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FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2007
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COMMENTARY  |  39


Endless war, endless spin: GOP keeps lying about Iraq






ANDREW GREELEY

M   ost of us thought that the
        last   election   settled   the
        Iraq issue. The voters by a
substantial   majority   rejected   the
Iraq war. It now appears that Iraq
will be the focus of the presidential
election next year. In an exercise of
political legerdemain almost as in-
genious as that which launched this
stupid, inept and immoral war,
President Bush has somehow rein-
troduced it as the focus for political
 
debate this year and next year.
    Despite the sentiment of the vot-
ers and the wise advice of the Iraq
Commission, victory is still possi-
ble in Iraq if only we have the pa-
tience and the courage (are willing
to accept more deaths of other peo-
ple's children). We must protect
Iraqi democracy. The conse-
quences of failure are unthinkable.
We must keep faith with our dead
troops. If we don't fight the terror-
ists in Iraq, then we will have to
fight them here at home.
    There is nothing new in any of
these arguments, and nothing true
either. Yet they are advanced as
new insights to support a "new"
strategy and they are propounded
by White House spokespersons,
Republican members of Congress,
commentators on the Fox network
and conservative columnists and
editorial writers as if they were wis-
dom that has not been heard before.
    Now at last, they seem to be say-
ing, we've finally got it right. The
war is lost. It was lost before it
started. It is immoral and it was im-
moral before it started. The Repub-
licans running for re-election know
the public is fed up with the war but
they are caught in recycled old rhet-
oric and cannot slip out of it.
    More disturbing, however, are
the arguments being advanced by
the three musketeers who are the
major Republican candidates. They
are still spinning the war in Iraq as
the real war on terror. Rudy Giu-
liani seems eager to take on Iran.
That might not be fair to Alexander
Dumas' gallant warriors. Perhaps
they should be compared to the
"see-no-evil-hear-no-evil-speak-no-
evil" trio of simians.
    If the jingoistic militarism of the
candidates persists for another year,
the public will have to choose be-
tween support for a war it doesn't
like anymore and the charge that it
is cowardly and traitorous. It seems
unlikely that this "framing" of the is-
sue could win the election. But in
the last couple of decades, Ameri-
can voters have been erratic in their
responses to the constant spinning
of slogans and fallacies, and espe-
cially those spun by the words
"Sept. 11, 2001." The Iraq war,
solidly beaten in 2006, could bounce
back again and win in 2008. That
would mean that a new Republican
president would have waded full
into the Big Muddy and taken the
baton from his predecessor.
    The "endless war" would con-
tinue. More flag-draped coffins
would be flown in during the dead
of night, more maimed bodies
turned over to the dubious care of
military and veterans hospitals,
more national guardsmen fired
from their civilian jobs, more trau-
matized veterans wandering about
in an emotional fog, and more life-
ruining tragedies imposed on
Americans, young and old.
    I do not want to question the mo-
tivation of the Republican candi-
dates. They need the support of
hardcore Republicans to win the
primaries -- men and women who
will put great emphasis on loyalty
to "our" president. Yet the picture
of Sen. John "Straight Talk" Mc-
Cain standing in a marketplace in
Baghdad, wearing body armor with
helicopters buzzing overhead and
celebrating the new safety in the
city suggests that he is already
trapped in the Big Muddy.