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4th of July HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY Fireworks


Hoping We Fail
Who loses and who wins
in the high-stakes poker in Iraq?
By Author Unknown

It is not hard to determine who wishes the United States 
to succeed in rebuilding Iraq along lines that will 
promote consensual government, personal freedom, and 
economic vitality: Hardly anyone. At least, few other than 
the Iraqi and American people.
Surely not the Baathist holdovers in the Sunni triangle. 
They will not only incur hatred for their past sins from a 
newly empowered democratic citizenry, but will also be 
doomed to slough off to the sidelines, since their 
antiquated skills, acquired through intrigue, murder, and 
banal bureaucracy, will be of less use in a newly 
structured society. The Saddamites are as desperate to 
disrupt the new order as Nazi holdovers were in the 
spring of 1945, or Japanese fanatics at the arrival of 
Americans in August of the same year. The theocrats all over 
the region wish us to fail as well. Modernism emanating from 
Iraq would undermine the strictures of the clerics, in 
empowering women and eroding the fossilized structures of a 
tribal society. After all, in the war's aftermath, Arab Idol 
(dubbed another "American invasion" by Islamists), a thinly 
veiled spin-off of the American television show, was suddenly 
earning a 40-million-viewer market share, as Middle Easterners 
voted for pop stars in a way that they never could for their 
own leaders. In geopolitical terms, what are Shiite extremists 
to do in Iran should their more prosperous brethren in Iraq 
find that freedom, affluence, and Islam are not always so 
incompatible after all? In truth, the mullahs in Tehran are in 
a race against time to either subvert the Shiite-dominated 
secular government in Baghdad, or obtain nuclear weapons that 
might galvanize fanatics with the promise of an Islamic bomb 
that can threaten Israel, Iraq, or the United States. The new 
Iraq's paleolithic neighbors also wish it would go away. Well 
apart from issues of competing oil supplies and pricing, the 
Saudis probably will find the new government far worse than 
Saddam Hussein's thugocracy. The latter, like elements of the 
royal family itself, helped subsidize killers on the West Bank. 
And Saddam in turn owed his survival in 1991 in part to Saudi 
pressures on the first Bush administration to forego a march on 
Baghdad, and thus let Kurdish and Shiite insurrectionists die 
in the street. With Saddam in power, there was always the 
ostensible need for American troops in the kingdom; they were 
de facto sponsors of a corrupt elite and, in a larger sense, 
hostages of sorts to ensure the unquestioned continuation of 
the traditional Saudi-American "friendship." Compared to 
Saddam's murderous fascist regime, the Saudis' medieval monarchy 
was sold to us by the oil lobby as a "moderate voice." But in 
contrast to an emerging neighboring democracy across the border, 
Saudi Wahhabi theocracy might soon begin to appear downright 
repulsive. Who knows what might happen should the Iraq experiment 
succeed and Arabs flock to Iraqi universities, malls, and tourist 
sites, and then return home wondering why commensurate freedoms 
and affluence are not found there? If I were one of the corrupt 
grandees of the Arab League, I would empty my capital of as many 
fanatics and crazed killers as possible and with dispatch export 
them all to Iraq, to nip all that nonsense in the bud. Syria and 
its Lebanese clients, along with Jordan and the Palestinian 
Authority, all share the same concerns. Some did lucrative 
business with the monster on their borders on terms that they 
might not have been able to manage with a noisy and independent 
Iraqi parliament, worried more about national than about familial 
interests. At times these illegitimate regimes were also dubbed 
moderate, or even "partners," by our State Department, only by 
virtue of not being as lunatic as Saddam's Iraq. But with an 
ongoing revolution in Baghdad that could result in the most 
tolerant society in the Middle East, we might demand a little 
more from kings, dictators, and gangsters than the promise that 
they don't kill Americans overtly. Others are right that Egypt 
has the most to lose. For two decades we have sent the Mubarak 
dictatorship billions in U.S. aid, and have received very little 
in return. Their promises not to invade Israel, and not to send 
overt aid to West Bank terrorists, didn't mean much; they would 
have lost handily anyway had they chosen war, and still always 
found ways to support radicals opposed to Middle East peace. The 
only surprise about September 11 was not the presence of the 
Egyptian Mohamed Atta in the lead plane, or plentiful Egyptian 
psychopaths in the court of bin Laden, all that was predictable 
to any who read the Cairo papers or monitored the hatred of its 
intellectuals and clerics, but rather that they were actually 
outnumbered by our other "friends,"' the Saudis. Little needs be 
said about the U.N. After its decade-long impotence where it came 
to disarming Saddam, and the circus last winter concerning the 
American invasion of Iraq, its officials will now have no interest 
in seeing the United States create a just society when they 
themselves could not. Indeed, many U.N. members probably preferred 
the old regime anyway. That allegation is not bombast or a slur, 
given the prominence of Syria in U.N. deliberations, and the 
elevation of Iran and Libya on key committees. The U.N. has simply 
ceased to be the liberal, Western-inspired utopian body that arose 
from the ashes of World War II with the promise that reasonable, 
civilized nations could adjudicate differences rather than killing 
each other over perceived grievances. Instead, it is a mobocracy, 
where majority votes reflect a passive-aggressive stance toward the 
United States, guiltily desiring our money and support, while still 
eager for a televised forum in high-profile New York to pose and 
showcase its cheap, easy defiance of America. 
Europe is a more interesting story. Ostensibly, France and Germany 
would appreciate the demise of a monster, flush with petroleum-fed 
dollars and guilty of a history of acquiring dangerous weapons that 
in a few years could reach them before us. But while Europeans 
complain publicly that they are being asked to help clean up after 
we do the fighting, none, in fact, would prefer to switch roles.
Even aside from the question of whether France and Germany had 
lucrative commercial arrangements with the Hussein regime, those 
countries invested their prestige in stymieing the United States by 
way of the United Nations. It was thus depressing enough for them 
that the war ended in three weeks; that chagrin could only get worse 
should postbellum Iraq emerge as a sane and humane society. In more 
fundamental terms, how can pacifists and socialists believe that war 
might rout evil and offer hope to millions of oppressed? How might 
unilateralism achieve what internationalism could not? How could 
crass, naïve Yankees barrel and bluster into the complexities of the 
Middle East to solve problems sophisticated, nuanced Europeans had 
struggled with for centuries? In short, our failure is essential to 
confirming the entire European view of how the world should work. 
Expecting French support would be the equivalent of asking them to 
admit that investment in American-style air-conditioners was 
necessary not merely for their dead, but for the living as well, or 
that those lengthy August retreats to the beach and mountains while 
their parents and grandparents fried was an indictment of their 
entire socialist paradise. Who could think that the same type of 
individual responsibility for which they caricature us is sorely 
needed, in an amoral country where the younger and hale expect the 
state to do for the old and unwanted what they themselves will not? 
I have been to dozens of American hospitals in August in the 
scorching San Joaquin Valley heat, but never to one that was empty 
of nurses and doctors. And when it hits 110 in supposedly provincial 
Fresno, 10,000 Valley residents, poor or rich, young or old, citizen 
or alien, do not die. Here at home, Democratic contenders for the 
presidency are an increasingly shrill lot. After listening to Messrs. 
Kerry, Dean, or Graham, we would never glean that the war had gone 
well, that the Iraqis were liberated, and that things are looking up. 
Instead, accusations of quagmire and near-disaster comprise the 
standard stump speeches. Some allege that too many Americans and too 
much money is committed to Baghdad. Other rivals swear that we need 
more soldiers and investment, the common theme being only that 
whatever the official position of the administration is, it must be 
wrong. Aside from the acute embarrassment that will arise should 
textual or material evidence of weapons of mass destruction, and of 
Saddamite ties with al Qaeda, soon appear (and they will), or should 
Iraqis begin to craft a consensual society, the Democratic elite 
increasingly run the risk of having it appear to the American people 
that they thrive on bad news and sputter on good. What else can we 
conclude when Howard Dean crisscrosses the country with shrill cries 
of "Who of our sons and daughters will be the next to die in Iraq?" 
and promises to enlist as his vice-presidential candidate General 
Clark, who was last prominent as a CNN commentator promulgating doom 
and gloom even as American tanks raced through Baghdad in the screen 
behind him? Had the horror of September 11 occurred in 2003 rather 
than 2001, just imagine what the reaction to it might have been by 
the current crop of presidential hopefuls. All this hysteria and 
unrest should come as no surprise given the ambition of our endeavor, 
which is no less than a war of civilization to end both terrorism and 
the culture and politics that foster it. Still, let us ignore the 
self-interest of contemporary parties and reflect on the very scope of 
American audacity. In little more than three weeks, and coming on the 
heels of an amazing victory in Afghanistan, the American military 
defeated the worst fascist in the Middle East. Surrounded by enemies, 
and forced simultaneously to conduct the war against terrorism in 
dozens of countries and restore calm on the West Bank, the United 
States nevertheless sought to create consensual government and order 
under legal auspices in weeks, rather than the decades that were 
necessary in Japan and Germany, where elections took years and 
soldiers remain posted still. The real story is not that the news 
from Iraq is sometimes discouraging and depressing, but that it so 
often not,and that after two major-theater wars we have lost fewer 
people than on that disastrous day in Beirut 20 years ago, and less 
than 10 percent of the number that perished on September 11. It is 
no wonder that we have almost no explicit voices of support. Most 
nations and institutions will see themselves as losers should we 
succeed. And the array of politicians, opportunists, and hedging 
pundits find pessimism and demoralization the safer gambit than 
disinterested reporting or even optimism, given the sheer scope of 
the challenge of transforming Afghanistan and Iraq from terrorist 
enclaves and rogue regimes into liberal and humane states. Yet if 
most Americans will retain their composure, reexamine the events 
of the last two years, remember the horror of September 11, and 
appraise the myriad of problems that faced us in Afghanistan and 
Iraq, as well as in Europe, the Arab world, at the U.N.,  and the 
hysteria and false knowledge here at home, they will look at our 
present situation and past accomplishment, and rightly sigh: "I 
can't believe that we really did it."


Submitted by:

LTC Richard D. "Tex" Wandke (Ret.)
U. S. Ranger Hall of Fame








 






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