The U.S. must tread carefully in Iraq. The repugican cabal's alternate reality bubble will
not protect them - or the rest of us - from real world …
There are many questions being raised by the wingnuts and in the feckless mainstream media
about President Obama’s foreign policy. Many repugicans seem to speak
as though the United States has free reign to respond to ISIL (whatever
actual threat it poses to U.S. interests) in any way it likes, as though
it might be responding to an armed insurrection on U.S. territory.
Never mind that in the right wing mind, as the Bundy episode proves,
the U.S. is NOT free to respond to armed insurrections on U.S.
territory. In fact, where the right wing is concerned, best to suspend
reality altogether.
The problem is that ISIL is not somewhere in the
American Southwest, but in Iraq and Syria. There are not only practical
considerations of logistics, but the war-weariness of the American
people, a fragile economy still recovering from the shrub’s two unfunded
decade-long wars, and, not least, a court of world opinion to be
considered. Even had it the logistical capability to do anything it
wishes, the United States would still be limited by what the world
allowed it to do, our 21st century brand of rampant 19th nationalism
called “American Exceptionalism” aside.
The shrub wastefully expended
virtually all of any cachet held by America in the Middle East outside
of Israel, which was in limited supply in any case because of America’s
ties to the jewish state. This shrub's disaster that was the Iraq War
leaves President Obama with far more limited options, if he is to not simply run roughshod over any and all who oppose him.
In many ways, this is a no-win scenario for Obama,
because if he tries to do more, he will be accused (as he has already
been) of exceeding his constitutional authority, and if he is content
with less, he will be accused (as he has already been) of being weak on foreign policy and soft on the perceived enemy, Islam.
Obama’s attempt to demonstrate, rationally, that
ISIL does not represent Islam, has fallen on deaf repugican ears, who
seem determined to make shrub’s war in Iraq only the first of many “christian” crusades
there, logistics and world opinion be damned. What is the opinion of
the world compared to the opinion of the god they claim to follow?
Especially when they have a Blue Light rapture at stake at 3 a.m. on the
Seventeenth of Never?
More nuanced critiques are certainly possible.
Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who watched a small number of
American advisors in Vietnam mushroom into a full-scale war almost
overnight, worries that
the U.S. has been in five wars since 1945 and that in only one (WWII) –
and in a more limited way in Korea – have we achieved the objectives
laid out.
You have to admit, that’s not a very good track
record. Like Kissinger or not, the man has a point. And there is good
reason, as he says, to worry about the potential of an open-ended
mission to mushroom out of all proportion. One minute advisors, the next
bombers, and presto, tens of thousands of boots on the ground fighting a
war that cannot be won (never mind the implications of America’s continued dependence on Middle Eastern oil).
The repugicans seem to want more than a few airstrikes.
It is obvious to any student of history that air strikes alone (like
naval blockades alone) will not get the job done any more than the
Allies could bomb Germany into submission in the Second World War.
But it isn’t air strikes alone, is it? Kurds are
fighting ISIL. Iraqis are fighting ISIL. Iranians are fighting ISIL on
the ground. American boots are not required. ISIL has shown it can harm
individual Americans at this point, Americans who have put themselves
within arm’s reach of the terrorists. We have two notable beheadings of
Americans. We do not have 3,000 dead Americans on American soil as we
did when the shrub was pretending.
Looked at that way, the Obama foreign policy looks
pretty damned spiffy, doesn’t it? ISIL cannot harm Americans here, in
America. The threat is purely regional. There is no reason the response
cannot also be primarily regional. Given that the U.S. is no longer in
control of Iraq, this is perfectly reasonable.
Before the SOFA accord,
of course, an entirely different response would have been reasonable.
And under the shrub junta, both practical and other concerns would
be washed away in a profit-lust response. People would die, cash would
flow into repugican coffers - god’s self-appointed legal representatives
would be happy that the infidel was getting his. A big win all around
for modern American totalitarianism.
The repugican dream scenario takes us back some
1900+ years, also to the Middle East, but to Palestine this time,
southern Syria, as the romans saw it, rather than the northern border
with what is now Iraq.
When the jews rebelled against Rome in 66 CE, Rome
moved immediately to crush the revolt. Imagine for a moment that ISIL
arose while American troops were still in Iraq, and while Iraq was still
governed by the United States. In that case, the U.S. would have had
far more freedom of action. The U.S. too could have moved immediately to
crush the revolt, the local forces of the client king (Iraq in this
case) would not have been defeated and the revolt would not now be
spreading out of control.
And you can bet your last petro-dollar that the shrub junta would have felt free to indulge its manly insecurities
and the military industrial complex’s thirst for profits to respond all
out of proportion to the threat. At this moment, a new surge would be
pummeling ISIL into the stone age (though maybe not even then).
Munitions and dollars would be flowing like nobody’s business and
Muslims would be dying to praise songs in megacults across the
country.
This revolt of the jews back in 66 CE was, on the
surface, also an isolated rebellion, and concerned only the jews and
Rome. But Rome had other provinces prone to revolt, and other provinces
with large jewish populations. Similarly, Iraq isn’t the only islamic
nation with people sympathetic to ISIL or to chaos whatever its
ideological underpinnings.
Localized as the rebellion currently is, it has the
potential to spread not only to other parts of Iraq, but to neighboring
states, which is, of course, ISIL’s ultimate goal of a new caliphate
encompassing the entire Islamic world, and perhaps more.
This makes ISIL, like the jewish rebels, a regional
concern, as the rebels also were intent on pressing their war outside of
Judaea, outside Greater Israel, to the extent, according to the jewish
historian of the war, Josephus,
of building ships to raid the sea lanes. Roman marker stones also show
the rebels tore up Roman roads through the region, which was a critical
link between Syria and Egypt, and we can’t forget yesteryear’s Iranians,
the neighboring Parthian Empire
(of modern Iraq and Iran), who had no reason to love Rome just as Iran
has no reason to love the U.S., and who, like Iran, had previously
intervened in the area. It was deemed critical by Rome to wipe out this
revolt as quickly as possible. Nero may not have been Rome’s best
emperor, but he was not an idiot.
Their immediate attempt with a single legion
marching from Syria, failed (Judaea was considered to be part of
“Greater” Syria and therefore the governor of Syria’s ultimate
responsibility). So the Emperor Nero sent in his best man, Vespasian,
and his son Titus (both destined to be emperors themselves) from what is
now Lebanon, with three legions and plentiful auxiliaries from various
Roman clients (you can think of them as regional allies, if America had
any regional allies outside of Israel, which it does not).
Rome did not have to contend with a court of world
opinion. Rome could do pretty much whatever it wanted without worrying
about what anyone outside the empire thought, which is what makes the
Roman response interesting. The size of the force ultimately used was
about equal to that which had conquered Britain a generation earlier,
and the Roman response was clearly a message to those contemplating
rebellion in other provinces, that it would “wipe out” what it saw as
any troublemakers anywhere it found them, and with overwhelming force.
This was not just an attempt to put down the local rebellion, but an
attempt to discourage further rebellions in other provinces.
It is noteworthy that with less than a thousand jewish rebels remaining on Masada (according
to Josephus) after the rest of the country had been pacified, the
Romans sent an entire legion plus auxiliaries (some 10,000 men total),
to lay siege to the fortress. Nor were the Romans content to starve out
the defenders. A legion was like a modern division, and it was valuable.
Think about it: Rome had 28 legions to control an
empire that spanned from Britain in the north to Morocco in the South,
and from Spain in the West to Syria in the East. It committed one of
these valuable legions to put down a few straggling survivors at Masada
to make a point to the entire Roman world that it meant business, like
Obama says America means business. “Fuck with us and we will bury you”
was the message then as now.
So the Romans proceeded to built a huge ramp, the
remains of which still exist, up the 400-foot side of the plateau upon
which the fortress stood. It took 3 months to complete this ramp. When
it was finished, says Josephus, Roman soldiers stormed into Masada to
find the defenders had killed each other rather than be taken.
This might seem like yet another Alamo-type ending,
but there are problems with it. Archaeologists found just 28 bodies, and
there is no evidence that they committed suicide. What has resulted
instead, like the myth of the Alamo, is the Myth of Masada.
We don’t know what myths may or may not have grown
up in the first century. We do know that the Jews lost and would not try
to revolt again for several generations, and we know that the sizable jewish population of Egypt did not revolt until that second attempt in
132-136 CE (the so-called Bar Kokhba revolt).
Rome could have made do with much less and still
won. The defenders were trapped, and if the Romans knew that there were
fewer than a thousand defenders in the fortress their response is the
more astounding. The Romans had already built a a circumvallation
(a fortified wall) all around the foot of the plateau. The jewish
rebels were going nowhere, whatever their numbers. The revolt itself was
crushed. Whatever remained on Masada had no practical bearing on future
affairs outside of Rome’s need for a grand gesture.
The repugicans see the need for a grand gesture as well. But America is facing its own myth, the myth constructed by the war criminals responsible for the Iraq War,
the myth that America went into Iraq in revenge for 9/11 (Sadam Hussein
was innocent of that, at least), to destroy weapons of mass destruction
(those weapons never existed) and that we kicked ass and took names. We
did kick ass but we didn’t take names, and the postwar mess the shrub’s
maladministration created is what has given rise to ISIL today.
The myth is that it is Obama’s foreign policy, not
prior repugican mistakes, that is to blame. The mainstream media feeds
the myth by giving air time to the same people who created the mess,
now eager to offer alternatives to fix the mess they refuse to take
responsibility for, alternatives that sound a lot like the schemes that
got us (and Iraq) into this mess in the first place. But we are not
Rome, Iran is not Parthia, and the rebels are not our rebels but Iraq’s.
And we DO have a court of world opinion and it would not be thrilled by
yet another unilateral military invention of the type our war criminals
embrace.
The world is awake and watching, if the repugican cabal is not, and their little alternate reality bubble does not extend its
coverage to any but repugicans. So to the extent the repugican cabal is able to act
on ISIL (and hope they are not), their reality bubble will not protect
them – or the rest of us – from real world, as opposed to fantasy,
consequences.
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