Fighting Words: An 11-Quote Quiz on the
Bush Administration's War of Words
by Tom Engelhardt and Nick Turse
From "mission accomplished" through those endless "turning points" and "tipping points" up to the "brink" of "the abyss" and "the precipice," and back again, American officials, military and civilian, in Baghdad and Washington, have never spared the images or the analogies. (Do you remember when our President and Secretary of Defense, for instance, were eagerly talking about taking those "training wheels" off the Iraqi "bicycle" and letting the Iraqi child peddle on his own into Democracy-land?) Reality be damned, they've had a remarkable way, over the last four years, of turning phrases and pretzeling language to suit their needs and the needs of a war that existed largely in their imaginations rather than on the ground.
In recent months, backs against the verbal wall, these spinmeisters have begun spinning ever more wildly -- mixing metaphors, grasping at rhetorical straws, and stretching credulity at every turn, if not turning point.
In an effort to analyze this latest
surge of sophistry -- a war of words always fought with the "home
front" in mind -- we've come up with a short quiz that places genuine
quotes from actual military commanders and Washington officials
alongside quotes we've spun from our own questionable brains. We
challenge you to pick the real ones. Did an American general in Iraq
liken the situation there to a pogo stick, a teeter-totter, a slinky,
or a jungle gym? It's your choice. Did George Tenet's "slam dunk" line
inspire current Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to use basketball
analogies, when speaking of "security" in the Middle East, or did he
flee to the football field of life?
Take this TomDispatch quiz
and see if you can guess which quotes are too wild, or not wild enough,
for the battling bureaucrats of the Bush administration. Let's start
with a warm-up round:
1. At his January confirmation hearings,
General David Petraeus, readying himself to command the President's
"troop surge" in Baghdad and al-Anbar Province, promised to offer
Congress periodic reports on how the plan was proceeding. No dates were
offered. Within months, however, this vague promise had morphed into a
specific September report to Congress and has now become a focus of
endless, near-obsessional media attention and questions.
Is this September report regularly referred to as:
A. A Disaster Report
B. A Regress Report
C. A Baghdad Report
D. A Progress Report
The
answer, of course, is D. And now that "victory" -- a word the President
once used 15 times in a single speech -- has left the administration's
fighting language, think of "progress" as the second team of words. No
matter how badly things are going, "progress" (or its lack) remains the
frame of reference for U.S. officials -- and for reporters asking
questions. Typically, in a May 31st press briefing, Lt. Gen. Ray
Odierno, Petraeus's second-in-command in Baghdad, and the reporters
questioning him, managed to use the word no less than 23 times. ("We've
made some very clear progress.... Anbar's economic and political
progress.... But progress has been made.... Every day we are making
progress…")
Now, let's make the questions just a tad harder.
2.
Spokesman for the American military command in Iraq, Brig. Gen. Kevin
Bergner, was recently asked about "progress" in the "Baghdad security
situation." He responded:
A. "Progress will not be like flipping a light switch -- it will be gradual, it will be nuanced, it will be subtle."
B. "Progress is going to seem like a balky jeep. It will stall, it will kick, but sooner or later it will lurch forward."
C. "Progress isn't like a faucet. You can't just turn it on and get hot water."
D. "Progress will not be like a cruise missile. You can't just fire and forget."
The
answer is A -- and, by the way, General Bergner, the last one out of
Baghdad, please turn off the lights. (Oh, sorry, we never got them on
in the first place.)
Now, here's your next puzzler and it's you against the mob.
3.
Another reporter with "progress" on the brain recently asked Secretary
of Defense Robert Gates whether "the pace of progress [in Iraq] is
sufficient or whether in fact it looks to you like the surge will have
to last longer."
Gates responded with which of these images?
A. "I don't think that the goalpost has changed, really, at all."
B. "I think it's all still in the same ball park."
C.
"There is a Baghdad clock and there is a Washington clock, and the
people in Washington are also going to have to take into account the
Washington clock.... Our military commanders should not have to worry
about the Washington clock. That's for us in Washington to worry
about."
If you guessed A, congratulations, you're right! Of
course, if you guessed either B or C, you're still right. Gates used
them all in the same press briefing on the same subject.
4.
Actually, our Secretary of Defense seems to love sports imagery.
Recently, explaining why a "long-term U.S. military presence" in the
oil heartlands of the planet was crucial, Gates used which of the
following sports analogies?
A. "It's important to remember
that the September re-assessment is only the seventh-inning stretch,
not the bottom of the ninth. Using the Korea model as a guide, we might
even go into extra innings. We might be in Iraq until at least the
bottom of the 15th."
B. "It's important to defend this country on the extremists' 10-yard line and not our 10-yard line"
C.
"It's important for Team USA to win on the road in Iraq and Afghanistan
-- and we can't allow the Bin Laden blitz to get into our backfield
again."
D. "It's important for the insurgents to learn that
we're the Harlem Globetrotters and they're the Washington Generals. I
mean, of course they're not the literally the Washington Generals. My
generals are the Washington generals, but also the Globetrotters. Well,
you know what I mean."
By a process of elimination, you should
have quickly reduced this foursome to a twosome. Neither baseball, nor
basketball is smash-mouth enough for the Global Analogy-War against
Terrorism and, in any case, for America's top officials, football has
always been war (and vice-versa). So the answer is B.
5. And
how about our military surge leader, General Petraeus, in Baghdad? He's
been fretting about progress too. But what image did he reach for to
make his point?
A. "We're in a horse race now. And our horse
in Baghdad is simply slower than Washington's. We better figure out how
to spike its oats fast."
B. "I learned at Princeton that there
are many ways to measure progress. As you know you can actually
progress backward, and backward progress is progress just the same. The
important thing is to keep progressing, whether forward or backward,
which we are doing, and in doing so we're showing the terrorists we're
making progress and that, in itself, is progress."
C.
"Clearly, we're in the pit and Washington's the pendulum and we better
figure out how to climb out quick before the next IED goes off."
D.
"We're racing against the clock, certainly. We're racing against the
Washington clock, the London clock, a variety of other timepieces up
there, and we've got to figure out how to speed up the Baghdad clock."
Since
these turn out to be the months of onrushing clock analogies, if you
guessed D, you're ticking right along. General Petraeus was evidently
the first one to wind up that clock image and set the alarm. It now has
all Washington on the clock.
6. U.S. military spokesman in
Baghdad Lt. Col. Christopher C. Garver, facing the news that, according
to the Washington Post, "May was the third-deadliest month for American
troops in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, and the casualties reported
over the past few days indicate that the insurgency shows no sign of
abating," had what response?
A. "The road to ruin is paved with cement."
B. "When the tough get going, the going gets easier."
C. "This is going to get harder before it gets easier."
D. "This is going to get harder before it gets harder."
Given
the history of the last four years in Iraq, the answer to this one,
hands down, should be D. But reality and history are so overrated! If
you guessed C, you were right on the mark. (By the way, few of the
examples in this quiz are unique. For instance, just a couple of days
after Garver made his comment, Deputy Director for Regional Operations,
Joint Chiefs of Staff Brig. Gen. Perry Wiggins said of the surge at a
Pentagon news briefing: "So, you know, it's going to get harder before
we make it -- or it gets any easier.")
7. In that same May
31st press briefing, General Odierno (his official title is: Commander,
Multinational Corps-Iraq) was asked the following question: "General,
it's Lolita Baldor with the Associated Press. You started out talking
about some of the progress but also suggesting that it may take 60 to
90 days before you can see what impact the surge is having. At that
pace, do you think you will be able to make an assessment within that
60-day window or do you think it's going to take longer to assess
whether or not the surge is having an impact?"
Odierno responded with which play analogy?
A.
"It's kind of like a jungle gym. Lose your grip past the turning point
and you're likely to fall and hit your head on the ground."
B.
"It's kind of like a teeter-totter; you work your way up the
teeter-totter, and when you go past the tipping point, it happens very
quickly, and we've seen that out in Anbar."
C. "It's kind of like a pogo stick. What goes up must come down – and vice-versa. We've experienced this in Baghdad."
D.
"It's kind of like a slinky. A surge begins slowly but as it walks
downstairs sooner or later it just springs toward the bottom."
The
correct answer is: B. It seems the official pre-September surge
assessment is that we're on a Baghdad teeter-totter, though our guess
is that neighborhood playgrounds in the Iraqi capital aren't much in
use these days.
8. Okay, let's up the ante here with a
two-part question. One aspect of the President's "surge plan" turns out
to involve the hope that the enemy's counter-surge will smash right
into a wall. Literally. The U.S. military has been making plans to
build giant walls around whole troubled neighborhoods in the Iraqi
capital. Think of giant, grey slabs of concrete going up around your
neighborhood. What kind of place, according to the military, do you now
live in?
A. A terrarium
B. A prison
C. A gated community
D. A strategic hamlet
If
it were 40+ years ago and the setting were Vietnam, D would be the
correct euphemism, but today the answer is C naturally. Just like in
Southern California! And who wouldn't want to be part of such an
obviously upscale living arrangement?
Of course, you can't
account for the tastes of foreigners. Strangely enough, when the first
wall started going up around the Sunni community of Adhamiyah, people
objected vociferously, leaving surge types somewhat on the defensive.
When pressed on the subject recently, how did Dr. David Kilcullen, an
Australian counterterrorism expert whose current position is Senior
Counterinsurgency Adviser to General Petraeus (and who also likes to
term such walled-in, embattled communities "gated") sum up the ongoing
project?
A. "It's something you do when a patient is bleeding to death. But you don't leave it there forever or it causes damage."
B. "Good fences make good neighbors."
C. "Something there is that doesn't love a wall."
D. "Before I built a wall, I'd ask to know what I was walling in and walling out."
Yes,
indeed, the answer is A. Dr. Kilcullen likes to think of these walls as
"tourniquets" applied to bleeding Iraq. And you guessed it, the other
three lines come from Robert Frost's poem, "Mending Wall."
9.
Here's another two-parter. On Friday, Secretary of Defense Gates
announced that he was not nominating Marine General Peter Pace to a
second term as head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff because he thought the
congressional confirmation process would be "quite contentious" and
possibly a "divisive ordeal." Instead, he picked Admiral Michael G.
Mullen, whose record and views, he implied, would smooth the
Congressional waters. What, then, has Adm. Mullen had to say about the
President's Global War on Terror?
A. "I may be a Navy admiral,
but I don't see us up to our eyeballs in millions of terrorists for a
generation. I think this has all been overblown."
B. "Now is
the time for sane policies that reflect a realistic assessment of the
situation. With all due respect, I think we need a change of course and
a fresh approach."
C. "Look, we can't go off half-cocked
calling people ‘evil' and saying they hate us or they hate our freedom
and democratic principles. Overblown rhetoric like that is
unsophisticated, uninformed and won't do anything for us."
D.
"The enemy now is basically evil and fundamentally hates everything we
are -- the democratic principles for which we stand.... This war is
going to go on for a long time. It's a generational war."
The answer is a hair-raising D.
Now
for part 2: If you are one of the country's major newspapers -- yes,
we're speaking of our hometown rag, the New York Times -- what do you
label the admiral?
A. An Ideologue
B. An extremist
C. A pragmatist
D. A warmonger
It's C, naturally. (The paper's headline read: "Nominee for Joint Chiefs Is Called a Pragmatist.")
10.
And how long will that "long war," which the admiral so likes to talk
about, actually take? Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice evidently
glanced at her own curious version of a clock the other day, and then
addressed this question at a meeting with the Associated Press
editorial board. Which of the following did she say?
A. "And I
think that what this President has done is in some ways comparable to
beginning to set up the long struggle that we are going to have to
resolve, particularly the problem of the growth of extremism in the
Middle East, which was clearly there underneath the surface and
exploded on September 11th so that we finally knew what the real
problem was."
B. "Now, will we see the end of all of this?
Maybe not. But when you're confronted with a fundamentally changed
strategic set of circumstances, you can try to put band-aids on it or
you can say we're going to have to deal with the root problems here and
it may take a long time and it may take successive administrations to
succeed."
C. "But we know what we have to put in place so that
successive administrations can succeed, and you don't get there by
covering the problems or trying to find a temporary solution to them
that isn't worth the paper that it's written on."
D. "We're
here at the beginning of a big historic transformation, and some of
them may still work out on our watch and some of them may not. But now
if you -- if you -- with all due respect, if you try to judge what you
should do by today's headlines, you miss the fact that history's
judgment is rarely the same as today's headlines."
If you
guessed A, B, C, and D, all said practically in a single breath, you
were 100% correct. It took Condi a bare few minutes with the AP
editorial board to extend the last six years of mayhem and catastrophe
another easy 12-20 years into the future ("successive
administrations"). So it turns out that, while Secretary of Defense
Gates and General Petraeus are looking at clocks whose second and
minute hands are speeding along far too fast for their taste, the new
head of the Joint Chiefs and our Secretary of State have timepieces
whose minutes pass in weeks, hours in months, and days in years.
11.
When discussing American efforts to arm Sunni groups who now claim they
are willing to fight al-Qaeda, what did Major General Rick Lynch,
commander of the Third Infantry Division, recently say?
A. "We don't negotiate with terrorists, but sometimes we renegotiate who we call terrorists."
B. "This isn't a black and white place. There are good guys and bad guys and there are groups in between."
C. "You see... in this war, things get confused out there--power, ideals, the old morality and practical military necessity."
D.
"We've had good success in operations like this before. Look at
Afghanistan in the 80s. We armed Sunnis to fight the Soviets and we
ultimately won that one. Imagine what we can produce by getting behind
Sunni fighters in Iraq today!"
If you thought you could
imagine an Army general intoning answer C, there's a reason. The line
comes from the fictional General Corman in the film Apocalypse Now. The
real answer is B. One wonders, however, how such thinking fits with the
strict dichotomy of good and evil proffered by the likes of Admiral
Mullen and Vice President Dick Cheney who, as it happens, is the
subject of our bonus challenge.
Bonus Challenge: The
ever-stalwart Dick (in the throes of being) Cheney recently got up
before the graduating class at West Point and said, in part:
D.
"The terrorists know what they want and they will stop at nothing to
get it.... Their ultimate goal is to establish a totalitarian empire, a
caliphate, with Baghdad as its capital. They view the world as a
battlefield and they yearn to hit us again. And now they have chosen to
make Iraq the central front in their war against civilization.... They
are surging their capabilities, attacking Iraqi and American forces,
and killing innocent civilians. America is fighting this enemy in Iraq
because that is where they have gathered. We are there because, after
9/11, we decided to deny terrorists any safe haven."
Didn't he
mean that, in Iraq, "we decided to deny terrorists any unsafe haven?"
Anyway, yes, the answer is D. Now, it's up to you to create your own A,
B, and C. Can you top Dick's "war against civilization"? Can you match
him image for rabid image? Give it a shot.
After all, why
should administration officials and military spokesmen be the only ones
to run wild, guns cocked, in the fields of imagery, spraying everything
in sight? Just remember though: When you're done, close the playground
gate, shut down the ballpark, turn off the alarm on your clock, and
turn out those lights. If you don't, I guarantee you, they won't.
Tom
Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the
co-founder of the American Empire Project and, most recently, the
author of Mission Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch Interviews with American
Iconoclasts and Dissenters.
Nick Turse is the associate editor
and research director of Tomdispatch.com. He has written for the Los
Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Nation, the Village
Voice, and regularly for TomDispatch.
Copyright 2007 Tom Engelhardt and Nick Turse
|