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by Tom Engelhardt
It's been a repetitive phenomenon of these last years — when fears about disaster (or further disaster, or even the farthest reaches of disaster) in Iraq rise, so does the specter of Vietnam. Despite the obvious dissimilarities between the two situations, Vietnam has been the shadow war we're still fighting. The Bush administration began its 2003 invasion by planning a non-Vietnam War scenario right down to not having "body counts," those grim, ridiculed death chants of that long-past era. His administration, as the President put it before the November mid-term elections, wasn't going to be a "body-count team." But the Vietnam experience has proven nothing short of irresistible in a crisis. Within the last month, after Bush himself bemoaned the lack of a body count in the vicinity, the body count slipped back into the news as a way to measure success in Iraq.
And that was only the beginning. With the recent plummeting of presidential approval ratings and the dismal polling reactions to Bush's "new way forward" in Iraq, the Vietnam scenario is experiencing something like a renaissance. Sometimes, these days, it seems as if top administration officials are simply spending their time preparing mock-Vietnam material for Jon Stewart's The Daily Show. The recent "surge" plan, for instance, brought that essential Vietnam vocabulary word, "escalation," back into currency. (It was on Democratic lips all last week.) Even worse, the President's plan was the kind of "incremental escalation" that military commanders coming out of Vietnam had sworn would never, ever be used again.
In any case, when Republican Senator (and surge opponent) Chuck Hagel questioned Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about the E-word last week, she denied it was an appropriate moniker. Here's what she suggested instead. "I would call it, Senator, an augmentation that allows the Iraqis to deal with this very serious problem that they have in Baghdad." (And, of course, Stewart promptly pounced…)
But that, too, was only the beginning. Hagel, a Vietnam veteran, called the President's plan "the most dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country since Vietnam." Lt. Gen. David H. Petraeus, just appointed senior military commander in Iraq in charge of the Baghdad "surge," turned out to have written a doctoral thesis, much publicized last week, entitled "The American Military and the Lessons of Vietnam: A Study of Military Influence and the Use of Force in the Post-Vietnam Era." ("Don't commit American troops, Mr. President unless… You have established clear-cut, attainable military objectives for American military forces… [and] you provide the military commander sufficient forces and the freedom necessary to accomplish his mission swiftly...")
Part of the plan Petraeus is evidently to put into effect involves an urban version of what Los Angeles Times
reporter Julian E. Barnes labels "a spectacular failure" of the Vietnam
War, the "strategic hamlet" program in which whole communities were to
be sealed off from the "insurgents" of that era. For Baghdad, the
military is now redubbing these — with another obvious bow to Stewart's
show — "gated communities." ("'You do it neighborhood by neighborhood,'
said the Defense official. 'Think of L.A. Let's say we take West
Hollywood and gate it off. Or Anaheim. Or central Los Angeles. You
control that area first and work out from there.'")
Fears
that Iraq's collapse into civil war (or a U.S. withdrawal) might knock
down other states in the region like so many ten pins, as former
National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski reminded us
in a Washington Post op-ed, "Five Flaws in the President's Plan,"
brought another Vietnam classic back to the fold: "the (falling) domino
theory." With the President's latest threats against Syria and Iran —
"We will disrupt the attacks on our forces. We'll interrupt the flow of
support from Iran and Syria. And we will seek out and destroy the
networks providing advanced weaponry and training to our enemies in
Iraq…" — yet another oldie but goodie from that era has reappeared: "hot pursuit":
As in pursuing the commies (or Islamo-fascists or Shiite renegades or
al-Qaeda terrorists) across the Cambodian or Syrian or Iranian border.
And speaking of Cambodia, Congress did at one point prohibit
the use of funds to pursue war in that country, exercising its
constitutionally guaranteed power of the purse, a thought that only in
the last weeks has made it back from the critical wilderness into the
mainstream as a respectable, debatable position for any politician.
But perhaps it's no more complicated than this: In a world in which
self-determination and nationalism are bedrock values, once you've
tried to occupy a country, whether under the banner of anti-Communism
or anti-Islamo-fascism, whether claiming to be in support of the "Free
World" or "freedom" itself, it may no longer matter which
counterinsurgency tactics you use or strategies you adopt, or whether
you count bodies or not. Once you've taken such a path — as long as you
don't make the decision to withdraw — you may always find yourself in
that limited land of options that we like to call "Vietnam."
In fact, Vietnam wasn't the only war in the vicinity in these last weeks. Adam Hochshild, author of King Leopold's Ghost (which the President claimed to have read in a recent interview) and a remarkable history of the British anti-slavery movement, Bury the Chains, is now at work on a new book on World War I. And here's what he noticed... Tom
"The Big Push" Mired in the Trenches of the Iraq Fiasco
By Adam Hochschild
If we needed more evidence that those surrounding President George W.
Bush have a tin ear for the lessons of history, it came ten days ago
when National Security Advisor Stephen J. Hadley referred to increasing
the number of American troops in Iraq as "the big push" that would bring victory closer.
"The Big Push" is a phrase that came into the language with another
troop surge that was supposed to bring another war to victory. For
months beforehand, the Big Push was how British cabinet ministers,
propagandists, generals, and foot soldiers talked about the 1916 Battle of the Somme. (It is even the title of a later book on the subject.)
The First World War had been in a deadly stalemate for the better part
of two years. A string of horrific battles had revealed the huge toll
of trench warfare: Defenders could partially protect themselves by
building deeper trenches, concrete pillboxes, and reinforced dugouts
far underground. But when you went "over the top" of the trench to
attack, you were disastrously vulnerable — out in the open, exposed to
deadly, sweeping machine-gun fire as you clambered slowly across barbed
wire and bypassed water-filled artillery-shell craters.
So, what did the Allies do? They attacked. At the time, in numbers of
men involved, it was history's largest battle. The plan was to break
open the German defense line, send the cavalry gloriously charging
through the gap, and turn the tide of the war. The result was a
catastrophe.
The British army lost nearly 20,000 killed and some 40,000 wounded or
missing on the first day alone. German machine gunners, after waiting
out the long preliminary bombardment in their fortified bunkers
underground, returned to the surface in time to mow down the advancing
soldiers. After four and a half months of fighting, British and French
troops had suffered more than 600,000 casualties. The Big Push had
gained them roughly five miles of muddy, shell-pocked wasteland.
Like the Big Push of the Somme, the Big Push in Iraq is a reapplication
of tactics that have already proven a calamitous failure. As the
outspoken retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General William Odom, former
director of the National Security Agency, puts it, it's like finding
yourself in a hole and then digging deeper.
Every piece of evidence from these past nearly four bloody years makes
clear that many Sunnis and Shiites alike are driven to rage by the very
presence of American soldiers walking Iraqi streets, barging into Iraqi
homes, and arresting or killing people who may or may not be
insurgents. Furthermore, the people arrested or killed, however
unsavory, are sometimes the only force protecting their communities
against attacks from the opposite side in an extremely bitter civil
war. Therefore, as sociologist Michael Schwartz explained the matter
some six weeks ago, a previous joint U.S.-Iraqi counterinsurgency drive
in Baghdad, of exactly the type now being planned, actually increased civilian casualties.
There are huge differences, of course, between the First World War and
the current fighting in Iraq. But, even beyond the optimistic talk of
the Big Push, there is another eerie resemblance between the two
conflicts. In both cases, a great power was itching to launch an
invasion, and seized on a handy excuse to do so. For the Bush
administration, of course, the excuse was September 11th. From a long
string of insider revelations, we know that its top officials were
hungry to invade Iraq, looked eagerly for the most far-fetched
connections between Saddam Hussein and 9/11, and — even then not
finding them — invaded anyway, while continuing to vaguely imply the
connections were there.
Something remarkably similar happened in 1914. Austria-Hungary was a
shaky empire of restless ethnic minorities ruled by a German-speaking
elite in Vienna. Nearly half the population was Slavic, including many
Serbs. As a result, the imperial rulers in Vienna felt threatened by
the very existence on their border of the independent nation of Serbia,
small though it was. They were determined to invade it, possibly
partition it, and so stamp out pan-Slavic and Serb nationalism once and
for all.
They drew up detailed invasion plans. Then, most conveniently, Archduke
Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary, the Emperor's nephew and heir to
the throne, was assassinated while on a visit to the provincial city of
Sarajevo. Like the White House after 9/11, the imperial palace in
Vienna promptly began an eager search for a connection to the Serbian
government. Frustratingly, however, the Archduke had been killed on
Austro-Hungarian soil by Gavrilo Princip, an Austro-Hungarian citizen.
The assassin, an ethnic Serb, had indeed had help from a shadowy secret
organization of Serb nationalists, but no connection to the government
of Serbia was ever proved. No matter. Austria-Hungary declared war on
Serbia anyway. Other countries quickly jumped in on both sides, and a
conflagration began that remade the world.
Part of that remaking, ironically, was the post-war cobbling together
of three provinces of the defeated Ottoman Empire into what was first a
British protectorate and then, after 1932, independent Iraq.
There is a final resemblance between the present bloodshed there and
the First World War. Both conflicts were fought for a curiously
shifting set of noble-sounding goals. With Iraq, the Bush
administration has tried on for size finding weapons of mass
destruction, liberating the Iraqis, combating Islamist terrorism, and
installing democracy in the Arab world. In the First World War, the
Allies initially talked of coming to the defense of innocent, invaded
little Belgium, then of defeating German militarism and defending the
British and French way of life. Once Woodrow Wilson brought the United
States into the conflict, he spoke of "the war to end all wars."
It didn't. The humiliation of the losers and the catastrophic loss of
life on both sides did nothing to end all wars and much to light the
fuses of later ones — especially the Russian Civil War and the Second
World War. The longer the war in Iraq goes on, and the more American
troops are planted by Big Pushes in a highly combustible part of the
world, the more we will continue to stoke a widespread humiliation and
anger whose consequences are already guaranteed to haunt us for decades
to come.
Adam Hochschild is the San Francisco-based author of six books include Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves, a finalist for the National Book Award, and King Leopold's Ghost. He is writing a book on the First World War.
Copyright 2007 Adam Hochschild
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