The Time Is Now
By Bob Herbert
The New York Times
Monday 11 December 2006
On Wednesday, as if the release of the
Iraq Study Group report needed some form of
dramatic punctuation, 11 more American G.I.'s
were killed in this misbegotten war that just
about everyone, except perhaps the president,
now sees as a complete and utter debacle.
Senator Gordon Smith, a Republican from
Oregon who supported the war, delivered an
emotional speech on the Senate floor Thursday
evening in which he said:
"I, for one, am at the end of my rope
when it comes to supporting a policy that has
our soldiers patrolling the same streets in the
same way, being blown up by the same bombs day
after day. That is absurd. It may even be
criminal. I cannot support that anymore."
If the U.S. is ultimately going to
retreat in Iraq, he said, "I would rather do it
sooner than later. I am looking for answers, but
the current course is unacceptable to this
senator."
The primary value of the Baker-Hamilton
report is that it embodies, in clear and
explicit language, the consensus that has
emerged in the U.S. about the current state of
the war. It's not so much a blueprint for action
as a recognition of reality.
"The level of violence is high and
growing," the report says. "There is great
suffering, and the daily lives of many Iraqis
show little or no improvement. Pessimism is
pervasive."
With the situation in Iraq deteriorating,
and support for the war in the U.S. having all
but collapsed, the only real question on the
table is how long the U.S. is going to drag out
its inevitable pullout of combat forces. And the
inevitable moral question that is inextricably
linked to that slowly evolving set of
circumstances is how to justify the lives that
will be lost between now and the final day of
our departure.
There is something agonizingly tragic
about soldiers dying in a war that has already
been lost.
The scale of the debacle is breathtaking.
According to the study group: "In some parts of
Iraq - notably in Baghdad - sectarian cleansing
is taking place. The United Nations estimates
that 1.6 million are displaced within Iraq, and
up to 1.8 million Iraqis have fled the country."
Americans, including the members of the
study group, continue to insist that the key to
an American withdrawal over the next couple of
years is the improvement of Iraqi security
forces to the point where they can successfully
step into the breach. That is a complete
fantasy, as a reading of the study group's own
assessment of the Iraqi forces will attest.
The study group found that, among other
things, the Iraqi Army units "lack leadership
... lack equipment ... lack personnel ... [and]
lack logistics and support."
"Soldiers are given leave liberally and
face no penalties for absence without leave,"
the report said. "Unit readiness rates are low,
often at 50 percent or less."
The report went on: "They lack the
ability to sustain their operations, the
capability to transport supplies and troops, and
the capacity to provide their own indirect fire
support, close-air support, technical
intelligence and medical evacuation."
Other than that, they're fine.
So what's next? The Bush administration
has lost all of its credibility on the war. What
is needed now are leaders with the courage to
insist, perhaps at the risk of their reputations
and careers, that it is wrong to continue
sending fresh bodies after those already lost,
to continue asking young, healthy American
troops to head into the combat zone, perhaps for
their third or fourth tour, to fight in a war
the public no longer supports.
In a foreword to "The Best and the
Brightest," David Halberstam's chronicle of the
Vietnam fiasco, Senator John McCain wrote:
"It was a shameful thing to ask men to
suffer and die, to persevere through god-awful
afflictions and heartache, to endure the
dehumanizing experiences that are unavoidable in
combat, for a cause that the country wouldn't
support over time and that our leaders so
wrongly believed could be achieved at a smaller
cost than our enemy was prepared to make us pay.
"No other national endeavor requires as
much unshakable resolve as war. If the nation
and the government lack that resolve, it is
criminal to expect men in the field to carry it
alone."
The United States lacks that resolve when
it comes to Iraq. It is time to pull the troops
out of harm's way.