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An anti-democratic tirade
Former US commander blames partisan politics and
agenda-driven media for Iraq debacle
By Barry Grey
15 October 2007
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In an extraordinary speech delivered October 12, retired Lt.
Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the top US commander in Iraq from June 2003
to June 2004, gave vent to deeply anti-democratic sentiments emerging
within growing sections of the US officer corps.
Addressing the Military Reporters and Editors annual conference
in Arlington, Virginia, Sanchez attributed American military failures
in Iraq to the unscrupulous reporting and agenda-driven
biases of the media, and the corrosive partisan politics
that is destroying our country and killing our service members
who are at war.
Sanchez avowed his support for freedom of the press and democracy,
but the implicit message of his speech was the incompatibility
of democratic processes with the pursuit of a global war against
extremism. He declared, Our forefathers understood
that tremendous economic and political capacity had to be mobilized,
synchronized and applied if we were to achieve victory in a global
war. That has been and continues to be the key to victory in Iraq...
Partisan politics have hindered this war effort and America
should not accept this. America must demand a unified national
strategy that goes well beyond partisan politics and places the
common good above all else...
Our politicians must remember their oath of office and
recommit themselves to serving our nation and not their own self-interests
or political party. The security of America is at stake and we
can accept nothing less.
At one point, Sanchez all but called for systematic press censorship,
saying, As I assess various media entities, some are unquestionably
engaged in political propaganda that is uncontrolled.
He seemed to suggest that the only basis for waging a successful
war in Iraq and beyond was some form of military rule at home,
declaring, As we all know, war is an extension of politics,
and when a nation goes to war it must bring to bear all elements
of power in order to win. War-fighting is not solely the responsibility
of the military commander, unless he has been given the responsibility
and resources to synchronize the political, economic and informational
power of the nation.
So who is responsible for developing the grand strategy
that will allow America to emerge victorious from this generational
struggle against extremism?
Given the lack of such a grand strategy, Sanchez
said the best the US could hope for was a stalemate, with a reduced
US military force in Iraq for the foreseeable future.
Voicing the widespread anger and frustration within the military
over the strains resulting from simultaneous wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, he obliquely raised the need for a restored military
draft, saying, the American military finds itself in an
intractable situation... the deployment cycles of our formations
has been totally disrupted, the resourcing and training challenges
are significant, and Americas ability to sustain a force
level of 150,000-plus is nonexistent without drastic measures
that have been politically unacceptable to date.
Sanchezs speech was, in part, a broadside against the
Bush administrations military strategy and conduct of the
war. Calling the Iraq war a nightmare with no end in sight,
the retired commander declared, From a catastrophically
flawed, unrealistically optimistic war plan to the administrations
latest surge strategy, this administration has failed
to employ and synchronize its political, economic and military
power.
The latest revised strategy is a desperate
attempt by an administration that has not accepted the political
and economic realities of this war, and they have definitely not
communicated that reality to the American people.
Media reports on the speech focused on Sanchezs criticisms
of the administrations war tactics, while virtually ignoring
its broader, authoritarian thrust.
There was a pronounced element of personal bitterness in the
remarks of Sanchez, who was removed from his Iraq command in the
wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal that erupted in April of 2004.
The sadistic torture of Iraqi prisoners and its exposure occurred
under his command. Sanchez testified before Congress that he had
no role in approving the torture methods employed at the US-run
prison, but documents subsequently released showed that he personally
signed off on the use of interrogation methods banned by the Geneva
Conventions.
An internal Army investigation concluded that Sanchez was indirectly
responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib, but cleared him of any
wrong-doing as part of the official whitewash of military officers
and Bush administration officials. However, the political fallout
from the scandal deprived Sanchez of a new command, and he retired
from the military in November of 2006, shortly after then-Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was ousted by Bush.
In the course of his tirade against the media, Sanchez alluded
to Abu Ghraib, saying, Over the course of this war tactically
insignificant events have become strategic defeats for America
because of the tremendous power and impact of the media and, by
extension, you the journalist. In many cases the media has unjustly
destroyed the individual reputations and careers of those involved.
However, Sanchez was clearly speaking for a broader constituency.
The failure of the US military adventure in Iraq has fuelled recriminations
and conflicts within the military and between it and civilian
authorities. Among sections of the officer corps, the commitment
to the Constitution and its principle of the subordination of
the military to civilian authority is growing increasingly tenuous.
In his speech, Sanchez directed his fire against the Bush administration,
the State Department, the National Security Council, Congress,
the Democratic and Republican parties and the media, while sparing
the Pentagon and brushing over the role of military commanders.
On Sunday, two days after Sanchezs speech, the New
York Times published an article based on interviews with officers
attending the Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas which made clear that the possibility of a military coup
in the US is openly being discussed. The article described conflicting
views among the mid-career officers at the school as to where
the chief blame lies for the military disaster in Iraq, with the
civilian authorities or the military commanders who refused to
defy them.
The article cited retired Col. Gregory Fontenot, an instructor
at the school, saying he questioned whether Americans really
wanted a four-star general to stand up publicly and say no to
the president of a nation where civilians control the armed forces.
The article continued: For the sake of argument, a question
was posed: If enough four-star generals had done that, would it
have stopped the war?
Yeah, wed call it a coup detat,
Colonel Fontenot said. Do you want to have a coup detat?
You kind of have to decide what you want. Do you like the Constitution,
or are you so upset about the Iraq war that youre willing
to dismiss the Constitution in just this one instance and hopefully
things will be OK? I dont think so.
That Sanchez is both reflecting and encouraging putchist moods
within the military is underscored by one section of his speech,
in which he declared, Who will demand accountability for
the failure of our national political leaders involved in the
management this war? They have unquestionably been derelict in
the performance of their duty. In my profession, these type of
leaders would immediately be relieved or court-martialed.
Sanchez concluded his remarks with an avowal of his evangelical
Christian beliefs, saying, Praise be to the Lord, my rock
who trains my fingers for battle and my hands for war. This
is significant, since an important ideological component of the
increasingly politicized US military is the promotion of right-wing
fundamentalist dogmas within its ranks.
The threat of a military coup in the United States is very
real. As the World Socialist Web Site has been pointing
out and warning of for some time, the military is wielding ever
greater influence over political life in America. It consumes
a massive portion of the national budget, its leading figures
occupy key posts within government and the corporate establishment,
and it is currently engaged in the neo-colonial occupation of
two countries.
The growing political power of the military, and the weakening
of civilian control, is a process that has been developing over
a protracted period, under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
With the Bush administration, this process has assumed more pronounced
and open forms. The current administration is one in which the
president and vice president rarely speak in public before any
but military audiences.
Presiding over an unpopular war, resting for support largely
on a financial aristocracy of multi-billionaires and multi-millionaires,
the administration openly bases itself on an alliance with the
military against the will of the people. Last July, at a White
House press conference, Bush justified his continuation of the
war in opposition to the will of the population, as expressed
not only in opinion polls but in the 2006 congressional elections,
by citing the military as a constituency with greater weight than
the American people.
Just this month, Gen. Peter Pace, the outgoing chairman of
the joint chiefs of staff, declared that the people cannot vote
an end to the war. This followed the passage of resolutions
in both the House of Representatives and Senate, with bipartisan
support, denouncing the Democratic pressure group MoveOn.org for
publishing an ad criticizing the current US commander in Iraq,
Gen. David Petraeus.
Neither the Democratic Party nor the media are prepared to
oppose the increasingly ominous intervention of the military into
political affairs. The response of the political establishment
and the media to Sanchezs speech further confirms this.
Neither the White House nor the Pentagon issued any response.
The National Security Council merely thanked Sanchez for his military
service and opined that the US military and security situation
in Iraq were improving.
No major newspapers have published editorials on the speech.
Nor have they reported its thoroughly anti-democratic content.
Leading Democrats have maintained a craven silence. On the
Sunday morning television talk shows, Sanchezs speech was
noted only in passing. Republican supporters of the Bush administration
and the war, such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, merely
pointed to an editorial in the Washington Post arguing
that Iraqi casualty numbers indicate an improving security situation
in Iraq.
As Sanchezs speech underscores, the war in Iraq and the
preparations for new and even bloodier wars increasingly imperil
the democratic rights of the American people. No section of the
ruling elite retains any serious commitment to the defense of
these rights. Only the independent political mobilization of the
working class against the two parties of American capitalism can
put an end to war and danger of dictatorship.
See Also:
US Senate censure of MoveOn.org:
An attack on free speech in the service of militarism
[22 September 2007]
Former US general confirms
high-level knowledge of Abu Ghraib torture
[19 June 2007]
US Defense Secretary warns
new naval officers on civilian control of military
[31 May 2007]
Pentagon devising
scenarios for martial law in US
[9 August 2005]
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