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What It Means To Lose

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  • What It Means To Lose

    WHAT IT MEANS TO LOSE
    By Gwynne Dyer

    AZG Armenian Daily
    22/11/2006

    "Stand back! No, further back, or you'll be swept away by the shock
    and awe! We're going to show you the full might and majesty of American
    military power. We're going to...INVADE IRAQ!!!"

    It's a bit like one of those backyard scenes where the hapless dad
    lights the enormous firecracker and retires -- and after a long wait,
    it just goes fzzzt.

    The full panoply of American power was unleashed upon Iraq, and the
    results have been profoundly unimpressive. This doesn't just mean
    that the United States loses in Iraq. It means that its leverage
    elsewhere is severely diminished as well. But very few people in
    Washington seem to understand that yet.

    American voters have spoken, Congress has changed hands, and Secretary
    of Defense Don Rumsfeld has been put out to pasture at last, but
    there is still no plan for getting the United States out of the Iraq
    quagmire. Certainly not from the Democrats, who are all over the map
    on the issue.

    Senator Hilary Clinton, the leading contender for the Democratic
    presidential nomination in 2008, doesn't want a timetable for
    withdrawal from Iraq. Senator John Kerry, the Democratic candidate
    last time, wants a firm deadline for withdrawal.. Senator Joe Biden,
    the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, thinks
    dividing Iraq in three is the answer. And Congressman John Murtha,
    who will control the House committee that authorises the cash for
    the war, wants an immediate pull-out. So no plan there.

    There is no Republican plan yet, either, but it is the job of the Iraq
    Study Group, a bipartisan panel co-chaired by James Baker, former
    secretary of state during Bush senior's presidency and long-serving
    confidant of the Bush family, to come up with one. Its recommendations
    will be acted on, too, because the new secretary of defence will
    be Robert Gates, another close friend of the family and currently a
    member of the Iraq Study Group. Thanks to various "accidental" leaks,
    we even know broadly what the ISG will recommend.

    It will urge a gradual reduction of American troops, with the last
    combat forces to be out of Iraq in eighteen months or so, well before
    the 2008 elections.

    And it will tell President Bush to seek cover for this process by
    talking to Iraq's neighbours, Iran and Syria.

    This will be very unwelcome advice for Mr Bush, whose spokesman
    Tony Snow was only two weeks ago warning those two countries to
    leave Lebanon alone: "We are...concerned by mounting evidence that
    the Syrian and Iranian governments, Hizbollah and their Lebanese
    allies are preparing plans to topple Lebanon's democratically elected
    government.... We're making it clear...that there ought to be hands
    off the [Lebanese] government...." But Bush will like it even less
    when he learns the price that Syria and Iran want for helping.

    The problem is that the United State is demonstrating every day in Iraq
    just how ineffective its military power is. It looked so impressive
    before it was unleashed that the Iranian government secretly offered
    Washington a general settlement of all the differences between the two
    countries, very much on America's terms, just before the US invasion
    of Iraq in March, 2003. The cocky neo-cons rejected that offer out of
    hand -- and now leading Iranians just smile when warned that the US
    might strike them too. They know that the US armed forces now regard
    an attack on Iran with such distaste that the Joint Chiefs of Staff
    might even resign rather than obey such an order.

    So Iran's price for cooperation would be high: an end to the 27-year
    US trade embargo, full diplomatic relations with Washington, an
    American commitment not to try to overthrow the Iranian regime --
    and acceptance of Iran's legal right to develop civil nuclear power
    under no more than the normal safeguards of the International Atomic
    Energy Agency. Would that mean that Iran becomes a "threshold" nuclear
    weapons power, able to build actual bombs on very short notice? Yes
    it would. Pay up or shut up.

    And Syria's price? An end to the United Nations investigation into the
    Damascus regime's role in the assassination of former Lebanese prime
    minister Rafik Hariri last year, US acceptance of a larger role for
    Hezbollah in the Lebanese government, an American commitment not to
    try to overthrow the Syrian regime -- and really serious US pressure
    on Israel to negotiate the return to Syria of the Golan Heights,
    occupied by Israel for the past 39 years. Don't want to pay that
    price? Then find your own way out of Iraq.

    The Bush administration will probably baulk at paying these prices,
    which means that the notion of Syria and Iran assisting in a US
    withdrawal from Iraq is just a fantasy. Besides, it is not at all
    clear that either Tehran or Damascus could deliver on any promises
    they made about Iraq. It's too far gone in blood and chaos for the
    usual tools of influence to deliver predictable, reliable results.

    Donald Rumsfeld used to have a framed cartoon on his office wall
    showing him driving in an open car filled with child-like journalists
    eagerly asking "When do we get to the quagmire, Daddy?" Well, we're
    there now, Rummy. And the US will probably have to find its own
    way out.
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