War’s cheerleaders have a new cry: ‘Don’t blame us!’

The warriors of Iraq are preparing their escape hatch. How nice for them.

I’m not talking, you understand, about the soldiers and Marines who are actually fighting the war in Iraq. There’s no escape for those brave men and women until their commander in chief finally figures a way out of the mess he’s created over there.

No – I’m talking about the warriors who dreamed up this little adventure in the first place from the safety of their Washington offices, and who then served as enablers and cheerleaders as chaos set in and the body count kept climbing.

People like Bill Kristol.

Bill Kristol, the always affable (if frequently delusional) editor of the Weekly Standard, and among the gung-iest of the gung-ho crowd who were ready and willing – with other people’s sons and daughters, of course – to transform the Middle East.

You might think that four-plus years of carnage would dampen his enthusiasm a bit. That helping al-Qaida’s recruitment efforts worldwide would occasion a bit of modesty, if not an outright apology.

Not a chance.

What Bill Kristol is doing instead is building the case for ducking the blame.

That’s exactly what he’s up to in an article he wrote for last Sunday’s Washington Post. The ostensible purpose of the piece, titled “Why Bush Will Be a Winner,” is to argue that the Bush presidency will “probably be a successful one.” But the bulk of the piece is devoted to the war in Iraq – and most of that is devoted to saving the neck of Bill Kristol and others of his ilk.

“We now seem to be on course to a successful outcome” in Iraq, Mr. Kristol writes – “despite some confusion engendered by an almost meaningless ‘benchmark’ report last week.” (“Confusion”? “Almost meaningless”?!)

“With the new counterinsurgency strategy announced on Jan. 10,” Mr. Kristol continues, “backed up by the troop ‘surge,’ I think the odds are finally better than 50-50 that we will prevail.”

And then the kicker:

“If we sustain the surge for a year and continue to train Iraqi troops effectively, we can probably begin to draw down in mid- to late 2008. … So if we keep our nerve here at home, we have a good shot at achieving a real, though messy, victory in Iraq.”

So we’re winning, Mr. Kristol claims. And we’ll achieve our victory, he says, if we keep the surge going for another year or so.

Which he knows isn’t going to happen.

Which is exactly the point.

He’s offering advice that he knows won’t be followed, can’t be followed. Leave aside the politics of the situation, with the 2008 election getting closer and more and more of his fellow Republicans joining Democrats in urging an early withdrawal. The military logistics won’t permit it either; our own generals are reporting that there isn’t enough manpower left to sustain a surge beyond next spring without breaking the military.

All of which Bill Kristol surely knows. All of which I suspect he’s counting on. And then when his latest advice isn’t followed, and Iraq is finally chalked up as one of the great strategic blunders in all of American history, he can sit in his rocker at the Old Pundits Home and say, “See? If only they’d listened to me … “

Three decades after Vietnam, there are still people who insist that our politicians (or our protestors, or our anchormen, or … ) snatched victory from our soldiers. That we were winning until we lost our nerve. That our mission was betrayed.

Articles like Bill Kristol’s are setting the stage for an encore every bit as bitter.

The architects of disaster in Iraq know what they’ve done – and now they’re trying to squirm out of it.

Can you blame them?

Rick Horowitz is a nationally syndicated columnist. Contact him by writing to rickhoro@execpc.com.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Sunday, March 23

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

A press operator grabs a Herald newspaper to check over as the papers roll off the press in March 2022 in Everett. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald file photo)
Editorial: Keep journalism vital with state grant program

Legislation proposes a modest tax for some tech companies to help pay salaries of local journalists.

Children play and look up at a large whale figure hanging from the ceiling at the Imagine Children’s Museum on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Comments: Trump cuts could starve nations’ museums, libraries

Gutting a museum and library agency could end grant funding and aid to communities’ centers of learning.

Medicaid cuts would hit hospitals and many others

A recent Herald editorial raised alarms over proposed Medicaid cuts as Congress… Continue reading

Frank DeMiero fostered love of choral music in students

I loved the article about Frank DeMiero (“’He dreamed out lod’: Remembering… Continue reading

H.L. Mencken quote seems to fit the time

A favorite quote of mine reads: “As democracy is perfected, the office… Continue reading

The Buzz: Week’s news already busted its March Madness bracket

A civics lesson from the chief justice, bird flu-palooza, the JFK papers and new ice cream flavors.

Comment: Lawmakers must abide duty for ample K-12 funding

The state’s needs are many, but the constitution makes clear where its ‘paramount duty’ lies.

Comment: County leadership focused on families, wellness

Roundtable discussions helped the council identify initiatives for families and health in communities.

Comment: Boost cost-effective care for disabled adults

Supported Living care improves the lives of families. It needs the state’s support from Medicaid.

Forum: ‘Whole Lotta Love’ for becoming a teenage Led Zepplin fan

A new documentary brings back images of rock stars and memories of the juicier days of youth.

Forum: What a late Korean War veteran has to say to Ukraine

A man who fought against an aggressor says our country owes an apology and gratitude to Zelensky.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.