Apocalypse Now, Iraq Edition [View all]
http://www.juancole.com/2014/09/apocalypse-iraq-edition.html
Apocalypse Now, Iraq Edition
By contributors | Sep. 24, 2014
By Peter Van Buren via Tomdispatch.com
I wanted to offer a wry chuckle before we headed into the heavy stuff about Iraq, so I tried to start this article with a suitably ironic formulation. You know, a déjà-vu-all-over-again kinda thing. I even thought about telling you how, in 2011, I contacted a noted author to blurb my book, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, and he presciently declined, saying sardonically, So youre gonna be the one to write the last book on failure in Iraq?
I couldnt do any of that. As someone who cares deeply about this country, I find it beyond belief that Washington has again plunged into the swamp of the Sunni-Shia mess in Iraq. A young soldier now deployed as one of the 1,600 non-boots-on-the-ground there might have been eight years old when the 2003 invasion took place. He probably had to ask his dad about it. After all, less than three years ago, when dad finally came home with his head held high, President Obama assured Americans that were leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq. So what happened in the blink of an eye?
The Sons of Iraq
Sometimes, when I turn on the TV these days, the sense of seeing once again places in Iraq Id been overwhelms me. After 22 years as a diplomat with the Department of State, I spent 12 long months in Iraq in 2009-2010 as part of the American occupation. My role was to lead two teams in reconstructing the nation. In practice, that meant paying for schools that would never be completed, setting up pastry shops on streets without water or electricity, and conducting endless propaganda events on Washington-generated themes of the week (small business, womens empowerment, democracy building.)
~snip~
The Grandsons of Iraq
The staggering costs of all this $25 billion to train the Iraqi Army, $60 billion for the reconstruction-that-wasnt, $2 trillion for the overall war, almost 4,500 Americans dead and more than 32,000 wounded, and an Iraqi death toll of more than 190,000 (though some estimates go as high as a million) can now be measured against the results. The nine-year attempt to create an American client state in Iraq failed, tragically and completely. The proof of that is on todays front pages.