Life as a Spectator Sport

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Saturday, May 15, 2004

Cracks in the Kristol . . .

In a rental car with a radio, instead of the Jeep with wires hanging out where the radio should be, I caught most of the public radio program, On Point, yesterday. William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard and a strong proponent of war with Iraq (Tom Ashbrook, the host, referred to him as an "intellectual architect of the war"), was one of the guests. I've been hearing lately that conservatives are having second thoughts about Bush, if not about the war, but the vehemence of his answers still surprised me, as well as the extent of name-calling to which he resorted. Among other things, he said:
. . . for a year there’s been—there’s an obvious failure in the post-war planning, in the post-war execution. Many of us—none of us is perfect—I’m sure we’ve made mistakes in our analysis too, but we’ve called attention to these failures. They weren’t very hard to see: the failure to have enough troops right at the beginning to stop the looting, to get the reconstruction going fast enough, the failure to crush the insurgency early on when we could have crushed it, and then the recent retreat at Fallujah, especially, which I think is very damaging.
Kristol's puerile finger-pointing glosses over his own culpability (Ashbrook mentioned that the war has, in fact, been called "Kristol's war"). In March 2004, an MSNBC article revealed that the life of Abu Musab Zarqawi (accused murderer of Nicholas Berg) was repeatedly spared because "the administration feared destroying the terrorist camp in Iraq could undercut its case for war against Saddam." In other words, if the American public had been told that a primary player in the war on terrorism was out of the picture, it might not have been so enthusiastic about going to war with Iraq. As an advisor with the ear of Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, and others of like opinion at high levels, it's inconceivable that Kristol knew nothing about the administration's refusal to act against Zarqawi. Regardless of any criticism he may have made since then, he wanted war with Iraq as badly as they, and he is as guilty as they.

I've noticed, with grim humor, the steadily weakening rhetoric about the war. Bush and buddies at the beginning, claiming that we would be greeted as liberators. Rumsfeld earlier this year: "We're going to win this war!" Bush's new line that we're facing some tough times, but we're going to "stay the course." Now the most Bill Kristol can say is that the war was "winable," and "I think we can win this," while accusing the Bush administration of mistake after mistake in execution.

The web of lies and deceit is finally beginning to unravel, but I fear we'll be paying the price for it for a long time to come.
posted by Liz @ 10:04 PM     |


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