Monday, September 05, 2005

Something of value

Some of the people who ran and splashed and waded through the new canals of New Orleans were looking for food and water; others were smashing, grabbing, raping and pillaging. Such things happen in the absence of order, says Rumsfeld. Such things happen in America, such things happen in Iraq.

The US has had little success in building stable governments in areas that are chaotic not because of an armed, organized political resistance, but because of anarchy, punctuated by warlords, loosely affiliated gangs of criminals, savage tribes and people using ancient religious disputes to seize power.

Those of us old enough to remember a rather trite movie from 1957 titled Something of Value, based on a book by Robert Ruark about the Mau Mau insurrection in Kenya, might remember the quote, allegedly an old African saying:
“When you take away the customs, culture and religion of a people, we better replace it with something of value.” To be fair, that’s just what the Bush junta thought they could do by toppling Saddam along with his statues, but whatever those values might contain beyond that nebulous Bushian “Freedom” may never be known if our enterprise there is, as I fear, doomed to failure.

Having read an encomium at World Defense Review to the journalist Stephen Vincent who was brutally murdered in Iraq last month, I was inspired to go to the National Review and look up some of his reporting from Iraq. The Iraq he pictured is not at all like Vietnam in the 60’s, but more like Somalia or Haiti: places where our failure was just as decisive.

“For the truth is, there is no Iraqi "resistance." Not, at least, in the traditional manner evoked by the word: a disciplined insurgency intent on seizing control of an unpopular government. In the same sense, there are no "guerrillas" forming a national liberation front on behalf of an oppressed people. Instead, Iraq is plagued by a volatile mixture of criminal gangs, tribal gunmen, and humiliated Saddamites who, for inscrutable and often conflicting reasons, pay impoverished farmers to plant roadside bombs that kill more civilians that Coalition soldiers — and who, if the price is right, will cease their "insurgency." The country also suffers from foreign-born Islamofascists who target Iraq's Shia population in hopes of rekindling a 14-century-old sectarian war. Listening to the BBC talk of Iraqi "rebels," or reading Reuters' claptrap about "guerrilla forces," I wonder — is there another conflict going on in this country I'm not aware of?”

If his assessment is true, and the idea given us by the Bush Administration of an oppressed people in Iraq yearning collectively for freedom but thwarted by evil insurgents, is false, do we really have the ability to give them anything of value to replace Saddam’s iron fist? With the institutions of our Republic being strangled by an impoverished treasury and eaten alive by ancient religious dogmas and amoral, warlord-like leaders battling for dominion, do we have anything of value to give?

PM update

In case you thought Karl Rove needed help in taking the blame from it's rightful holder, look at the latest ABC poll. As usual, the side you're on, depends on the side you're on, not on objective reality.


Nightcap

Barbara Bush, the one everyone likes. I read over at Eschaton some quotes from the former First lady regarding the people now housed in the Astrodome:

"What I’m hearing is they all want to stay in Texas. Everyone is so overwhelmed with the hospitality. And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway so this (she chuckled)--this is working very well for them."

Gee Barbara, can I get in on the sleepover too? Can we make popcorn and watch TV?

4 comments:

Crankyboy said...

HDTV and video games. As well as Captain Crunch with Crunch Berries. Fruit of the Gods. And the colored milk left behind is nectar of the Gods.

Capt. Fogg said...

Most of that comes from Asia - that's what they gave us to replace any culture we might once have had.

d.K. said...

I don't believe the ABC poll. I can't base that on anything other than my gut, and the reaction from the people I've talked with over the last week. I think that Americans are still sorting things out, and the "rally 'round the flag" (and president) instinct that we all share in times of national crisis is probably making people reluctant to be too critical on the telephone with some stranger conducting a poll. I don't generally dismiss polls out of hand like this, but I just can't swallow this one.

Capt. Fogg said...

I don't want to believe it, but I do talk to a lot of hardcores here and they are saying "don't listen to the news, things are going well" and referring me to "Christian news"

I'm a hardcore pessimist and it's amazing how often this stopped clock is right!