Monday, January 19, 2009

More Turd Polishing For Dummies

Ahh, where would we be without the Village constantly trying to rewrite Bush's failed legacy? Today's contestant: The Independent's Bruce Anderson (trying to meet or exceed the goal of complete temporal reversal set last week by Andrew Roberts.)
But it all comes back to the Iraq War, which was a tragedy, for a reason worthy of a great tragedian. It was fought in a spirit of excessive idealism. After 11 September, the US Administration asked itself one repeated and agonised question. Why do these people hate us? The Bush team came up with their answer: because they live in failed states, which offer their young no hope in this world and thus leave them open to the temptations of fanaticism and a better deal in another world.

Baghdad was one of the foremost cities in the Muslim world. Iraq was a rich country with a large educated middle class. Yet it had become a police state and many of its ablest people had fled into exile. Moreover, Saddam had been trying to acquire weapons of mass destruction. We could not be certain that his quest had failed. So should we wait until the certainty of a mushroom cloud? It seemed that all the routes to progress in the Middle East and safety in the West led to Iraq.

There was one problem. Largely because of the malign influence of that fraud and tautology, international law, we have grown squeamish about regime change. As a result, the overwhelming desirability of regime change in Iraq had to be downplayed, and there was a further difficulty: the most unfortunate un-meeting of minds in recent public policy. After 2001, in both Washington and London, there was a split between those who knew Iraq, who were generally hostile to the War, and those who wanted war but usually knew nothing about Iraq. George Bush had little confidence in his Secretary of State, Colin Powell. Unable to sack Mr Powell, he made up for it by not listening to the State Department. Tony Blair never took much notice of his foreign secretaries.

The size of the list of people who deserve the blame for Bush's failed legacy is impressive, but the one thing all these articles have in common is that Bush himself isn't on that list, but the reality-based community is.

That's to be expected after all...it's historical parallel universe fiction at its finest, the kind that makes Harry Turtledove novels look positively orthodox.

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