By Dave McGowan <dave@davesweb.cnchost.com>
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/mythofomnipotence25mar03.shtml
March 25, 2003
I have long held the belief that the American people are not stupid, though
they are decidedly ignorant. By that, I mean that the fact that Americans'
collective view of the world is not grounded in any sort of objective reality
is due not to the fact that Americans have no capacity for critical thought,
but rather to the fact that we are deliberately deprived of the information
that we need to form a coherent world view.
I must say, however, that it is getting increasingly hard
to cling to that belief. After immersing myself for several days in the
world of cable 'news' - an activity that I usually avoid at all costs -
I have come to the conclusion that anyone who can watch this parade of fools
and not know that they are being lied to has to be a few Freedom Fries short
of a Happy Meal.
Lies, Lies, & More Lies
A pattern to the coverage of the Iraq war is ridiculously easy to
discern: first, a recklessly transparent lie is told; then, it is repeated
endlessly by a stable of resident 'experts,' apparently in an attempt to
bolster its credibility; this continues until the initial claim is irrefutably
revealed as a lie; at which time another layer of spin and lies is added,
with no acknowledgment that the initial claim was entirely fraudulent; with
the new lies in place, the process begins again.
The certainty with which these breathtakingly brazen lies
are told is truly something to behold, particularly on Fox News, where it
is gleefully reported that Saddam is dead even as he continues to make regular
appearances on Iraqi television. Fox has assured us in the last few days
that there is no resistance in Iraq; that victory is just days, if not hours,
away; that the entire country would be under U.S. control by Sunday, March
23; that Tariq Aziz has defected; that Tariq Aziz is dead; that Iraqi command
and control has completely broken down; that entire divisions of the Iraqi
military have already surrendered; that negotiations are underway for the
surrender of the Republican Guard; that 20% of Republican Guard forces have
already surrendered; that Umm
Qasr is under U.S. control; that the Faw Peninsula is under coalition control;
that Basra is under U.S. control; that al Nasiriyah is under U.S. control;
that virtually all of southern Iraq is under U.S. control; that the biggest
problem U.S. troops are facing is how to deal logistically with mass surrenders
and thousands of POWs; that there have been no POWs taken by the Iraqis,
that no aircraft have been shot down or captured; that no American tanks
have been destroyed; and that no casualties have been inflicted by Iraqi
forces.
And those are just some of the more outrageous claims that
have been revealed as lies. Virtually every thing that is said is a lie.
And they're not even good lies. They're not even credible lies. They are
absolutely shameless lies. Tall tales are told of the pinpoint precision
and flawless performance of Tomahawk cruise missiles even while a brief
blurb on the constantly running news ticker reveals that quite a few of
them don't even hit the right country. The U.S. military is discussed with
awestruck reverence, its technological superiority said to render it omnipotent,
just after an Iraqi videotape reveals that an Apache Longbow helicopter,
one of the most heavily armed and technologically advanced weapons in the
U.S. arsenal, has been taken out by a group of villagers and farmers armed
with rifles.
The Iraqi regime is loudly denounced for violating the Geneva
Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war after doing nothing more
diabolical than airing brief video clips of the questioning of American
POWs (which was done to expose the lies put out by Washington and the U.S.
media), and that denunciation comes from a regime that has openly advocated
using torture on 'terrorist' suspects, that has reportedly beaten Afghan
prisoners to death at a special 'interrogation' center (http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanistan/story/0,1284,909294,00.html),
and that has used a 'terrorist' suspect's young children as leverage to
extract information (http://www.nypost.com/news/worldnews/69950.htm).
George Bush stands on the White House lawn and sternly cautions
the Iraqis to treat American POWs fairly and humanely, in the same way that
the U.S. has treated the prisoners that it holds humanely. Is this advice
intended to be taken literally? Should we expect to soon be seeing videotape
of American POWs being stripped, bound, blindfolded, tossed into 'tiger
cages' and left exposed to the elements? Is that what Bush has in mind?
It has taken less than a week of warfare for the administration's
justifications for waging it to be exposed as lies. No alleged 'weapons
of mass destruction,' and no 'banned' weapons have been deployed by Iraqi
forces. Not so much as a Scud missile, it is now being admitted. And no
caches of banned weapons have been found, despite advance billing. After
flogging a blatantly fraudulent story of the discovery of a huge chemical
weapons plant for a couple of days, the cable networks have fallen silent
on the issue of quickly seizing bio/chem weapon stashes.
As for the claims of seeking to liberate the Iraqi people,
it is abundantly clear that the Iraqi people are violently opposed to American-style
'liberation,' though that doesn't stop the Fox folks from continuing to
prominently display an "Operation Iraqi Freedom" graphic.
Embedded News
'News' coverage of this war is heavily reliant on Pentagon-provided euphemisms.
Most of them are fairly transparent. "Pockets of resistance,"
for instance, as in "coalition forces have met pockets of resistance,"
refers to U.S. troops meeting with fierce, organized resistance and taking
casualties.
"Mechanical failure," as in "a coalition aircraft
made a forced landing due to mechanical failure," means that a U.S.
aircraft has been shot down by Iraqi forces. "Hard landing" means
much the same thing. "Coalition," by the way, refers to an invading
army composed of approximately 85% Americans, 15% Brits, and a couple of
guys from Australia.
The phrase, "Iraqi troops dressed in civilian clothes,"
refers to either (1) civilians paraded before the cameras and claimed to
be captured Iraqi POWs, or (2) civilians that have willingly taken up arms
to assist the Iraqi military in repelling the U.S. invasion. And "Iraqi
troops feigning surrender and attacking U.S. troops" refers to Iraqi
troops outmaneuvering U.S. troops and inflicting casualties.
Finding anything resembling the truth through the dense fog
of lies is not an easy task. But one thing seems pretty clear: the Beast
has been wounded. And that is a rather scary thing, because one of the Beast's
worst fears is of being perceived as being weak. If threatened with exposure
of the fact that it is not omnipotent, it will act out in increasingly violent
and unpredictable ways.
As near as can be determined, the Beast's Great War Plan lies
in ruins. That is evident in the increasingly panicked tone of the 'news'
coverage, and in the constant flow of statements from officials and analysts
reassuring the American people that everything is proceeding smoothly, when
that is clearly not the case. When a command and control center gets fragged
almost before the first shots are fired, that's a pretty good sign that
there might be some problems.
The U.S. appears to be pretty much winging it at this point.
As one ABC military analyst (who apparently didn't understand his role,
much to the dismay of Peter Jennings) surmised early on, the Iraqis appear
to have taken the strategic initiative from the start of the war. The result
of this is that the U.S. has been forced into a reactive mode.
The military component of this operation has been scrapped
primarily because, U.S. arrogance being what it is, no one bothered to factor
in such elements as an actual opposing army. Meanwhile, the psychological
warfare component, being conducted largely by the allegedly 'free' American
press, is laughably inept and completely ineffective in obtaining Washington's
objectives.
The current situation is that, having quickly come to the
realization that none of their targets in the south can be taken without
sustained and bloody battles, the U.S. war machine is apparently staking
it all now on a battle for Baghdad, in a reckless bid to save face and in
the desperate hope that the fall of Baghdad will result in the surrender
of the rest of the country.
As all the analysts explained initially, it is absolutely
essential that an advancing army 'secure the rear.' It is a basic rule of
warfare that you don't leave yourself vulnerable to attack from the rear
by leaving hostile forces in your wake. You don't take the chance that you
will find yourself cut off from supply and support, surrounded by enemy
forces. That is why the analysts all assured everyone that all the cities
in the south would be quickly secured before the march on Baghdad.
But now, having revealed that the fall of Baghdad has purportedly
always been our top priority, all of that becomes insignificant and the
analysts all now marvel at the "amazing flexibility" and "boldness"
of U.S. military planners. In truth, what those masters of war are doing
is sending tens of thousands of young, unsuspecting American kids into a
situation where they could very well find themselves cut off, surrounded,
and pummeled by Iraqi forces.
Even without the problems presented by an unsecured rear,
U.S. forces have virtually no chance of taking Baghdad by conventional means.
Umm Qasr
The border town of Umm Qasr has been hammered for five days, bearing
the full weight of the U.S. war machine. It has been subjected to unrelenting
aerial bombardment, massive artillery shelling, heavy tank fire, and everything
else 'coalition' forces can think to throw at it. And yet resistance remains.
Umm Qasr, it should be noted, is a town of just 4,000 residents.
It lies within sight of U.S. military encampments in Kuwait. It is in the
Shiite south, which was supposed to offer little or no resistance to U.S.
occupation. And it is being defended, according to a March 23 report in
Financial Times, by a force of just "120 Iraqi soldiers still fighting
against overwhelming odds."
Baghdad, on the other hand, is a sprawling city of some 5,000,000
residents. It lies several hundred miles from U.S. base camps, in central
Iraq, where the Hussein regime enjoys its highest levels of support. And
it is defended by tens of thousands of elite troops, supplemented with tens
of thousands of regular army forces, and probably as many as a million armed
citizens. And that number is growing day by day; instead of a massive flow
of refugees out of the country, there has been, and continues to be, a steady
flow of Iraqis and others entering the country to assist in the defense
of Baghdad and other Iraqi cities.
For a preview of the battle for Baghdad, take the siege of
Umm Qasr and multiply by a factor of at least a thousand.
Desert Warriors
But surely, you say, our vastly superior forces can easily defeat
the Iraqis. Our troops are better trained, better equipped, and have much
higher morale. Everyone knows that.
But I beg to differ. It is very unlikely that our troops are
better trained. I doubt very much that some reservist snatched off the streets
of Southern California knows any more about waging tank warfare in a desert
sandstorm than I do. It seems very unlikely that our troops are better trained
than troops that were born, raised and trained in the environment that they
are now fighting in.
And what do U.S. military planners, despite all their bluster
and arrogance, know about waging mechanized warfare? When was the last time
that the U.S. war machine was engaged in a war that was primarily reliant
on mechanized ground forces? The last time I checked, it was during WWII,
six decades ago.
Korea and Vietnam, it will be recalled, were jungle warfare
operations. All subsequent wars have been almost entirely reliant on air
power. This war then is something of a test for U.S. military strategists.
Iraqi generals, on the other hand, are intimately familiar with the concept
of mechanized desert warfare.
Psychological Motivation
The notion that U.S. troops have higher morale and are more motivated
to fight seems rather unlikely as well. The American men and women deployed
over there have no personal stake in the outcome of this invasion. They
have been motivated by lies, and as those lies unravel, and as 'coalition'
casualties mount (and there is no question that losses are already significantly
higher than has been acknowledged), troop morale will drop precipitously,
if it hasn't begun to do so already.
Iraqi troops, on the other hand, are fighting in defense of
their homeland. Each and every one of them has a personal stake in repelling
the U.S. occupation. They are on their home turf, fighting in defense of
family. U.S. troops are ill prepared for the ferocity of the fighting that
will be required to seize Baghdad.
As for U.S. troops being better equipped, there is no question
that that is true. The 'coalition' has an enormous technological advantage,
and unquestioned air superiority. But high-tech weapons can be seriously
hampered by low-tech means, and Mother Nature can sometimes provide a most
inhospitable environment for sensitive electronics. Desert sandstorms and
burning trenches, despite official denials, can wreak havoc with guidance
systems. andstorms, in fact, and sand in general, wreak havoc with pretty
much everything. This is true, of course, on the Iraqi side as well, though
one would think that the native peoples have a little more experience dealing
with the special problems posed by desert warfare.
US Military Superiority
We as Americans live with the myth that everything that we do is,
by definition, the best, and that myth certainly extends to our military
prowess. But all that we are really the 'best' at is throwing exorbitant
sums of money at our military services, which means that we are heavily
armed and in possession of a vast array of technological wonders.
But all that can be concluded from that with any certainty
is that, along with an unfathomable number of dead bodies, we will leave
behind in Iraq hundreds of billions of dollars worth of destroyed military
equipment and exploded munitions.
Iraq is in a unique position in this war: it is the only nation
that has had an opportunity to learn first-hand how to defend against the
uniquely American style of modern warfare. These lessons were learned at
a tremendous cost, but they appear to have been translated into successful
military strategies.
It is very unlikely that the relatively light use of U.S.
air power has anything to do with humanitarian concerns. It is more likely
due to the fact that the Iraqis aren't presenting the 'coalition' with very
many targets that can be hit from the air. Smoke, sand, well-camouflaged
Iraqi equipment deployed in small detachments rather than easily targeted
columns, and the placement of multiple decoys, have all likely contributed
to frustrating U.S. pilots and military planners.
So too has the fact that the Iraqis have held back thus far
on deploying any of their aircraft. They have also made scant use of rockets
and missiles, and have made only partial use of air defense systems. This
is apparently due to a conscious decision to preserve these weapons for
the defense of Baghdad. Despite boasts that Iraq's failure to wield these
weapons represents some kind of victory for the 'coalition,' it appears
as though the Baghdad regime opted to minimize its up-front losses by keeping
key defensive assets hidden and riding out the initial U.S. assaults.
Baghdad
While much of this is speculation at this point, what isn't speculation
is that the Beast is wounded. It is weakened and it will attempt to reassert
its supremacy by taking Baghdad at all costs. And how will it do that? One
has to look no further than the strategy that is being employed at Umm Qasr:
"Coalition commanders insist they are trying to avoid
civilian casualties and preserve as much of Iraq's civil infrastructure
as possible, but officers would rather flush out snipers with tanks and
aircraft than risk their troops on the ground. 'It makes sense for us to
do this,' said one US commander quoted by Reuters in Umm Qasr yesterday
after Harriers dropped two 500 lb bombs on a building used by Iraqi resisters.
'Rather than send men in there, we're just going to destroy it.'"
(http://search.ft.com/search/article.html?id=030323000670&query=ominous+signs&vsc_appId=totalSearch&state=Form)
Baghdad will prove to be very resistant to being destroyed.
Millions of Iraqi people have a lot riding on the defense of the city. But
Team Bush has a lot riding on the fall of Baghdad. Expect a massive infusion
of U.S. troops. Expect a concerted campaign to lower expectations as a war
that was billed in advance as a war that would be over in days becomes a
campaign that could take weeks ... and then months ... and then ... ?
Failure is not an option for the Beast. It will employ any
means it deems necessary to achieve its ends. It will carpet-bomb residential
areas. It will fire-bomb cities. It will employ every weapon in its arsenal,
including the chemical ones and including the nuclear ones. Indeed, it will
deploy chemical weapons, claim it was the Iraqis who did so, and then use
that as a pretext to step up to nuclear weapons. It will sacrifice tens
of thousands of its native sons and daughters. It will sacrifice an unlimited
number of Iraqis. It will brutally suppress efforts to hamper its war drive.
The Beast is wounded and is beginning to panic. These are
interesting times we are living in.
Dave McGowan
PS: I wasn't going to mention it, but prognostications on
the Iraq war were remarkably consistent across the board. Pundits and theorists
in all avenues of the media - print, broadcast, and the lowly internet -
forecast a very short war. War proponents foresaw a quick and painless war
with a happy ending. Foes of the war foresaw a quick and - for our side
- painless war with devastating consequences for the Iraqi people.
This newsletter, however, stood apart from the crowd and repeatedly
warned that the Iraqis would resist with a fury, and that this war would
be a long and bloody affair in which countless U.S. casualties would pile
up.
This newsletter also cautioned, in November of last year,
that the U.S. had established legal justification for its war even without
an additional UN Security Council resolution. It was postulated that the
legal argument would go something like this: "In 1991, resolution 687
provided a blueprint for actions that Iraq would have to take in order to
end hostilities in the area and restore peace and security. Resolution 687
also explicitly made fulfillment of those obligations by Iraq a prerequisite
for a ceasefire to go into effect. Iraq has, however, never fulfilled those
obligations. The ceasefire, therefore, never actually went into effect,
and we are still duty-bound to achieve our 'stated objective of restoring
international peace and security in the area' by 'all necessary means.'"
(http://davesweb.cnchost.com/nwsltr23.html)
On March 20, U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte presented to
the UN Security Council the United States' legal argument justifying its
decision to invade Iraq. As the Los Angeles Times reported, Negroponte "noted
that Resolution 687, which was adopted in April 1991, imposed disarmament
obligations on Iraq that were conditions of the cease-fire signed at the
end of the Gulf War ... 'It has long been recognized and understood that
a material breach of these obligations removes the basis of the cease-fire
and revives the authority to use force under Resolution 678,' Negroponte
wrote. 'In view of Iraq's material reaches, the basis for the cease-fire
has been removed, and the use of force is authorized ... to restore international
peace and security in the area.'"
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-war-reasons21mar21,1,2904576.story)
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