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This article originally provided by
The New York Times
July 11, 2005
It Just Gets Worse
By
BOB HERBERT
Back in March 2004 President Bush had a great time
displaying what he felt was a hilarious set of photos
showing him searching the Oval Office for the weapons of
mass destruction that hadn't been found in Iraq. It was a
spoof he performed at the annual dinner of the Radio and
Television Correspondents' Association.
The photos showed the president peering behind curtains
and looking under furniture for the missing weapons. Mr.
Bush offered mock captions for the photos, saying, "Those
weapons of mass destruction have got to be somewhere" and
"Nope, no weapons over there ... maybe under here?"
If there's something funny about Mr. Bush's misbegotten
war, I've yet to see it. The president deliberately led
Americans traumatized by the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, into
the false belief that there was a link between Iraq and Al
Qaeda, and that a pre-emptive invasion would make the United
States less vulnerable to terrorism.
Close to 600 Americans had already died in Iraq when Mr.
Bush was cracking up the audience with his tasteless photos
at the glittering Washington gathering. The toll of
Americans has now passed 1,750. Tens of thousands of Iraqis
have died. Scores of thousands of men, women and children
have been horribly wounded. And there is no end in sight.
Last week's terror bombings in London should be seen as a
reminder not just that Mr. Bush's war was a hideous
diversion of focus and resources from the essential battle
against terror, but that it has actually increased the
danger of terrorist attacks against the U.S. and its allies.
The C.I.A. warned the administration in a classified
report in May that Iraq - since the American invasion in
2003 - had become a training ground in which novice
terrorists were schooled in assassinations, kidnappings, car
bombings and other terror techniques. The report said Iraq
could prove to be more effective than Afghanistan in the
early days of Al Qaeda as a place to train terrorists who
could then disperse to other parts of the world, including
the United States.
Larry Johnson, a former C.I.A. analyst who served as
deputy director of the State Department's counterterrorism
office, said on National Public Radio last week: "You now in
Iraq have a recruiting ground in which jihadists, people who
previously were not willing to go out and embrace the vision
of bin Laden and Al Qaeda, are now aligning themselves with
elements that have declared allegiance to him. And in the
course of that, they're learning how to build bombs. They're
learning how to conduct military operations."
Has the president given any thought to leveling with the
American people about how bad the situation has become? And
is he even considering what for him would be the radical
notion of soliciting the counsel of wise men and women who
might give him a different perspective on war and terror
than the Kool-Aid-drinking true believers who have brought
us to this dreadful state of affairs? The true believers
continue to argue that the proper strategy is to stay the
current catastrophic course.
Americans are paying a fearful price for Mr. Bush's
adventure in Iraq. In addition to the toll of dead and
wounded, the war is costing about $5 billion a month. It has
drained resources from critical needs here at home,
including important antiterror initiatives that would
improve the security of ports, transit systems and chemical
plants.
The war has diminished the stature and weakened the
credibility of the United Sates around the world. And it has
delivered a body blow to the readiness of America's armed
forces. Much of the military is now overdeployed,
undertrained and overworked. Many of the troops are serving
multiple tours in Iraq. No wonder potential recruits are
staying away in droves.
Whatever one's views on the war, thoughtful Americans
need to consider the damage it is doing to the United
States, and the bitter anger that it has provoked among
Muslims around the world. That anger is spreading like an
unchecked fire in an incredibly vast field.
The immediate challenge to President Bush is to dispense
with the destructive fantasies of the true believers in his
administration and to begin to see America's current
predicament clearly. New voices with new approaches and new
ideas need to be heard. The hole we're in is deep enough. We
need to stop digging.
E-mail:
bobherb@nytimes.com
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