A lot of ink was recently spilled, and hot air
blown, over whether Petraeus’ testimony had been cleared, even
written, by the White House. (Petraeus denied this.)
What is the matter with the MSM (main stream media) and politically-oriented
organizations? How simple minded are they? Do they
seriously think it is necessary for the White House to vet,
or approve, or write Petraeus’ testimony in order to be sure
he does not get out of line? Do they seriously think Bush
would have put somebody in Petraeus’ position in the first place
if he wasn’t known to agree with the White House’s views?
The whole thing is an absurd tempest in a teapot,
with opponents of the war thinking they must show White House
vetting or approval in order to discredit Petraeus, and really
obnoxious Republicans like Duncan Hunter, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
and Norm Coleman playing the sycophant to Petraeus and viciously
attacking opponents. Pols like these three Republican
hacks make you want to puke.
Then there is the question of what will happen
now. Again, Washington politics, and pundits act in ways
that defy common sense and years of observation. (They
ignore Yogi Berra’s wise admonition that you can observe a lot
if you look.) Anybody with any sense knows that Bush isn’t
going to take us out of Iraq. That would defy his long
observed obstinacy, refusal to change his mind, refusal to admit
mistakes. It is entirely obvious that, as Petraeus’ testimony
indicated, Bush intends to keep us in Iraq. He intends
to pass the problem on to the next President, who may well be
a Democrat. Bush no doubt feels that, if a Democrat brings
home our men and women, then Republicans can say that the Democrats
lost Iraq, just as they said the Democrats lost China.
The idea will also be that Bush’s historical reputation will
look better because he and the other right wing wingnuts can
say all would have been fine if only the next president had
continued doing what George had been doing. All this is
so obvious, as a logical matter, that it is painful.
It is also obvious that Bush is going to leave
to his successor the awful question of what to do with terrorists
whom we’ve tortured, held incommunicado and detained indefinitely.
These people can’t be convicted in civilian courts. The Bush/Cheney
gang saw to that by using interrogation methods that would cause
the evidence to be thrown out of court. Unless Bush’s
absurd military tribunals are upheld, with their rules allowing
evidence to be used no matter how horribly it was obtained,
the next president is going to have to deal with the impossible
conundrum of what to do with the people who cannot be convicted
yet ought not be set free. If they ultimately have to
be set free because there is no lawful way to hold them any
longer, once again Bush will say, “Hey, it wasn’t me who let
them out. Blame the courts and my successor.”
Then, too, it is again obvious that the Democrats
aren’t going to force Bush to bring home the troops by cutting
off funds for the war. They have neither the brains nor
the guts to cut our losses (the way a smart business cuts its
losses). Nor do they operate on the basis of any long
run principle, such as the unhappy truth that war is always
and everywhere a disaster - and an unpredictable one at that
- which should be studiously avoided, except in case of direst
necessity and, when unavoidable, should be kept as short as
possible. (Jefferson Davis, the Kaiser, Hitler, Johnson
and Nixon, and Bush the Second are only some of the persons
who have had to learn this, to their sorrow.)
Nor do the Democrats even operate on the basis
of truth. They beg off by saying they haven’t the votes
to overcome a veto of a bill cutting off funds for the war.
What weak-kneed unprincipled bovine defecation this is.
They have more than enough votes, in each house,
to refuse to pass any military or military funding bill that
does not contain a provision cutting off all funds for
the war (except for funds needed to safeguard troops while quickly
bringing them home). Refuse to pass any bill that does
not cut off funds, and our participation in the war will end
soon enough. But neither the politicians nor the mass
media want anyone to realize that this could be done.
There is, finally, the notion now being bandied
about, because of Robert Draper, that Bush isn’t as stupid as
one thinks, since his acumen is far higher than one believes
and the problem is not stupidity but obstinacy, refusal to admit
mistakes, true belief, etc. Forgive me, but stupid is
as stupid does. What would be the difference if Bush’s
IQ were 160 - in the genius range. What he has done and
is doing is stupid, and that makes him stupid.
The Draper argument is like the argument in favor of people
who have gotten bad grades but, because of claimed potential
shown by high SAT, GMAT OR LSAT scores, gain admission to universities
or graduate schools and then get bad grades again, despite their
supposed potential. Such people are bad students regardless
of their high aptitude test scores. Likewise, Bush’s actions
make him stupid regardless of his claimed acumen.
BlackCommentator.com columnist Lawrence
R. Velvel, JD, is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. Click
here to contact Dean Velvel.