We can only hope that with sufficient wisdom and a lot of good luck, our Iraq editorial will get this right; if so, it would truly be stunning
A Nov. 6 New York Times editorial makes you wonder whether editorial writers read their own newspaper. The editors praised the decision last week of the United States and the ruling coalition in Iraq to invite "mostly Sunni Arab junior officers of Saddam Hussein's disbanded military to enlist in Iraq's new national army." The editorial describes the move as "historically stunning" and necessary to "try to undo as much of [former U.S. proconsul in Iraq Paul] Bremer's disastrous decision [to disband the Iraqi army] as possible, as one element in a broader effort to reintegrate the deeply estranged Sunni Arab community into the nation's military, political and professional life."
It was so stunning a move, apparently, that the editors missed that Bremer had, on April 23, 2004, "reached out to officials of the old regime--and offered a faster way to rebuild the Iraqi army, disbanded by Mr. Bremer a year ago--by reinstating many of the "honorable men" who had served as senior officers in Mr. Hussein's army." At least that's how the New York Times put it. Indeed, the paper went on to say at the time:
The Baathist rehabilitation plan is a major rollback of a policy aimed at purging the Iraqi government of members of Saddam Hussein's former governing party. The change represents a sharp split with the American-appointed Iraqi Governing Council. The Americans are breaking in particular with Ahmad Chalabi, a former exile, who is now the council member in charge of the purges.
Bremer's shift, like the one last week, involved reinstating mostly Sunni officers. Of course, one can limply defend the Times by arguing that in 2004, according to a U.S. military spokesman, the policy change involved only senior army officers, including generals and full colonels, whereas the latest invite supposedly involves "junior officers." Perhaps, but that distinction is not the gist of the editorial--in fact it's not even mentioned--nor are we left much the wiser about how successful Bremer's initial reversal of course was. The question the editors should have asked, but didn't, is whatever happened to that earlier policy? Or, do Sunnis today actually want to rejoin an army that is increasingly controlled by Shiites? And of what value is a national army in the context of an increasingly federal Iraq, where regional governments will have greater power?
Instead, what we get are these wilting closing lines:
We can only hope that the encouraging shift that produced last week's plea to ex-soldiers runs deep enough and lasts long enough to divert Iraq from imminent civil war toward constructive, democratic nation-building. With sufficient wisdom and a lot of good luck, it is not necessarily too late for Iraqis to salvage something positive from their long ordeal of dictatorship, war, invasion and occupation.
We can only hope? With sufficient wisdom and a lot of good luck? Not necessarily? If waffling were a sport, the Times' editors would be awash in gold. The common man must pay a stiff fee to excavate from the paper's archive, but not the editors. Doing so might have helped determine if Bremer's reinstatement policy actually worked. If it did work, it was worth a mention, though it would have made the latest development much less "stunning." If it did not work, then the policy reversal last week has all the makings of a dud, and the Times looks incredibly naive. Instead of solid information, though, we get an editorial written with one hand on the keyboard and the other on an Ouija board.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
For any given media outlet:
IF (NEWS SPIN) == (PERSONAL PRECONCEIVED NOTIONS) THEN PRINT THAT SUCKER.
The Times is pushing it, I'm not pushing it!
It suits the Times better to keep Bremer as a useless stooge so they never mention anything positive that might have come out of his tenure. His blanket demonization has been impressively consistent, for the Times.
I knew I wasn't the only one who reads the New York Times, including the Op-Ed page, but not the editorials themselves. I had no idea the editors themselves did not read them either.
'Bremer's shift, like the one last week, involved reinstating mostly Sunni officers. Of course, one can limply defend the Times by arguing that in 2004, according to a U.S. military spokesman, the policy change involved only senior army officers, including generals and full colonels, whereas the latest invite supposedly involves 'junior officers.'"
Whatever the Times journalistic shortcomings, this is a huge distinction. There is no understating the difference between junior and senior officers in terms of what effect it has on military strength and effectiveness.
One, junior officers (let's say company and lower field grade level) comprise a larger - if not the largest - segment of all officers. Two, company grade officers are the ones with direct contact, oversight and responsibility for individual units and platoons. When we hear that Iraqi troops need to be trained up so they can operate independently, the things you look for are competent NCOs, Staff NCOs and a effective commanding officer. Working together, these make the backbone of unit leadership, period.
Not to mention, Not a Bama, senior officers are a lot more likely to have dirty hands from the Saddam era.
Chalabi's absurdly broad "deBaathification" efforts always struck me as being more about openning up patronage positions than a genuine effort to remove offenders.
Let's face it. Our policy in Iraq was and is the real "dud." From the now proven fake WMD claims, to the lack of post-war planning, Iraq will be the main subject of our failed policy for many years to come. Paul Bremer deserves an award for plundering American and Iraqi wealth along with Iraq's security, due to his lack of Political expertise and his turning of a blind eye to corruption while he was incharge of Iraq. Billions of US tax-payer dollars have been corruptly wasted and unaccounted for, as thousands of American and Iraqi lives have been lost. He really should be impeached, along with Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, and Rumsfeld. Those of you who feel otherwise, I suggest that you go to Iraq and see for yourself. My son, who is out there risking his life for you and me is very patriotic but not naive to the real truth. Wake up and smell the coffee!
From the now proven fake WMD claims . . .
Can you believe the nerve of that Clinton and those UN guys, going on for years about Iraqi WMD after we booted Saddam out of Kuwait, and all because he used them on some tribesmen and wouldn't offer any proof he had gotten rid of them.
Didn't Clinton support a bill calling for the removal of Hussein? I'm glad he got term limited out. He was obviously looking for an excuse to go to war for oil.
Trying way too hard...
Look! Over there! Bill Clinton! That means Bush isn't responsible for anything!!
CLIIIIINTOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOON!!!!!!
I had the misfortune of reading a NYTimes editorial the other day about how the failure of the Harriet Meirs nomination should have given Bush a chance to reassess his failing presidency, be the uniter he promised to be, and reach out to the center by appointing an O'Connor-type justice -- but that he'd failed to grasp this opportunity by appointing Alito.
I'm trying to imagine the alternative universe in which anyone in the White House would be paying attention to such pablum, or the dope-smoking editorialists who ever imagined that Bush had any interest in changing.
Not to mention that one of the reason he had to withdraw Meirs was because she was perceived as an O'Conner type justice.