If Gen. David Petraeus can't stabilize Iraq by autumn - or if Americans
decide to pull out of Iraq before he gets a fair chance - expect far worse
chaos eventually to follow. We will see ethnic cleansing, mass murder of
Iraqi reformers, Kurdistan threatened, emerging Turkish-, Iranian-, and
Wahhabi-controlled rump states, and al-Qaida emboldened as American military
prestige is ruined.
And then what new American Middle East policy would arise from the ashes of
Iraq?
Past presidents and statesmen as diverse as Madeleine Albright, James Baker,
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Brent Scowcroft have
weighed in with various remedies to our supposed blunders in the Middle East
since September 11.
Apparently, Americans are supposed to forget these supposedly brilliant
strategists' dismal records of dealing with Middle East terrorism, Islamic
radicalism and murderous dictators. However, their three decades of
bipartisan failure helped bring us to the present post-9/11 world.
So before the United States abandons its present policies in Iraq and
Afghanistan, we should at least recall the past record - which may be best
summed up as the ying of Democratic appeasement and the yang of Republican
cynicism.
Jimmy Carter now writes books damning our present policies. He should keep
quiet. When the Iranians stormed the American embassy in Tehran and
inaugurated this era of Islamic terrorism, his U.N. ambassador, Andrew
Young, announced that the murderous Ayatollah Khomeini was "a 20th century
saint." Moralist Carter himself also tried to send hardcore leftist Ramsey
Clark over to Tehran to beg the mullahs to release the hostages - in
exchange for arms sales.
Next came Ronald Reagan, who, to put it kindly, was bewildered by Islamic
extremism. He pulled out American troops from Lebanon after Hezbollah
murdered 241 marines and thereby helped to energize a new terrorist movement
that has spread havoc ever since.
The Lebanon retreat was followed by the disgrace of the Iran-Contra affair,
when American agents sold the hostage-taking theocracy missiles and then
used the receipts illegally to fund the Contras. Few now remember that
Oliver North purportedly flew to Iran to seal the deal, bearing gifts for
the ayatollah. No need to mention the intelligence the Reagan administration
gave to Saddam Hussein during the savage Iran-Iraq war, or the way it
continued Carter's policy of arming jihadists in Afghanistan.
There were just as many cynical realists in George Bush Sr.'s foreign policy
team. In the debate leading up to the first Gulf War, Secretary of State
James Baker justified attacking oil-rich Saddam Hussein for the sake of
"jobs, jobs, jobs." And when our coalition partner, the even oil-richer
House of Saud, objected to removing the murderous Hussein regime after its
retreat from Kuwait, we complied - to the point of watching Saddam butcher
thousands of Kurds and Shiites.
Bill Clinton also often weighs in with ideas on the Middle East. But during
his two terms he passed up an offer from Sudan to hand over bin Laden.
Shortly afterwards, the terrorist openly threatened us: "To kill the
Americans and their allies - civilians and military - is an individual duty
for every Muslim."
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