Letter From A Soldier: Answers You Won't Want To Hear

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First Posted: 04- 1-08 01:25 PM   |   Updated: 04- 9-08 05:12 AM

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In The Bonfire of the Vanities Tom Wolfe described a New York City awash in what could be called "sectarian" tension. The city trooped along in its day-to-day, glossy existence, seemingly unaware of the racial divisions and class separations that prevailed, and the white-hot caldera they fueled below the city's fault lines. In the midst of the erupting tensions, one of Wolfe's characters (a black preacher, actually, how timely!) introduced a concept that has resurfaced in my memory from the moment it seemed clear that we were bent on a course to depose Saddam Hussein and assume responsibility for the future of Iraq.

That concept? Steam control. The idea being that Gotham was a boiler, perpetually on the edge of explosion, that was only kept intact through a thousand tiny adjustments. This was the arduous, unappealing work of managing this particular polis -- backroom promises, compromises, and buy-offs helped to reduce the pressure and keep the peace, and it did so at the expense of higher-minded principles. The need for "steam control" overrode the need for justice, or truth, or the curing of society's ills. Instead of solving the root of the tension, the tensions were leveraged against one another until a stalemate was achieved.

What happens when you apply the same ideas Wolfe ascribed to New York City in a place where the tensions are even deeper, the divisions more entrenched, everyone is armed to the teeth, and there is no tradition of the sort of democratic institutions that could maintain order in the wake of a blooming power vacuum?

You get Iraq, circa 2008. And you have American soldiers managing the valves on a boiler that's constantly on the verge of eruption.

The email of one such soldier made its way to the blog of Spencer Ackerman today, and every single one of his keen insights are worthy of digestion. There's one in particular I find worthy of highlighting. After summarizing what he sees as the only plausible way forward -- "We need to ask 'if we left tomorrow, what would happen in Iraq?' and from there, we need to determine which of those anticipated results are unacceptable to us. Then we must aim our efforts on making sure those unacceptable results do not occur" -- he reaches this conclusion (emphasis mine):

When I look at the problem that way, it becomes almost impossible to find a purpose in what we do. Regardless of what we do, the Shia are going to take control. They have completely infiltrated all the security forces. The only kind of leader who could keep them in check was a tyrant like Saddam. And when the Shia take control, as soon as we leave, they are going to be as brutal as they like against the Sunni and there will be little we can do about it. That is what will happen whether we leave tomorrow or in ten years.

When it comes to whether or not deposing Hussein was for good or ill, a discouraging word is seldom heard. This is mainly because critics are often shamed with the admonishment: "Surely you must admit that the world is better off without Saddam Hussein!" In the strict terms of a game of moral checkers, one is hard pressed to admit otherwise. And if it turns out that our efforts in Iraq manage to kill and harm Iraqis at a slower rate than Hussein killed and harmed Iraqis, we might be able to one day back up our moral certainty with statistics.

Still, I hardly think it's out of bounds to appreciate just how bad ol' Saddam had it during the last years of his rule. It cannot be surprising to hear this soldier note Saddam's ability to keep Iraq "in check" -- after all, it's men and women like him who have essentially assumed Hussein's daily tasks of "steam control." Our troops handle Iraq's valves in an endless process of managing sectarian tensions, while working to keep regional rivals from asserting their claim over Iraq's sovereignty. Our soldiers have a keen view of how hard it was for Saddam to keep the threats, both within (the Shia and Kurds) and without (al Qaeda and Iran) at bay. And they have had to manage the fractured state without indulging in Hussein's brand of unrelenting brutality (though, sadly, there have not been a complete absence of incidents of same).

And "steam control" is about the only thing we are achieving in Iraq. This was never more evident than the past week, where Muqtada al Sadr rather effortlessly demonstrated how much more influence he has over the state of play than we do. I'll not soon forget those chants -- "Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada!" -- that preceded Hussein's hanging. Any illusion that the United States had control of Iraq should have ended right then and there. It's pretty clear that despite all the good press the "Surge" gets at home, the relative peace Iraq has lately enjoyed has been achieved at the whim of al Sadr and his loyalists, to say nothing of Iran, whose fingerprints are ubiquitous as well.

Meanwhile, we're consigned to the boiler room, frantically attempting to stave off the inevitable -- something John McCain says we could be doing for the next American century. Senator McCain claims that he is a break from the flawed strategy of the Bush administration. But the Iraq miasma is not the result of a flawed strategy. It is the result of a flawed concept to begin with, and the notion that "better" strategy is going to remove the mistakes at the root are delusional. This soldier's assessment of the role Saddam Hussein played in the great scheme of things is central to exposing one of the Iraq War's great flaws: having assuming the responsibility of "steam control," we can see just how badly Hussein was hogtied and hamstrung in maintaining his own power, and how little capability he had where posing an imminent threat to the United States is concerned.

I don't think this metaphor is a bad one. "Things are heating up," the email reads. "We're facing a high risk with very little potential payoff." Somewhere in Hell, Saddam Hussein's ears are ringing.

In The Bonfire of the Vanities Tom Wolfe described a New York City awash in what could be called "sectarian" tension. The city trooped along in its day-to-day, glossy existence, seemingly unaware of ...
In The Bonfire of the Vanities Tom Wolfe described a New York City awash in what could be called "sectarian" tension. The city trooped along in its day-to-day, glossy existence, seemingly unaware of ...
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- jimmyaj I'm a Fan of jimmyaj 5 fans permalink

...critics are often shamed with the admonishment: "Surely you must admit that the world is better off without Saddam Hussein!"

What do you think? I doubt the world is better off. The people who thought they would be better off were the transnational oil barons (who owe no loyalty to the US, by the way) who wanted Saddam out of the way so they could gain their own hedgemony over the area. How convenient they were able to get their puppet, GW Bush into the Oval Office just before 9/11 so they could use the US military to further their aims...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 AM on 04/02/2008
- Soulsurfer I'm a Fan of Soulsurfer 38 fans permalink

Certainly not better off for the families of the dead.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 AM on 04/02/2008
- montestruc I'm a Fan of montestruc 5 fans permalink
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Another option, which always was an option, is breaking Iraq up into three nations, Kurdistan, and Shia Iraq and Sunni Iraq. Divide the land based on majority population and try to make sure the mineral weath is divvied up roughly proportional to population. Then walk away and tell all of them that US air support backs those who do not invade the lands of their neighbors.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 AM on 04/02/2008
- plainsman I'm a Fan of plainsman 17 fans permalink
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Ah, yes, the Biden plan. The only plan overwhelmingly approved by a bi-partisan majority. Too bad it was sent to the desk of President Busch. (The little 'c' is for cheney)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 AM on 04/02/2008
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Should be a big "C"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 04/02/2008
- jnratliff I'm a Fan of jnratliff 9 fans permalink

I never use capital letters when I am writting about people I don't respect like bush/chenny as a matter it's not a case of respecting I really disrespect republicans that were stupid, greedy and evil enough to vote for the bush/chenny bastards!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 04/02/2008
- HansB I'm a Fan of HansB 17 fans permalink

'cept that the Iraqis themselves (except the Kurds) are opposed to this idea.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 AM on 04/02/2008
- nippersdad I'm a Fan of nippersdad 29 fans permalink

Perhaps at one time. I no longer think that this is the case...though it is a very useful talking point for the Bush Administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 04/03/2008
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It is my understanding that the majority Sunni regions have no oil. The Kurds would definitely support partition, and the Shia might do so, but the Sunnis are NOT going for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 04/02/2008
- montestruc I'm a Fan of montestruc 5 fans permalink
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2 out of three ain't bad, and anyway the sunni are IIRC less than 1/3 anyway. F@ck - um if they cannot take a joke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 AM on 04/05/2008

Every tyrant is supported by the elite. They benefit from his rule even if they have to sacrifice one of their own now and then.

Look at the current administration, completely out of control, yet supported by the elite. Just look at how much money Bush can still raise from this class of society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 AM on 04/02/2008
- rebeccaj I'm a Fan of rebeccaj 6 fans permalink

I told friends this in 2003 and it is sad to see a soldier on the ground saying this now...

This is also why Barack Obama should be our next president. He, alone, of all the current presidential candidates saw the war would gain nothing but a result like this -- also in 2003.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:06 AM on 04/02/2008
- neocon43 I'm a Fan of neocon43 29 fans permalink

Very easy to say something when you are not voting and looking at the intel.You found one soldier saying this.Where is the other 150,000 ?The result of this war will be the defeat of democratic nominee in November!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 04/02/2008
- aceholiday I'm a Fan of aceholiday 5 fans permalink

methinks neocon43 is dreaming. or a troll. or even a dreaming troll

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 AM on 04/02/2008
- nippersdad I'm a Fan of nippersdad 29 fans permalink

"Very easy to say something when you are not voting and looking at the intel."

Have you not heard that the chairman of the Intelligence committee was voicing objections to the invasion of Iraq prior to the AUMF coming up for a vote? Have you forgotten how hyped the rhetoric was at the time? Obama gained no kudos at the time for his unpopular stance, in the Senate or out. Clinton voted for it without reading the intel and over the objections of the committee chairman....the soldiers NEVER have a say in where they are sent or what missions they are given whilst there.

Your points do not ring true.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 04/03/2008

Obama wasn't even in the Senate at that time yet. So him saying he wouldn't have supported the war is the same as you and me saying 6 years ago we didn't support the war. He had no say whatsoever in the Senate because he was still in the Illinois state senate. So don't make it sound like he is the messiah saving the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 04/02/2008
- jnratliff I'm a Fan of jnratliff 9 fans permalink

I wasn't in the senate either but I dissagreed with this war as does ever thinking human being.
He had no weapons he didn't have the capabilities to attack us. He was keeping Iraq in check something we cannot do.
man I hate idiot republicans!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 04/02/2008

True, Obama wasn't in the Senate but he is the only presidential candidate remaining that saw the writing on the wall before the Iraq invasion and said so.

Meanwhile Hillary Clinton was making a purely political calculation with her war vote in the Senate. With US opinons strongly in favor of the war at the time based on Bush's marketing, she determined that if she voted against it and Bush happened to be right, she could never be elected president. Never mind the strategy of toppling Saddam was bad from the get-go.

This doesn't make Obama a messiah but it does put him in a small class of politicians who don't play politics when it comes to issues of war and peace, life and death.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 04/02/2008
- Steamboater I'm a Fan of Steamboater 202 fans permalink
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Steam control is a fallacyand that's because like among New York City's streets where manhole covers abound, you plug up one holel where steam erupts and the pressure builds uo so badly on the pipes that it erupts from another manhole cover . That's what we're trying to do in Iraq and in doing so only causing varous eruptions throughout the country. Better to leave and save American lives and let the Iraqies vent it full steam ahead if they must. Iraq will never be our friends anyway and democracy there a fantasy. Iraq can live in peace or they can murder each other which is what they seem to do best. Nothing we do will help them. We should leave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 04/02/2008
- Mesaywar I'm a Fan of Mesaywar 3 fans permalink

"Nothing we do will help them. We should leave."
Of course we should leave. We should never have gone there in the first place.
I am always amazed by the blind, arrogant, dishonesty and denialism of our leaders and our public.

Let's say there was a house with some loathesome vermin in it.
The vermin make the lives of the people living in the house difficult, but they can live.
We come in, bomb, bulldoze, and burn the house down. We allow predators from all over the neighborhood to come in and force a situation where people housemate must turn on housemate in order to survive.

Then we complain that the people in the house aren't doing enough with the burned out shell, and destroyed lives we left them, and we should just leave.

Truth is, we never cared about the house, or the people in it. We only cared about the built-in oil tank under it.

Do you really think we needed to bomb the house just to get rid of a colony of rats; when a little poison, propaganda, and pressure would have done the job?

That scenario, however, would have empowered the people in the house to take care of the rat problem themselves,...and their oil tank too. So , clearly, we could not have that...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 AM on 04/02/2008
- MRb1000 I'm a Fan of MRb1000 10 fans permalink

This officer knows what is going on in that country along with the non officers. We see different things going on when we watch TV, but it is not what is truly going on in other countries. A lot of thing happen around the world, but the military men and women know what goes on first hand. The civilian population do not get the same story. I have said this many times if you want to know the truth find the young sergeant or private in the room and ask him what he thinks. The others will tell you what you want to hear. After being in for a while you know what to say and not to say. The young guy just do not give a hoop. Most of the time they keep these guy like faraway from the news media. Now, they have a way to vent their frustration with our government and leaders. I pray they do not quiet these voices. They need away to vent their frustrations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 04/02/2008

I would be very interested to see how the Army's lawyers deal with the "rules of engagement" these days. I hear its very dangerous for our troops who are there and our troops resent their inability to defend themselves under all the "legal what-if-isms".

Of course we are worse off, the world is worse off, and everyone knows it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 AM on 04/02/2008
- andhakari I'm a Fan of andhakari 7 fans permalink

Obama can promote that junior officer to SecDef in January.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 AM on 04/02/2008

Iraq has become a Shi'ite-dominated police state, in which Sunnis are treated as second-class citizens at best, and targets for death squad murder and ethnic cleansing otherwise. This reality is directly traceable to Bush's policies: deBaathification (which discriminated, de facto, against the Sunnis) and police training (which resulted in the creation of an overwhelmingly and discriminatingly Shi'ite police force). The idea that we're preventing the Shi'ites from committing genocide against the Sunnis is preposterous. If we left Iraq, at least the Sunnis could be arming and defending themselves against Shi'ite attacks, instead of having the Bush administration misusing our military to break into their homes and confiscate their weapons. Of course, some Shi'ites are worse than others, as Nouri al-Maliki's NEEDLESS instigation of violence against others of his own sect proves.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 04/02/2008
- nippersdad I'm a Fan of nippersdad 29 fans permalink

You must have missed the part where the minority sunni's refused to engage in the political process early on...much less the part of the surge where we have been paying and arming Sunni warlords; hence the comparative peace in sunni dominated areas.

Malike is an Iraqi brought out of exile to rule in Iraq...he is a creation of the coalition provisional authority, not a naturally produced Iraqi leader, hence the violence perpetrated against his own sect at the behest of his actual paymasters.

No ones hands are clean, but there are certainly those with dirtier hands than others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 04/03/2008

"Defiant to the end, Saddam Hussein mocked Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr moments before he was hanged, a witness said Saturday.As a noose was tightened around Hussein's neck, one of the executioners yelled "long live Muqtada al-Sadr," Haddad said, referring to the powerful anti-American Shiite religious leader. Hussein, a Sunni, uttered one last phrase before he died, saying "Muqtada al-Sadr" in a mocking tone, according to Haddad's account.The White House issued a statement praising the Iraqi people for giving Hussein a fair trial"

http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/12/30/hussein/index.html

"In the name of the people I call on all men of the past regime and manipulated by it to reconsider their stances," al-Maliki said in a written statement. "The door is still open for every person who does not have blood of innocents on his hands to join in rebuilding of Iraq, which will be for all Iraqis without exceptions or discrimination"

"The Joint Chiefs of Staff were not consulted on the US decision to disband the Iraqi army shortly after the end of major combat operations in Iraq last May, General Peter Pace, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Pace said Paul Bremer, the head of the coalition provisional authority in Baghdad, ordered the army disbanded on his own authority"

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0218-06.htm

The different factions were armed through "security training" by us, and we let them loose on each other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 AM on 04/02/2008
- cylindar I'm a Fan of cylindar 7 fans permalink

Hmmm, Yeah, sounds about right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 04/02/2008
- timothe I'm a Fan of timothe 7 fans permalink

So let me see if I have this right...

Y'all think that the world was a better place when Saddam Hussein was in power. Right or wrong?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 AM on 04/02/2008
- davesideas I'm a Fan of davesideas 8 fans permalink

As bad as Saddam Hussein was, yeah, the world is worse off because we invaded Iraq; sanctions had brought him to his knees, we've unnecessarily wreaked havoc by our invasion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 04/02/2008
- prscnt1 I'm a Fan of prscnt1 8 fans permalink

The world is too big for any nation.

Saddam could have been deposed by other means, yet the killing envisioned by the soldier will happen, at the latest when Saddam died naturally or unnaturally.

The real question you should be asking whether we would have been better off if bush were not to be appointed as president by the supreme court?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 04/02/2008

All things being what they are, yes, timmy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 AM on 04/02/2008
- davesideas I'm a Fan of davesideas 8 fans permalink

In addition to my last comment: Your question is irrelevant to the article: of course Iraq sucked when Hussein was alive...what kind of question is that? My question to you is: Is the world a better place for our having invaded Iraq?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 04/02/2008
- neocon43 I'm a Fan of neocon43 29 fans permalink

100% better and we are safer.Terrorist have take a major ass kicking in Iraq.let freedom roll!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 AM on 04/02/2008
- DumbDad I'm a Fan of DumbDad 32 fans permalink
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For the dead and the displaced, it goes without saying. For the right wing American nationalists, it's hard to say, because the world where real people actually live is not often apparent in their contemplations. For the United States of America, the world was much better before our leaders used mega military muscle to perform an assassination, and assassination is not a hallmark of legitimate rulers. A world without legitimate rule is not a good place, not an improvement. The decision to kill somebody to make things better is, after all, the original fruit of the original sin. Have a nice trip to hell, son.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 AM on 04/02/2008
- shades3 I'm a Fan of shades3 34 fans permalink

How could anyone be surprised at this assessment?? It's been obvious that there was no cohesive plan beyond an invasion to depose an old Bush enemy with the benefit to the United States being a larger footprint in the Middle East and dibs on the oil fields there.

When the Iraqis didn't just stand there and let the takeover by foreigners happen and hand over their oilfields, there was NO contingency plan. Having exhausted all the possible reasons for invading in the first place, WMDs, chemical weapons, imminent threat............the U.S. was stuck, having deposed Saddam Hussein, with picking up his job of controlling the rivalries between the various warring factions.

They were and are stuck in a civil war and there's no way out, with any sort of honour.
And why should they? When a foreign power invades a country that is no threat to them, we normally criticize them for imperialism.
Why would it not be the same offence just because the Americans did it?
Pre-emptive invasion has never been acceptable as a defensive tactic, unless there is an IMMINENT THREAT. There never was one from Iraq against the U.S. and the invasion was no different than any other invasion by a hostile force against a soverign country.
Of course the citizens of the invaded country are going to resist.
George W Bush has a special hot corner of Hell reserved for him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 AM on 04/02/2008
- 3rdCitizen I'm a Fan of 3rdCitizen 35 fans permalink

American optimism and self-confidence has shown itself to be a double-edged sword. On the one hand, it has allowed us to do things that were thought to be virtually impossible (e.g, gaining independence from Great Britain, building the Panama Canal, landing human beings on the moon in the 60s, etc.), but it has also led us into overreaching disasters where we just couldn't admit to ourselves that our goals were unobtainable (e.g. Viet Nam). The situation in Iraq appears to be a case of the latter. The United States simply can't control the hearts and minds of millions of Iraqis with complex attitudes and conflicts whose historical roots reach down through centuries. As a number of analysts have pointed out (but the MSM and the public still largely ignore), all the likely outcomes left to U.S. policy in Iraq are bad ones.
The only politician I've heard who address this fact was Senator Biden. Now, it's returned to the status of a political taboo. But it's still the truth, and it's the only legitimate response the Dems have to the Repub propaganda about "victory vs. surrender."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 04/01/2008
- researcher I'm a Fan of researcher 118 fans permalink

oh the price of imperialism. but all that oil. 40 years worth.

these guys are voluntrees. the surge is working leave it alone and keep printing that money plus the chinese have plenty of money to loan us. god bless america and capitalism truly god's country.

reagan you were a genius to put into motion a means of making the have mores richer and eliminate the middle class all in one trickle down theory the demos and repubs and middle class brought hook line and sinker..

all the middle class do is whine. the poor are much easier to control. just send them a 1200 dollar irs check every few years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 PM on 04/01/2008
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