| Opinion
On every level, the Iraq war is hurting
America
By Pat M. Holt
The Christian Science Monitor, Thu Oct
5, 2006
ARLINGTON, VA. - The conventional wisdom
says that President Bush's recent
campaigning has brought on a tilt toward
Republican congressional candidates in
fall elections. But all the other
indicators point the other way.
The latest National Intelligence
Estimate of the war on terror reports
that "anti-US sentiment ... is on the
rise and fueling other radical
ideologies." One reason is the lack of
success in stabilizing and pacifying
Iraq. The implication is that the US is
losing the war in Iraq.
In one sense, the Army is plainly losing
the war. It is shorter of manpower and
equipment now than when it invaded Iraq
in 2003. The 3rd Infantry Division,
which led the invasion of Baghdad and
which has already served two tours in
Iraq, has been alerted to prepare for a
third tour. (It has also been told to
prepare to go to the Korean peninsula if
another conflict breaks out there.) But
there is no equipment with which to
train. What was not destroyed or worn
out in Iraq was left there for the
replacements.
Besides the equipment shortage, the
division's 2nd Brigade has only about
half of the roughly 3,500 soldiers it is
supposed to have. Fort Stewart, Ga.,
where the 3rd Infantry Division is
based, has been receiving about 1,000
soldiers a month, of whom 400 are just
out of basic training. This is the
result of an intensified recruiting
drive, but it will be a year, perhaps
longer, before they are combat ready.
The Bush administration wanted to fight
the war on the cheap. It did not want to
ask the public for sacrifices, such as
paying higher taxes. On the contrary, it
fought in Congress to keep taxes low,
thereby making the richest 1 percent of
the population even richer. There was no
talk of rationing. And there was
certainly no talk of a draft to provide
more manpower for the Army.
Mr. Bush has said that if the generals
in charge in Iraq ask him for more
troops, he will provide them. But
authorizing more troops is different
from having them on the ground well
trained and well equipped.
Not only is the Bush policy weakening
the Army, it is also weakening the
economy. Most traditional economic
indicators are favorable: the stock
market is up, inflation is reasonably
under control, employment is good, and
retailers are expecting a good Christmas
season. But the national debt is
sky-high, as is the deficit in foreign
trade and the international balance of
payments. It should not be forgotten
that what ended the cold war, leaving
America the winner, was the collapse of
the Soviet Union, largely brought on by
excessive spending, mainly on missile
defense.
Vice President Cheney said in a
television interview last month that
critics of the war in Iraq are
encouraging terrorists. President
Johnson said a similar thing about the
war in Vietnam.
In the same interview, Mr. Cheney said
that even if the Bush administration had
known before the war that there were no
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, it
would have "done exactly the same
thing."
The implication is that the weapons of
mass destruction did not matter. If that
is so, then why did the administration
make such a fuss about them? Why did it
damage the credibility of its secretary
of state by sending him to mislead the
Security Council so grievously? Was the
whole purpose of this war to get rid of
Saddam Hussein? And are we going to be
told at some time in the future that it
did not matter if Iran had nuclear
weapons; what mattered was getting rid
of Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad?
Bush has repeated as though it were a
mantra that the world is better off
without Mr. Hussein. To say his presence
or absence affected the world is to
vastly overestimate the influence of
this tinhorn dictator. To say Iraq is
better off is getting closer to what can
reasonably be argued. But even with
respect to Iraq, given what has happened
since the US invasion, it would not be
surprising if many Iraqis soon believe
that they were better off under Hussein.
Indeed, just 61 percent of Iraqis now
say that ousting Hussein was worth the
hardships they might have suffered,
according to a survey conducted last
month by WorldPublicOpinion.org.
Another question follows: Will this war
leave the United States stronger or
weaker, with greater or lesser
international prestige, than it had
before 9/11? Bush talks about spreading
democracy. But in fact, through his
assault on the Bill of Rights in our own
Constitution, he is weakening democracy.
* Pat M. Holt is former chief of staff
of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
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