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US crisis in Iraq sparks Republican attacks on Rumsfeld
By Bill Van Auken
22 December 2004
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With only weeks to go before the inauguration of the Bush administrations
second term, a raging dispute has broken out within the Republican
Party over the performance of US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
Leading Republicans have denounced the Pentagons civilian
chief in terms that are at least as harsh as those previously
used by their ostensible political opponents in the Democratic
Party.
This gang of right-wing millionaire politicians has suddenly
discovered the plight of the grunts in Iraq, posturing
as their advocates while flaying the defense secretary for his
arrogance and insensitivity to the needs of the US soldiers.
I have no confidence in Rumsfelds leadership,
declared Nebraska Republican Senator Chuck Hagel in a televised
interview. I think those in the Pentagon, specifically the
civilian leadership, failed this country in addressing a post-Saddam
Iraq. It was astounding, he added, that no one
was held accountable.
Former Senate majority leader Trent Lott described himself
as no fan of Rumsfeld, adding that he wanted to see
him replaced as defense secretary in the next year or so.
Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican and former Vietnam
prisoner of war, also declared he had no confidence
in Rumsfeld, adding that he had very strong differences
of opinion with the defense secretary, particularly over
troop levels in Iraq.
Voicing an explicit call for Rumsfelds resignation is
William Kristol, the editor of the Weekly Standard, an
influential publication within the Republican right. Kristol was
among those demanding an invasion of Iraq in the immediate aftermath
of September 11, 2001, exploiting the terrorist attacks to promote
a war that he had advocated for several years.
Like other pundits of his ilk, Kristol claimed that the US
takeover of Iraq would be a cakewalk. In recent months, however,
he has grown increasingly hysterical about the debacle facing
the US in Iraq. He has criticized the administration for not increasing
troop levels and demanded the unleashing of unrestrained military
power to crush popular resistance.
Contrast the magnificent performance of our soldiers
with the arrogant buck-passing of Rumsfeld, Kristol wrote
in a recent column. The piece concludes, These troops deserve
a better defense secretary than the one we have.
Kristol and the Republican politicians have focused on Rumsfelds
December 8 appearance before nearly 2,000 US troops preparing
to deploy from Kuwait to Iraq. In response to defiant questions
from soldiers about the lack of armored vehicles and other equipment,
the defense secretary answered dismissively that you can
have all the armor in the world and you still can
be blown up.
These criticisms have also fed the firestorm around revelations
that Rumsfeld had relegated the signing of condolence letters
to dead soldiers next of kin to a machine. The practice,
which epitomizes the administrations indifference to the
deaths of more than 1,300 US troops in Iraq, was first exposed
in a column published a month ago by David Hackworth, a retired
US Army colonel.
After repeatedly denying that there was any truth to Hackworths
charge, the Pentagon was forced to reveal that, indeed, the letters
had been signed by a machine, while Rumsfeld issued a statement
pledging that he would personally sign them in the future. The
corporate media picked up the story, interviewing family members
who were justifiably outraged at the contempt shown by the Pentagon.
In his end-of-the-year press conference, Bush found himself
compelled to defend his defense secretary. I know Secretary
Rumsfelds heart, he declared unconvincingly. The Pentagon
chief, he insisted, is a good human being who is doing
a really fine job.
Rumsfeld himself penned an opinion piece for USA Today
on Tuesday, praising the men and women in uniform [who]
are putting their lives on the line.
He continued: In recent days, much has been made of a
question I received from a National Guard soldier at a town hall
meeting in Kuwait about armor on Army vehicles. His question was
a fair one, and I share his impatience.
Behind the phony claims of concern about the lives and welfare
of the enlisted men and women deployed in Iraqby Rumsfeld
and his detractorsthere exist deep divisions and uncertainty
within the administration and the US ruling elite as a whole.
This is not the first time that the defense secretary has served
as a designated political lightning rod over the crisis confronting
Washingtons colonial enterprise in Iraq. Just last May,
there were widespread demands for Rumsfelds resignation
in response to the international outrage over the photographs
showing US military personnel torturing Iraqi detainees at the
Abu Ghraib prison.
There were indications thenas nowthat the White
House gave the green light for the attacks on Rumsfeld as a means
of deflecting criticism away from Bush himself. In the midst of
the Abu Ghraib scandal, it was leaked to the press that Bush had
rebuked Rumsfeld for failing to inform him about the existence
of the photographs.
The fact that Iraqis were subjected to torture was itself never
the focus of the controversy in Washington. Rather, it was a matter
of the presidents image and the damage done to US foreign
policy by the publication of photographs exposing the ugly reality
of the US war in Iraq.
Since then, it is worth noting, new photographs have surfaced
showing Special Operations troops abusing prisoners, while multiple
reports and documents have exposed the continuation of torture
at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, as well as the systematic killing
of civilians by US military units. None of this has evoked a peep
of outrage against Rumsfeld, either on Capitol Hill or within
the media. Rather, both have applauded as US forces have carried
out savage attacks on civilian targets in Fallujah and elsewhere.
Meanwhile, Alberto Gonzales, the White House counsel who was
instrumental in drafting the legal briefs justifying torture and
the abrogation of the Geneva Conventions, has been nominated as
US attorney general.
In the present controversy, it was initially reported that
Kristol had boasted that the White House had urged him to write
his column calling for Rumsfelds replacement. The right-wing
columnist subsequently denied this account. Whatever the truth
of the matter, the fact that such a connection was widely suspected
is evidence of the intense pressures building up within the administration.
These tensions have multiple objective sources. First, behind
the empty assertions that the Iraqi elections planned for January
30 will mark a turning point in the US occupation, it is obvious
to both the American military and the US State Department that
this exercise will only provoke greater upheavals, while doing
nothing to stem the mounting attacks on US forces.
Second, there are indications that elements within the White
House and the Pentagon are contemplating new acts of aggression
against Syria, Iran or both in retaliation for their perceived
interference with US attempts to erect a puppet regime in Iraq.
Any new military adventure, given the present crisis confronting
the Pentagon in Iraq, has the potential of stretching the American
armed forces to the breaking point.
Then there are the long-standing tensions between Rumsfeld
and the uniformed command over Iraq and the defense secretarys
sweeping proposals for transforming the military. These two issues
came together in the conflict over troop levels in Iraq, beginning
with the invasion in March 2003. The top brass have bitterly resented
Rumsfelds micro-managing of deployments and have excoriated
the defense secretary behind his back for failing to anticipate
the intense counterinsurgency campaign now confronting the US
military.
Divisions at the top between the uniformed and civilian leaderships
of the armed forces have been joined by an increasingly restive
mood among the US enlisted personnel, reflected in the defiant
attitude of the soldiers who questioned Rumsfeld in Kuwait earlier
this month.
There is growing concern over the multiple rotations of US
units into Iraq, the continuous lengthening of tours of duty for
units already there and the use of such measures as stop-loss
to prevent soldiers from exercising their right to leave the military.
It is feared that such practices are not only destroying morale
and crippling recruitment efforts, but also creating conditions
for acts of mutiny within the occupation forces.
These are the issues underlying the sudden discovery that Donald
Rumsfeld is arrogant and insensitive.
The internecine dispute within the Republican Party has nothing
to do with any genuine concern for the lives and welfare of the
young US soldiers in Iraqdrawn overwhelmingly from the working
class and the most impoverished layers of society. As far as the
ruling elite is concerned, their lives are expendable in the pursuit
of the strategic interests of American capitalism.
Whether Rumsfeld will hold onto his post at the Pentagon after
January is now a matter of intense speculation.
The entire dispute is playing out as the US presence in Iraq
is becoming increasingly unpopular with the American public. Bushs
reelection, far from providing some sort of mandate, has done
nothing to dampen the mass opposition to the war. The latest poll
released by ABC News and the Washington Post shows 56 percent
of those questioned describing the war as not worth fighting,
a marked increase over a poll conducted last July. While more
than half of those polled said Rumsfeld should be replaced, an
even greater number57 percentsaid they disapproved
of Bushs handling of the situation in Iraq.
Under these conditions, for Bush to remove Rumsfeld in response
to public criticism holds obvious dangers. The defense secretary
has been so instrumental in the development of the administrations
policy of unprovoked military aggression that employing him as
a scapegoat threatens to drag the White House itself down with
him.
See Also:
The Bernie Kerik saga
The war on terror and the rise of the political underworld
[16 December 2004]
Behind State Department, CIA
shake-up: Bush-Cheney regime prepares a second term of all-out
militarism
[17 November 2004]
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