Another Quagmire For The AmeriKKKan Empire
"There is no question that the US government was ill-prepared for the
aftermath of a war well fought. Many facilities, such as electrical
transformers and oil pumping stations that had been meticulously spared by
the air campaign, were destroyed by looters and saboteurs. Many members of
the old regime escaped and have come back to haunt the occupying
authorities. Both problems have set the reconstruction process back. The
administration implicitly conceded that something was amiss early on when it
sacked Jay Garner, a mild-mannered former general, and replaced him as
viceroy with the tough-talking Paul Bremer. Mr Garner complained that his
outfit - the Pentagon's Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance
- had been hastily assembled and given neither the time nor the resources to
prepare for running a country of 24m people. Mr Garner had only two months
to plan and no more than 200 staffers to work with. The lack of preparation
is astounding not only because the Iraq invasion had been long foreseen but
also because America and its allies have run so many similar nation-building
exercises in recent years: Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, East Timor, Kosovo,
Afghanistan. Yet there has been little attempt to apply the lessons of those
places in Iraq." - Financial Times July 2, 2003
The Bush cabal as Laurel and Hardy used to say, have gotten themselves into
another fine mess. The invasion and occupation of Iraq was supposed to be a
smooth orderly romp in the park. Instead it displays the omens of a
protracted bitter struggle. Just as AmeriKKKa arrogantly went into Vietnam
to uphold European imperialism foolishly underestimating the Vietnamese'
will to resist foreign domination, so too have Bush and Co. underestimated
the Afghani and Iraqi people's will and resolve. US soldiers are dying on a
daily basis in Iraqi and now the spotlight is back on Afghanistan as
hostilities flair up. Things are getting so hot the US propaganda machine
can no longer blame escalating US casualties in both Afghanistan and Iraq on
auto accidents or friendly fire. In an article in the July 2 2003 online
version of Financial Times an Op-Ed piece written by a senior fellow at the
Council on Foreign Relations called for the US to establish a Colonial
Office. I suggest you read the piece at
www.FT.com it addresses the real issue, imperial occupation, what must
be done to "stabilize" Iraq. The writer Max Boot asserts the situation in
Iraq should have been foreseen given the US involvement in other actions
around the world. Boot's perspective on Iraq is typical of a colonizer,
arrogant to the point of dismissing the natural urge of people to defend
their families and homeland against takeover by imperialist forces. He
states quite candidly the imperialist intentions of Bush and Co , "The lack
of preparation is astounding not only because the Iraq invasion had been
long foreseen but also because America and its allies have run so many
similar nation-building exercises in recent years: Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia,
East Timor, Kosovo, Afghanistan. Yet there has been little attempt to apply
the lessons of those places in Iraq." What lessons is he talking about?
Haiti is still feisty thank goodness. The last I heard there is fierce
resistance in Afghanistan, Warlords hastened AmeriKKKa's withdrawal from
Somalia, East Timor was no piece of cake. The jury is still out on Bosnia
and Kosovo despite seventy some odd days of "shock and awe" NATO bombings,
ground troops and mercenaries are still needed in those countries to
maintain "order" years later! So what lessons can be learned from these
actions other than the possibility of long drawn out animus and conflict ala
Vietnam?
Bush and Co have bitten off more than they can chew especially since the US
military are being overextended all over the globe. Unlike US troops in
Japan and Germany following WWII when the US government succeeded in molding
pro US governments, the people of Afghanistan and Iraq detest the AmeriKKKan
presence. Boot called for an office of colonial affairs, "We need to create
a colonial office - fast. Of course, it cannot be called that. It needs an
anodyne euphemism such as Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian
Assistance. But it should take its inspiration, if not its name, from the
old British Colonial Office and India Office. Together, these two
institutions ran large swaths of the world with a handful of bright, honest,
industrious civil servants. They had an enormous impact, given the small
numbers involved; there were seldom more than 1,000 members of the Indian
civil service to administer hundreds of millions of Indians. Like its
British predecessors, the US colonial service needs to be an elite civilian
agency that can call on forces for assistance where appropriate." Boot fails
to realize Bush and Co are a bunch of cold blooded thieves who are used to
doing their dastardly deeds in the dark, they have their hands full trying
to deal with open resistence to their occupation by two very stubborn
nations while also trying to secretly expropriate the rest of the world's
resources. Boot also fails to recognize another lesson of history, Britain
lost its American colonies because it overextended itself in wars around the
world. The longer the resistence to AmeriKKKan occupation goes, the deeper
Bush and Co will sink into the quagmire.