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Help Save 1.800.SUICIDE


A Petraeus by Any Other Name

by rcs1

"How the troops are configured, what the deployment looks like will depend upon the recommendations of David Petraeus." -- George W. Bush, 9 August 2007

Despite what Duncan Hunter and most of the other Republicans on the House Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees would like you believe, General David Petraeus's uniform does not earn him immunity from criticism.

I thought MoveOn.org's full page "Petraeus or Betray Us" ad in Monday's New York Times was a bit more incendiary than it needed to be, but it was pabulum compared to the propaganda shenanigans the Bush administration and its echo chamberlains have pulled over the years to promote their woebegone war in Iraq. And the concern congressional Democrats have regarding Petraeus was aptly summarized by Senator Dianne Feinstein when she said, "I don't think he's an independent evaluator." That statement was more than fair, more than balanced, because Petraeus is not an independent evaluator. He's not even close.


commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!

American Caesar or Gunga Din?

Petraeus drew skepticism about his motives the old fashioned way--he earned it. Mr. Bush's "main man" is, in fact, carrying water for the administration and it is ridiculous to pretend otherwise.

To begin with, Petraeus has a personal stake in the success of the so-called "surge" strategy. He did not "invent" it, as some would have you think. Fred Kagan and other think tank neoconservatives can take the blame for that. Petraeus did, however, step up and embrace the surge when virtually all the rest of the four-star community, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was opposed to it. What's more, he adopted the surge even though it did not provide sufficient troops to conduct the tactics outlined in the "book on counterinsurgency" he supposedly wrote. (Generals don't write field manuals. A bunch of light colonels and majors and sergeants revised the old counterinsurgency manual, and Petraeus signed off on the revision. Whether he read it or not we may never know.)

More important to note, though, is that Petraeus's testimony before the House on Monday was in lockstep with standard administration rhetoric.

-- He deliberately overstated the role of al Qaeda in Mesopotamia in the civil and sectarian violence taking place in Iraq, and perpetuated the ubiquitous inference that al Qaeda in Iraq is the same al Qaeda that executed the 9/11 attacks. When challenged on that line of argument by Congressman Gary Ackerman (D-New York), Petraeus shifted into the full evasion mode.

-- He conspicuously highlighted what he considers to be military "victories" while steadfastly avoiding any mention of the fact that none of these tactical "successes" have led to one iota of progress in Iraq's political structure. In war--especially at this particular point in this particular war--tactical victories that do not lead to political gains are merely organized but meaningless violence. Petraeus knows that darn good and well, and for him to pretend otherwise in front of a congressional committee is nothing short of world-class mendacity.

-- Petraeus's most outrageous piece of hocus-pocus on Monday was his talk of troop pullbacks. The front page of Tuesday morning's Virginian-Pilot read "TIME TO BRING SOME HOME, TOP GENERAL IN IRAQ SAYS." Newspapers and TV talking heads throughout the country were saying much the same, and it's a bunch of bunk. The pullbacks Petraeus is talking about aren't, as he claims, something he can agree to because of the success of the surge so far. They're a fait accompli. Back in January 2007, when the surge began, high-level military officials--including Petraeus's number two man in Iraq Lieutenant General Ray Odierno--agreed that it could only be sustained through April 2008. Now, Petraeus is not only talking about sticking with the surge as planned, he's talking about extending it another three months into next summer. But he knows just how to frame his intentions so the folks in Peoria think he's pushing to bring troops home early. Petraeus is nothing if not a master of public relations and media manipulation.

Dress Green Body Armor

The four stars on his epaulets and the rows of ribbons that extend from the top of his breast pocket to his left eyebrow do not grant Petraeus exemption from deconstruction of his agenda and methods. Rovewellians like Duncan Hunter would like to shield Petraeus behind their "support the troops" mantra, but that's yet another false Bush administration stratagem.

David Petraeus is not a "troop." He's a four-star general in operational command of the "best-trained, best-equipped" armed force in the history of humanity that just happens to be getting its hat handed to it by an enemy that doesn't have a navy or an air force or a military industrial complex or anything else that Petraeus's force was trained or equipped to defeat. Petraeus has life and death control over more human beings than did Pericles, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar combined. You can support the troops and still protest the war, but you can't separate Petraeus from the war. Petraeus is the war. He's not a private soldier, he's a public figure; he's a political operative, one who at present is the point man for promoting the program of America's politician in chief.

Petraeus Reports. You Decide.

One of the definitions of "betray" in my Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary is "to deceive; mislead." So was MoveOn.org org unjustified in asking "General Petraeus or General Betray Us?" Different people will draw different conclusions, but you know, if you want to convince the world that you're not a salesman hawking Mr. Bush's snake oil, you don't go about it by doing a pro-surge infomercial on Fox News like Petraeus did Monday night.

On Tuesday, at the Senate Committee hearings, John Warner (R-Virginia) asked Petraeus if the war in Iraq was making America safer. Warner had to ask the question twice because Petraeus tried to dodge it the first time. He finally replied, "I don't know, actually…"

I don't buy that answer. I think Petraeus actually does know. I think he knows better than anyone else that the Iraq war is actually making America, and the world, a more dangerous place to live.

Is it too much to hope that our American Caesar just met his Ides of September a few days early?

#

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia. Read his commentaries at Pen and Sword, ePluribus and Military.com. Jeff's novel Bathtub Admirals (Kunati Books, ISBN: 9781601640192) will be available March 1, 2008.
Display:
on an "accelerated" drawdown sez we can't "rush to failure".  Snappy.  I like it.

by rba on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 02:50:55 PM EST
To question whether or not Move On was immoderate is missing the point.  The point was to drive home to everyone in sight that the story that the General and his little dog too were pushing was bogus. The Big Orange had a really silly discussion about the use of the word "betray" and "traitor"--which was not really used but was claimed to have been used.  All missing the point.  If the intent of the ad was to make people think twice about the veracity of the testimony (and it was) then it was Mission Accomplished.  We have been playing defensively for so long, the Dem masses reflexively shudder when one stops being "nice".  At the risk of repeating myself "Nice" means "Foolishly agreeable."

To break through the Fortress of Solitude around American apathetic complacency, it takes a big bang.  And that ad accomplished that.  Anything "nicer" would have been lost in the dust.Were THEY nice about their attacks on Max Cleland?  Or Kerry? Hell, no. It is why they are able to wage this war WITHOUT OUR CONSENT.

by DEFuning on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 04:11:46 PM EST

I've been quite happy with most of the Senate hearings today, and Reed and Pelosi just gave a pretty good conference on CSPAN.

by Jeff Huber on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 04:51:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Something I keep chewing on and just have not been able to find an answer to.

What is the benefit of staying in Iraq?

Really. Can anyone think of one single solitary benefit at this point in time?

National Security? Bullsh*t. Iraq has become a real life training ground for guerrilla war fighters from all over the globe. There's no doubt in my mind history will judge the War in Iraq as the single greatest national security blunder of all time.  

Money? Big contractors have been quietly pulling out of Iraq since early 2005. Contrack International, Bechtel...Can you say Sisyphus?

Propping up the current Iraqi government? The US has a hideous and bloody history of propping up and backing the wrong side.

by susie dow on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 05:11:47 PM EST

largest U.S. "embassy" anywhere.

by Cho on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 05:14:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Those sound like good reasons, but they're just not sustainable.

Oil - they can't secure the oil fields, pumping stations, pipelines or the employees who service and support all of the above. The only way to steal the oil is slant drilling in from Kuwait which I wouldn't be surprised to learn has been going on since the invasion in 2003.

Presence in the Middle East - unnecessary as long as Israel maintains its large undeclared nuclear arsenal. The US has little credibility left in the region.

The Embassy will be nothing more than a ghost town. Too large to protect, support, staff, or service.

by susie dow on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 05:35:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]

but more evidence of the faulty logic of the Bush administration!

by Cho on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 09:28:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
BushCo is scoring points with this performance, and will likely score more in the Prez' speech in a few days.  Three hearings reduced the debate to withdrawal numbers and timing, now publicized as 30,000 by July '08, and continuing thereafter.

by rba on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 08:17:06 PM EST
...I'm not sure of anything, but like I just added in the Coda, I think Warner gave Son of Caesar the royal Senate treatment.

by Jeff Huber on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 08:21:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
member or supporter since they decided facts were not as important in their ads and campaigns.  This ad would have been fine simply sticking with the facts they were presenting.  But I know many people who no longer support the war but are not impressed with these tactics.  It probably won't change their opinion on the war but instead of sitting around the coffee shop discussing what is needed to get us out of Iraq, they'll be talking about the cheap shot in the ad.  

by standingup on Tue Sep 11, 2007 at 08:59:24 PM EST

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