-Caveat Lector-

THE MISCALCULATION
By Serge July

Translated from Libération (Paris), Mar. 25:

Editorial

The United States is waging war without an international mandate, in
unfriendly solitude. Even some of the pillars of its alliances, like Turkey,
have defected. The Turkish case is all the more dramatic in that it upset
the
American military's plans by depriving it of an important contingent of GIs,
who today were supposed to be on the battlefield to the north of
Baghdad.

After this diplomatic fiasco, it was hoped that the American war would be
all
the shorter, all the more "surgical," all the less deadly to GIs and Iraqi
civilians, all the less destructive to Iraq, as is seen in the decision to
ostentatiously incorporate journalists in combat units. In other words, it
was supposed to be a large-scale police operation designed to arrest a
small
number of people linked to the dictatorship, not a war of annihilation on
large Iraqi cities.

This war, unlike the 1991 war, was based on a political calculation. Military
pressure was supposed to provoke the collapse of Saddam Hussein's
regime.
This was the scenario the American leaders dreamed about: a house-to-
house
battle for control of Baghdad, politically fatal in the Western and Arab
worlds, was not anticipated.

This strategic vision is in trouble after the first five days of the war. The
manipulation of the media is certainly intense, but given what American
expectations were, what they're not showing us -- and what Gen. Franks's
headquarters would like very much to have us see -- must not exist.

We are not seeing refugees on the roads, fleeing the combat zone, as in
1991.
The camps established on the frontiers are empty. There is even
something of
a movement in the opposite direction in progress: more than 5000 Iraqis
living
in Jordan have returned to Iraq since the beginning of hostilities.

Surrenders have been very few. On the fifth day of the war, the
Anglo-American armies have, according to Gen. Franks, taken 3000
prisoners.
In 1991, the ground campaign only lasted four days, but tens of thousands
of
soldiers were taken prisoner. In those days there was a sort of
renunciation
in the face of the coalition armies. There's nothing of the sort taking place
today. The negotiations with Iraqi officers in the big cities of the southern
Iraq are not living up to expectations. Not one city is open. And the
fighting is continuing. There are no images showing Iraqis celebrating the
Anglo-American troops as liberators.

The American war has not, so far, caused the collapse of the dictatorship,
which is still quite active, including in the South.

To the contrary, the American military full-court press, after twelve years
of
UN embargoes with dramatic effects, has provoked a patriotic reflex in the
face of a military operation whose goals are, for the Iraqis too, unclear. It
would top everything if this resistance, over time, turned Saddam Hussein
into
a national hero.

In addition, there is still the awful memory of the bloody repression of the
1991 uprisings, when the Shiite South, the Kurdish North, and even some
regiments of the Republican Guard took up arms against Saddam's
dictatorship
after the rout in Kuwait. Saddam had several hundreds of thousands of
people
massacred after the Western forces left. This abandonment has made the
population particularly mistrustful with regard to the Marines.

The nationalist reaction on the one hand and the horrific memory of the
repression carried out by Saddam's cronies on the other explain the
reactions
of the people living in the zones through which the American army has
passed.
The "policing" war, the war of liberation, whose screenplay was written by
the
hawks in Washington, will no doubt not take place. If the war becomes
simply
warlike, that is, murderous, destructive, and painful, even an American
military victory will in the end sound like yet another political defeat for
the United States.

A specter is now haunting Washington -- the specter of being condemned
to
undertake the military conquest of Baghdad. It amounts to a terrible
miscalculation.

http://www.liberation.fr/page.php?Article=98322

--
Translated by Mark K. Jensen
Associate Professor of French
Chair, Department of Languages and Literatures
Pacific Lutheran University
Tacoma, WA 98447-0003
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sutra

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