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Thursday, July 09, 2009
Diana West :: Townhall.com Columnist
In Iraq, Soldiers Are Still Suffering, Dying
by Diana West
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The first I heard about what happened to Lt. Col. Timothy Karcher, the last U.S. commander of Sadr City who recently signed over jurisdiction to Iraqis, was from a reader. He e-mailed me about my last column, which argued that "allies" don't declare victory over each other (as Iraq's prime minister Nouri al-Maliki declared "victory" over the United States), and the sooner we realize Iraq isn't our "ally," the better. It also bemoaned the U.S. military's deference to Iraq, quoting top brass beginning with Gen. Raymond Odierno and including Lt. Col. Karcher, in their execution of what I, myself, consider a futile U.S. policy to Westernize Islamic cultures.

"I appreciate your fervor and feelings about Mr. al-Maliki's comments, but I must say that your biting commentary regarding the quote from Lt. Col Karcher has driven me to reply," he wrote. "You may not be aware," he continued, but since signing over jurisdiction to the Iraqis, Lt. Col. Karcher suffered a roadside bomb attack and lost both legs. One of his men, Sgt. Timothy David of Beaverton, Mich. -- a veteran of six tours in Iraq and Afghanistan -- was killed by a second EFP.

I was not aware. This grievous attack received scant coverage. Pieced together, news briefs tell us that on June 28 -- two days before Iraq's "victory" celebration, and 10 days after Lt. Col. Karcher signed over jurisdiction to Iraq -- the vehicle Lt. Col. Karcher was riding in near Sadr City drove over an explosively formed penetrator (EFP, also called an explosively formed projectile), the particularly lethal, Iranian-made roadside bomb. The blast severed both legs above the knees. After delivering their commander to Baghdad's Combat Support Hospital, his men were hit by a second EFP. It was then that Sgt. David was killed.

Lt. Col. Karcher is now hospitalized at Walter Reed in Washington, DC. Sgt. David , 28, was buried in Beaverton, Mich., this week.

Whether al-Maliki counts this as another "great victory" over the "foreign presence" in Iraq, we don't know. The incident elicited no statements, no calls for an investigation into how and why, shortly after turning over security responsibilities to the 11th Iraqi Army Division, Lt. Col. Karcher was hit. And the official silence blankets both Baghdad and Washington, DC.

It was left to ABC's Martha Raddatz, who has been updating the story's essentials at ABC News' blog, to write that June 28 was a "terrible, terrible day for the soldiers of the 2-5 Cavalry Division." But it was a terrible, terrible day for America as well -- or would have been if Americans had known it. And I'm not going to blame Michael-mania for our ignorance. This kind of thing is invisible on the national radar. It doesn't show up in anyone's vision of Iraq -- not that of the Obama administration, which seeks none of the entanglements that an official reckoning of this attack would entail, and not that of the Bush-cons, who persistently see Iraq as a "success." Congress? Dazed. The media? Winding Iraq down -- and besides, no "innocent civilians" were killed.

But back to my original e-mail, which having described Lt. Col. Karcher's ghastly fate, asked me "not to disparage the character of individuals who are putting themselves in harm's way," adding: "They do not make the political decisions, but perform the tasks asked of them."

That I know -- although being under orders is never a sufficient excuse. But are statements made in harm's way exempt from civilian critique? Of course not. I will say that prior knowledge of Lt. Col. Karcher's injuries would certainly have affected my last column. I would have been 10 times more furious about the U.S. foreign policy, from President Bush's to President Obama's, that has placed our best and bravest patriots in mortal danger for what increasingly appears to be, certainly in these last "democratizing" years, a long and costly misadventure with no discernible benefit to the United States. When even such patriots, however, engage in PR to promote Iraq as an "ally," cosset al-Maliki's delusional machismo like a dysfunctional family member, or trumpet an ill-conceived mission to Westernize Islamic cultures, I can't help but respond.

That said, there are not adequate phrases to impress upon the Karcher family the depth of my condolences or the sincerity of my wishes for the recovery, body and mind, of Lt. Col. Timothy Karcher.

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About The Author
Diana West is a contributing columnist for Townhall.com and author of the new book, The Death of the Grown-up: How America's Arrested Development Is Bringing Down Western Civilization.
 
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We have no alternative...
Surrogates of Iran such as Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas, or customers of North Korea can mount a relatively crude nuclear warhead on a missile, drag it to our seacoast on a barge or in a small freighter, and detonate it above the atmosphere over the U.S. The electromagnetic pulse from the nuclear detonations would wipe out almost all communication--and anything dependent upon electronics. No water, power, heat, telephone, or plane, train or automotive transportation. Estimates by a Congressional Commission are that the chaos produced would bring about the deaths of NINETY PERCENT of the population within a year's time.

George Bush, despite his sometimes halting, sometimes-two-steps-back-for-every-step-forward actions, was right in pressing for democracy everywhere. We must dredge and drain every swamp, including those of Russia and China, in order to gain even a semblance of security against the great variety of WMD available, not only to any tinpot dictator, but even to a single semi-crazed fanatic who wants to practice nihilism on the grandest of scales.

This may seem to be the wildest form of idealism in foreign policy as well as an almost impossible task that makes Woodrow Wilson look like a practitioner of Realpolitik, but we have no other alternative to safeguard ourselves and the world from multiple mini-Armageddons in the not-so-distant future.

"A civilization that feels guilty for everything it is and does, will lack the energy and conviction to defend itself." --Jean Francois Revel

Maliki's "victory"
Here's what Maliki actually said, talking about the June 30 US troop pullback from Iraq's cities:

"It is a great victory for Iraqis that we are taking the first step toward ending the foreign presence in Iraq," Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told a conference of leaders from the ethnic Turkmen community.

Here's the story:

BAGHDAD, June 20 (Reuters) - Iraq's leader declared victory on Saturday as the country began to end a foreign occupation with the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from cities, and told Iraqis not to lose faith if the pullback resulted in attacks.

As part of a security pact signed between Baghdad and Washington last year, U.S. combat forces must leave urban centres by June 30 and the entire force that invaded Iraq in 2003 must be gone by 2012.

"It is a great victory for Iraqis that we are taking the first step toward ending the foreign presence in Iraq," Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told a conference of leaders from the ethnic Turkmen community.
----
Iraq's Victory = ending "foreign presence."
US = "foreign presence."
Iraq declared victory over US.
The case isn't closed exactly, since we still 130,000 troops's worth of "foreign presence" in Iraq. More "victory" for Iraq to come, sounds like.
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