Cal Thomas
August 8, 2006
Opponents of President Bush and his Iraq policy have jumped on a
comment last week by Gen. John Abizaid, commander, U.S. Central
Command, before the Senate Armed Services Committee: "I believe that
the sectarian violence is probably as bad as I've seen it, in Baghdad
in particular, and that if not stopped, it is possible that Iraq could
move toward civil war."
Ignored in most of the media coverage was what Gen. Peter Pace,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at the same hearing: "I
believe that we do have the possibility of that devolving to a civil
war, but that does not have to be a fact." Gen. Pace added: "Our enemy
knows they cannot defeat us in battle. They do believe, however, that
they can wear down our will as a nation." Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY.)
called the administration's Iraq policy a failure, which can only
encourage the terrorist insurgents to keep on fighting and killing
Iraqis and American soldiers. Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI.) seemed fixated on
timetables for withdrawal instead of defeating those who want to
destroy the elected government of Iraq.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld reminded the panel that the United
States and the free world are in a "global struggle against violent
extremists." Rumsfeld's testimony bears reading and repeating to a
large number of people who, in their quest for pleasure and personal
peace, appear to lack the staying power required to defeat perhaps the
greatest evil the world has ever faced.
Taking note of the differences between the way the United States and
terrorists fight, Rumsfeld said, "one side puts their men and women at
risk in uniform and obeys the laws of war, while the other side uses
them against us." We have seen that in the world's reaction to
Guantanamo Bay prison and Abu Ghraib. Terrorists use torture and murder
and no court of public opinion or judicial entity holds them
accountable. The rare instance of abuse by American soldiers is
punished.
Rumsfeld elaborated on the difference between the two sides: "One side
does all it can to avoid civilian casualties, while the other side uses
civilians as shields, and then skillfully orchestrates a public outcry
when the other side accidentally kills civilians in their midst. One
side is held to exacting standards of near perfection; the other side
is held to no standards and no accountability at all."
Rumsfeld noted how the enemy uses our media to undermine American
resolve, "planning attacks to gain the maximum media coverage and the
maximum public outcry." And then, most importantly, he said: "If we
left Iraq prematurely - as the terrorists demand - the enemy would tell
us to leave Afghanistan and then withdraw from the Middle East. And if
we left the Middle East, they'd order us - and all those who don't
share their militant ideology - to leave what they call occupied Muslim
lands, from Spain to the Philippines, and then we would face not only
the evil ideology of these violent extremists, but an enemy that will
have grown accustomed to succeeding in telling free people everywhere
what to do."
For those who claim Iraq has nothing to do with the war on terrorism,
Rumsfeld noted, "This enemy has called Iraq the central front in the
war on terrorism."
During World War II, U.S. and German forces fought the battle of
Hurtgen Forest. It began Sept. 19, 1944 and ended Feb. 10, 1945. That
was one battle in a strategically insignificant corridor of barely 50
square miles east of the Belgium-Germany border. The Germans inflicted
more than 24,000 casualties on American forces, while another 9,000
Americans were sidelined due to illness, fatigue and friendly fire. Had
live TV beamed this battle to America, there might have been an outcry
that the policy was failing and somehow a cease-fire and an
accommodation with Hitler should be achieved. Amer
ica won that war because the objective wasn't to understand the Nazis,
or to reach an accommodation with them; the objective was to win the
war. Anything less in this war - against an equally evil and
unrelenting enemy - will mean defeat for the United States and for
freedom everywhere. That's what Rumsfeld was getting at when he said,
"We can persevere in Iraq or we can withdraw prematurely, until they
force us to make a stand nearer home. But make no mistake: They are not
going to give up, whether we acquiesce in their immediate demands or
not."
Rumsfeld is right.