 7, but apparently elections don't register at the White House unless the voters dip their fingers in purple ink. Mr. Bush seems to think that the only decision he had to make was replacing Donald Rumsfeld and the mission of changing course would be accomplished.

Tell that to the Americans in Anbar Province. Back in August the chief of intelligence for the Marines filed a secret report--uncovered by Thomas Ricks of The Washington Post--concluding that American troops "are no longer capable of militarily defeating the insurgency in al-Anbar." That finding was confirmed in an intelligence update last month. Yet American troops are still being tossed into that maw, and at least 90 have been killed there since Labor Day, including five marines, ages 19 to 24, around Thanksgiving.

Civil war? Sectarian violence? A phase? This much is certain: The dead in Iraq don't give a damn what we call it.

6 Comments:

At 9:50 AM, Blogger DownWithTyranny said...

As excited as I was to read that Jim Webb, senator-elect and, just as important in this instance, father with son in Iraq, had actually contemplated slugging the criminal Bush, and as heartily as I agree with Frank Rich`s postulation that we as a people have allowed this lowlife crook in the White House to savage our very language, I have an addition. In fact, I`ve been writing about it in the last few days, probably over at my travel blog-- the beating the word "democracy" has taken at the hands of Bush. It infuriates me as much as Jim Webb must have been infuriated by Bush`s smug indifference to a father and U.S. Senator about more and more young Americans dying in the maelstrom of the Iraqi Civil War for no reason whatsoever that Bush has ever been able to articulate to the satisfaction of anyone beyond the intellectual developmental stage of "He was chosen by God."

Democracy is too crucial a concept to even allow someone like Bush to say the word in public. Remember when he was wired so that Rove could give him the answers to tough questions? Now he should be wired so that whenever he says "democracy" someone who actually cherishes it, rather than despises it, gets a chance to give him a good electric shock.

 
At 10:29 AM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Amen.

Ken

 
At 12:28 PM, Blogger peg said...

Ken,

tip on easy way to grab the lilnks with the column for reprinting... first, click on the "print" icon and then "view source" and just copy/paste (you can edit out the crap at the top).

This assumes that blogger will accept all of the code..? But it's worth a try (i've tried to explain to my elderly mother that Rich & Krugman 'footnote' their columns online, but, being an old grey lady, herself, she was totally perplexed by the mere concept until i demonstrated it for her. as a long-ago history major, she was mightily impressed).

 
At 2:26 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Hi, deeluzon, and thanks for your help. I'll have to see whether that gets me anywhere, but I have a feeling that it won't deal with the Blogger end, which is where my problem comes in. Let me try it and see what happens.

But the "View Source" thing is totally new to me, and sounds like it's bound to come in handy.

Thanks again-
Ken

 
At 6:33 PM, Blogger peg said...

Ken,

I just tested it (on my barely-used blogger account) and it worked like a dream. You should copy/paste the whole source code (once you've "viewed source") into a text program and then just scan down through all the crap code until you find the by;ine/headline (wherever you want to start). that's your "start point." At the end, clip it at the last close paragraph (brackets around a backslash-p) bit of html.

after you paste it into the blogger box, preview (you probably will need to fiddle to make the type size the way you want it) and... behold the whole column WITH links!

i hope this is clear (it'll probably be a little more so when you try it). it took me no time and no effort, so, once you've figured it out, it should work for anything else you want to... cite.

 
At 8:19 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Very interesting, D--thanks!

Ken

 

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