[W is gambling, I think, that the "surge" will keep the war going
until some other President -- likely a DP person -- comes in to take
the blame. (Then the Bushies can blame whoever takes over.) This is
different from the "Texas Strategy" that PK refefs to, because that
strategy did not assume a specific end-point (January 2009). But like
Keating _et al_, I think that W is trying to keep his admistration
from simply _falling apart_. (War-mongering against Iran might help
here.) He's hoping that he can keep it together until 2009 (about 2
years from now). The admin has been so rigid that I think it's almost
shattering due the stress that events -- in Iraq and elsewhere -- have
put on it.]

January 15, 2007/New York TIMES
Op-Ed Columnist
The Texas Strategy
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Hundreds of news articles and opinion pieces have described President
Bush's decision to escalate the Iraq war as a "Hail Mary pass."

But that's the wrong metaphor.

Mr. Bush isn't Roger Staubach, trying to pull out a win for the Dallas
Cowboys. He's Charles Keating, using other people's money to keep
Lincoln Savings going long after it should have been shut down — and
squandering the life savings of thousands of investors, not to mention
billions in taxpayer dollars, along the way.

The parallel is actually quite exact. During the savings and loan
scandal of the 1980s, people like Mr. Keating kept failed banks going
by faking financial success. Mr. Bush has kept a failed war going by
faking military success.

The "surge" is just another stalling tactic, designed to buy more time.

Oh, and one of the favorite techniques used by the owners of savings
and loan associations to generate phony profits — it involved making
high-interest loans to crooked or flaky real estate developers — came
to be known as the "Texas strategy."

What was the point of the Texas strategy? Bank owners were certainly
gambling — with other people's money, of course — in the hope of a
miraculous recovery that would bail out their negative balance sheets.

But the real point of the racket was a form of looting: as long as
they could keep reporting high paper profits, S.&L. owners could keep
rewarding themselves with salaries, dividends and sweetheart business
deals.

Mr. Keating paid himself a million dollars just weeks before his
holding company collapsed.

Which brings us to Iraq. The administration has spent the last three
years pretending that its splendid little war isn't a big disaster.
There have been the bromides (we're making "good progress"); the
promises (we have a "strategy for victory"); and, as always, attacks
on the media for not reporting the good news from Iraq.

Who you gonna believe, the president or your lying eyes?

Now Mr. Bush has grudgingly sort- of admitted that things aren't going
well — but he says his "new way forward" will fix everything.

So it's still the Texas strategy: the war's architects are trying to
keep their failed venture going as long as possible.

The Hail Mary aspect — the off chance that somehow, things really will
turn out all right — is the least of their motivations. The real
intent is a form of looting. I'm not talking mainly about
old-fashioned war profiteering, although there is no question that
profiteering is taking place on an epic scale. No, I'm saying that the
hawks want to keep this war going because it's to their personal and
political benefit.

True, Mr. Bush can't win another election with phony claims of success
in Iraq, the way he did in 2004. But escalation buys him another year
or two to claim that we're making progress — and it gives him another
chance to prove that he's the Decider, beyond accountability.

And as for pundits who promoted the war and are now trying to sell the
surge: for a little while longer they can be Very Important People who
have the president's ear.

Meanwhile, the nation pays the price. The heaviest burden — in death,
shattered bodies, broken families and ruined careers — falls on those
who serve. To find the personnel for the Bush escalation, the Pentagon
must lengthen deployments in Iraq and shorten training time at home.

And the back-door draft has become a life sentence: there is no limit
on the cumulative amount of time citizen-soldiers can be required to
serve on active duty. Mama, don't let your children grow up to be
reservists.

The rest of us will pay a financial price for the hundreds of billions
squandered in Iraq and, more important, a price in reduced security.

Escalation won't bring victory in Iraq, but it might bring defeat in
Afghanistan, which the administration will continue to neglect. And it
has pushed the military to the breaking point.

Mr. Bush calls his critics "irresponsible," saying that they don't
have an alternative to his strategy. But they do: setting a timetable
for withdrawal, so that we can cut our losses, and trying to save what
can be saved. It isn't a strategy for victory because that's no longer
an option. It's a strategy for acknowledging reality.

The lesson of the savings and loan scandal was that when a bank has
failed, you shouldn't let the owner string you along with promises —
you should shut the thing down. We should do the same with Mr. Bush's
failed war.

--
Jim Devine / "Young people who pretend to be wise to the ways of the
world are mostly just cynics. Cynicism masquerades as wisdom, but it
is the farthest thing from it, because cynics don't learn anything.
Because cynicism is a self-imposed blindness, a rejection of the world
because we are afraid it will hurt us or disappoint us." -- Stephen
Colbert.

Reply via email to