The Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore will be visiting the office of Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger on Thurs., July 9 at 4:30 PM. Meet in the lobby at 4:15 PM at 375 W. Padonia Road, Suite 200 , Timonium , MD 21093 . We go to his office to discuss why he voted to further fund the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq . At 5 PM, we will demonstrate on Padonia Road until 6 PM against war funding. Call Max at 410-366-1637.
Published on Tuesday, July 7, 2009 by The
A Quagmire for Obama
It is almost as if yesterday’s death of Robert McNamara was a warning to President Obama. The defense secretary for Presidents Kennedy and Johnson during the Vietnam War passed away at 93, with his legacy forever tarnished by the conflict that claimed 58,000 American soldiers and more than 3 million Vietnamese. McNamara would finally say, in his 1995 memoir “Retrospect’’: “We were wrong. We were terribly wrong.’’
With no small irony, Obama won the White House by running to a noticeable degree against McNamara’s legacy, in the form of President Bush’s invasion of Iraq, an invasion launched on false pretenses, false promises of quick victory, and no strategy for prolonged chaos. On the campaign trail, Obama invoked the great code word of Vietnam, criticizing Republican rival John McCain with, “So far, all he’s done is follow George Bush into the quagmire of Iraq.’’
But questions are emerging as to whether Obama is slipping slowly into his own quagmire, in another guerrilla war. Obama is taking combat troops out of Iraq, but increasing them in Afghanistan, with questions arising as to whether there is a concrete end to our involvement. The 21,000 troops that Obama is adding brings the total of troops in
The official stance of the Obama administration is that it will be stingy with additional troops. Obama told Newsweek in May that “My strong view is that we are not going to succeed simply by piling on more and more troops. The Soviets tried that; it didn’t work out too well for them. The British tried it; it didn’t work. We have to see our military action in the context of a broader effort to stabilize security in the country.’’
At the same time, the Obama administration is awaiting a midsummer assessment from
The assessment is getting more complicated as
That makes it a very tricky moment. Two-thirds of the civilian deaths caused by the
It also means the temptation to call for more troops. In a conflict where definitions of stability, let alone victory, are a fleeting thing, one of the most important moments in this first year of the Obama administration will be to take the hardest look possible at any assessment beyond the 68,000 troops in
© 2009 The
Derrick Z. Jackson can be reached at jackson@globe.com [1].
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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