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Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Austin Bay :: Townhall.com Columnist
James Baker and the Desert Storm legacy
by Austin Bay
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Iraqis haven't forgotten the aftermath of Desert Storm. With Saddam's troops forced to retreat from Kuwait, Shia Arabs throughout southern Iraq rose up against Saddam's tyranny. Kurds in the north also rebelled. Many Sunnis in Baghdad anticipated the end of Saddam's "Tikiriti" despotism. Numerous Iraqis tell me post-Desert Storm they anticipated liberation. Instead, they got a dose of so-called Realpolitik -- mass murder and a return to dictatorship.

In 1991, Saddam did not fall. His Republican Guards attacked the Shia towns and massacred their inhabitants. At least 50,000 Iraqis were murdered by Saddam's defeated army.

In April 2003, America toppled Saddam. This aftermath promised something better than tyranny and mass murder. Still, many Iraqis doubted America's commitment to sticking with them through the trials of escaping a terrible past and building a better future. Pundits can point to Vietnam and Somalia as American bug-outs (al-Qaeda alludes to both), but the failure to act after Desert Storm -- the failure to act in the face of mass murder -- is by far the most pertinent to Iraqis.

An Iraqi cultural adviser I worked with in 2004 insisted Iraqi doubts about long-haul American commitment were an immense political problem. He was a Shia, and he himself vacillated between pessimism and optimism. During one late-night discussion (we were standing in front of a shower-trailer), the personal anguish of 1991 was particularly evident. But he was upbeat the day he returned from a week-long visit with his brother in southern Iraq. "They think you (America) may stay this time," he told me.

What the translator meant was "stay long enough." America never intended to stay. America's post-9/11 strategy has been to help foster nation-states where the consent of the governed creates legitimacy and where terrorists are prosecuted, not promoted.

In an essay I wrote for the Dec. 9, 2002, issue of The Weekly Standard, I outlined the rough path to that "end state" in Iraq:

"Pity Gen. Tommy Franks or, for that matter, any American military commander tasked with overseeing a post-Saddam Baghdad. For in that amorphous, dicey phase the Pentagon calls 'war termination' ... U.S. and allied forces liberating Iraq will attempt -- more or less simultaneously -- to end combat operations, cork public passions, disarm Iraqi battalions, bury the dead, generate electricity, pump potable water, bring law out of embittering lawlessness, empty jails of political prisoners, pack jails with criminals, turn armed partisans into peaceful citizens, re-arm local cops who were once enemy infantry, shoot terrorists, thwart chiselers, carpetbaggers and black-marketeers, fix sewers, feed refugees, patch potholes and get trash trucks rolling, and accomplish all this under the lidless gaze of Peter Jennings and Al-Jazeera." Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).
 
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Political War ad infinitum
There must be SOME Iraqis who like Americans.

However, according to the MSM almost every Iraqi (and most Americans) want us out of there. I'm sure ALL the terrorists want us out of there.

Having written that, I remember the Vietnamese I spoke with in 1972. When I told them the American soldiers would be leaving soon, they laughed and said that Americans would never leave. They didn't believe Americans would just turn them over to the communists.

The American soldiers wanted to win the war. The American politicians didn't. As with all politicians, they focused on the next election, the next campaign contribution, the next fund raiser.

They forgot the Vietnamese, forgot the painful and bloody efforts of the US military in Vietnam, forgot the dead and wounded Americans who fought for a free Republic of Vietnam.

Once again, the American politicians (Pelosi, Murtha, Durbin, etc) are getting ready to abandon an ally, a free country, to the horror of enemy retribution.

I can only hope the politicians who decide this will suffer at least as much as those they abandon.

Bloody Decisions
The early 90's decision looks better and better the longer we stay. Yes, it may be characterized as a betrayal, but look who you're dealing with. Is it possible to betray a sewer-rat? Saddam's exterminations were no less severe than one calling in an exterminator to control any pest in their home. Don' insult our soldiers by assuming any Iraqi comes close to the equivalent worth of a human being.

Let the Sunni and Shia bloody-up one another. One American soldier isn't worth the life of 1 million Iraqis.
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