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I
love the smell of quagmire in the morning. My,
but it takes you back, doesn't it? The only thing
left to say is that there is "light at the end
of the tunnel." But everything else has already
begun to play itself out. We have even seen the
resurrection of that Orwellian mantra "winning
the peace." If I had been just a few years older
in the Vietnam era, the deja-vu might kill me.
As
it is, I have to rely on crazy resources, like
history, to feel the eerie similarities coming
into focus. No real sense carpet-bombing the desert,
so that's out-no trees to hide in. Napalm made
a surprising rebound, though. They lied about
it for months (gasp!) of course, but its comeback
was all but assured given the recycled cast of
characters. I'm beginning to think the only reason
we haven't heard more about "Iraqization (Iraqicization--
Iraqation--?) is that it's so much harder to spell
than Vietnamization. The hubris of the Best and
the Brightest is back with a vengeance, though-recast
as The Most Dangerous Men on Earth.
Of
course we can win the war in [enter name of hopeless
imperial adventure in which the U.S. is currently
involved here]. These colors don't run! I wonder
if remorse is even a quality even remotely familiar
to these Men of War. Having whipped up a war fever
among the gullible with a pack of lies wrapped
in jingoistic slogans, they are sending other
people's children to die in yet another far-off
place. Do they care? Has the ice in their veins
warmed at all since the days of Civil War impressments,
the hireling campaigns of the British Empire,
the thousands of boys sacrificed at Gallipoli
on the altar of nation building? Ahhh, that's
how you work your way up from the stockroom--if
your boys get wiped out in a war, now that's how
you become a country!
Obviously,
the relation of rulers to fighters is one thing
that hasn't changed since Vietnam, nor for ages
before. One of the most troubling aspects of the
draft, after deferments and exemptions and the
like, was the age. A huge outcry arose over the
unseemly fact that young adults qualified to fight
and die for the goals of their government were
not, alas, eligible to vote to shape those goals.
Today still, the number of offspring of members
of Congress in the military barely registers.
Yet almost 40,000 of America's frontline soldiers
are not eligible for citizenship (and thus voting)-what
British MP George Galloway has called America's
"Green Card Army." [US attacked over green card
soldiers].
Back
then, this outrage sparked a constitutional amendment
to insure that never again would America's youth
be sent off to die without having a say in the
matter. But of course, the ruling elites have
ways of dealing with such insolence, and devised
an even more ingenious end run: pick from those
who can't vote in any event. Great show, guv'nors!
The thing about The People having a say was even
easier to dispense with. A spineless Congress
having been hoodwinked and bullied into ceding
its constitutional power, the people were easy
dominoes. Actually, the people put up more of
a fight than the "opposition," but in the end
the Big Lie held sway enough to drown out the
voices of reason.
The
neocons and their Fellow Travelers will screech
about how this or that is completely different.
Well, duh! The only true analogies are in math:
2 is to 4 as 3 is to 6, and so on. Every historical
period has its social and cultural characteristics.
Nobody expects today's Antichrist to be a short,
goofy looking character who is adopted by big
business because they think they can play him
for the buffoon he is--oh, wait a minute. The
one thing that is different is the speed and intensity
with which the ill-fated project in question seems
to be imploding. Unless we start with Reagan's
Morning in America, this sunset appears to have
come awful quick compared to Vietnam.
True
to form, then as now, the Cold War [or enter current
global nemesis-of-the-month here] knows no party
loyalty. But this, sadly, is indeed a bit different.
When things started going this badly in Vietnam,
there was a sizeable antiwar bloc within the party
claiming to be the Tribune of the People. Now,
of course, as we know all too well, the "opposition"
which cut its teeth on caving with the 2000 election
apparently liked the flavor. Having voted for
the war (or having even if was a bad idea, or
that it was insufficiently macho, or that the
planets weren't aligned quite right, or whatever),
it has decided that the real problem is one of
management. A well-managed occupation might succeed
just fine: more troops, more electricity--better
slogans? Most Democrats, all too like their truly
frightening counterparts, are all for continuing
the occupation, bless their incorrigible little
imperialist hearts.
You
see, the right wing has always blamed Democrats
for being spineless. Their version of the Vietnam
syndrome was akin to a geopolitical Rorschach
test: no matter what the little blob looked like,
Democrats always saw Vietnam. In their smug, arrogant
way, the right has lobbied for another Vietnam
since April 1975, and tried to bully the opposition
with silly analogies like this one. Little did
they know that they simply chose the wrong psychiatrist.
The
real bogeyman here is the fictional Dr. Zilkov,
the Russian scientist who programmed the killing
machine in the classic Manchurian Candidate. Angela
Landsbury, in one of her greatest roles, acts
as the Russian agent who controls Laurence Harvey's
character. Coaxed to "pass the time by playing
a little solitaire," the brainwashed Sgt. Raymond
Shaw dutifully turns cards until the Queen of
Hearts turns up. Once this trigger is revealed,
he is doomed to follow the murderous plan of his
trainers, in a trance, through to its bloody end.
The
Democrats don't seem to realize that the Queen
of Hearts has already been turned, and by staying
in Iraq we only prolong the time until we are
driven out, the treasury looted in the process.
The only "obligation" the US can be serious about
is to undo the war crimes committed in the name
of our people by the Dark Knights in Washington.
Arresting them and turning them over to the International
Criminal Court would be a start-except that we
don't belong to it. The right wing is obviously
off its rocker-no sense wasting ink there. The
rest of us should be careful not to be deceived
into thinking that the Iraqis need us, except
to pay damages for ruining their country. Think
about it, does the oldest city on earth really
need Paul Bremer's "expertise" to get back on
its feet? The UN, having allowed itself to be
used as an arm of US policy, is unfortunately
equally tarnished. Iraqis hate the UN as much
as they do the US, in part for their failure to
stop the invasion, in part for their obsequious
role in the murderous decade-long sanctions regime
that throttled the country.
The
Republicans, having destroyed an entire country-not
including the US (and cutting them some slack
here if we concede that Afghanistan was already
mostly rubble), are lost. Ironically, they not
only seem doomed to see the US commit the same
mistakes as in Vietnam, but to play out the rest
of the deck by blaming the same people. They have
even begun griping about the press-the press (!)
who so dutifully jumpstarted their little exercise
in imperial lunacy to begin with, is now somehow
hindering the flowering of their neocon fantasies.
Denial, it seems, another stubborn hallmark of
the Vietnam quagmire, has also come back for a
second run.
Topplebush.com
September 5, 2003
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