[Mb-civic] Cut Our Losses By Bob Herbert

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Mon Nov 28 14:48:26 PST 2005


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    Cut Our Losses
    By Bob Herbert
    The New York Times

    Monday 28 November 2005

    Washington - Jack Murtha is as tough as they come, but he's seen enough
of the misguided, mismanaged, mission impossible war in Iraq to know that
it's not sustainable, not worth the continued killing and butchering and
psychological maiming of thousands of American G.I.'s.

    "I mean, this was a war done on the cheap and we're paying a heavy price
for it," he said in an interview just before Thanksgiving.

    Mr. Murtha is the Pennsylvania congressman, former marine and
traditional war hawk whose call for a quick withdrawal of American troops
from Iraq has intensified the national debate over the war. He makes weekly
visits to wounded troops in military hospitals, and when he talks about
their suffering it sometimes seems as if his own heart is breaking.

    "These kids are magnificent," he said. "They've done their duty."

    He talked about the former Notre Dame basketball player Danielle Green,
a left-handed guard ("heck of a player") who lost her left hand in a rocket
attack in Baghdad. And he recalled a young marine who was trying to defuse a
bomb when it exploded. "It blinded him and took his hands off," said Mr.
Murtha. "It killed the guy behind him."

    In Congressman Murtha's view, the troops who have displayed so much
valor and made so many sacrifices in Iraq deserved better from their
leadership here at home. "We went in with insufficient forces," he said. "We
had people in the wrong [specialties], people driving trucks who couldn't
back trucks up. We had security forces without radios. I found 40,000 troops
without body armor."

    He has no faith in President Bush's repeated calls to stay the course.
"The number of incidents have gone from 150 a week to 772 a couple of weeks
ago," he said. As additional U.S. forces have been deployed, casualty rates
have increased, not decreased. And his many conversations with G.I.'s have
convinced him that American fighting men and women don't have much
confidence in their Iraqi allies.

    "They don't trust them - that's all there is to it," said Mr. Murtha.
The disparagement of Iraqi security forces by American troops was so
widespread that Mr. Murtha was surprised when one soldier "started talking
about how good they are, how much they've improved, and so forth."

    It was a miscommunication. The congressman soon realized that the
soldier was talking about how much the insurgents had improved; how they had
become more sophisticated, and thus "more deadly."

    Mr. Murtha, 73, is a Democrat who has maintained good ties over the
years with Republicans and has extraordinary contacts within the Defense
Department and the military. He's a decorated Vietnam War veteran (Bronze
Star, two Purple Hearts) who retired as a colonel in the Marine Corps
Reserves after 37 years of service.

    He said he's convinced that there is nothing more the military can
accomplish in Iraq. It's the presence of the American troops themselves,
inevitably seen by the Iraqis as occupiers, that continues to fuel the
insurgency.

    "Our military captured Saddam Hussein and captured or killed his closest
associates," he said. "But the war continues to intensify."

    When he went public with his proposal to pull American troops out of
Iraq (he would establish a "quick reaction" force elsewhere in the region,
perhaps in Kuwait), he said:

    "Our military and their families are stretched thin. Many say that the
Army is broken. Some of our troops are on their third deployment.
Recruitment is down, even as our military has lowered its standards. Defense
budgets are being cut. Personnel costs are skyrocketing, particularly in
health care."

    Equipment shortages at premier military bases in the U.S., including
Fort Hood in Texas and Fort Bragg in North Carolina, are so severe, Mr.
Murtha told me, "that the troops don't have the equipment they need to train
on."

    We need to cut our losses in Iraq. The folly of the Bush crowd and its
apologists is now plain for all to see. Congressman Murtha is right, the war
is not sustainable. Even Republicans in Congress are starting to bail out on
this impossible mission. They're worried - not about the welfare of the
troops, but about their chances in the 2006 elections.

    To continue sending people to their deaths under these circumstances is
worse than pointless, worse than irresponsible. It's a crime of the most
grievous kind.

 



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