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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (89349)4/3/2003 1:53:22 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
THE NEW POLITICAL CORRECTNESS
________________________________________________________

By Richard Reeves*
Op/Ed
Wed Apr 2, 10:13 PM ET
story.news.yahoo.com

WASHINGTON -- This is the way Machiavelli, the cynical Florentine philosopher of politics and power, put it in "The Prince" in 1513:

"Everyone sees what you seem to be, few perceive what you are; and those few don't dare oppose the general opinion, which has the majesty of the government backing it up. ... The masses are always impressed by appearances and by the outcome of an event -- and in the world there are only masses. The few have no place there when the many crowd together."

Few dare to oppose now, almost 500 years later. Even a clever descendant of Machiavelli's people, Madonna, herself a philosopher of daring, has decided the risk of opposition or the appearance of opposition is just too risky with American troops in the field. Last Tuesday, demonstrating that she is no Dixie Chick, the former Madonna Louise Ciccone announced that she was withdrawing an anti-war video to promote her song "American Life."

"It was filmed before the war started, and I do not believe it is appropriate to air it at this time," she said. "Due to the volatile state of the world and out of sensitivity and respect for our armed forces, who I support and pray for, I do not want to risk offending anyone who might misinterpret the meaning of this video."

Political correctness has turned sharply right, hasn't it? I'm sure Madonna was not at all influenced by the ongoing radio boycott of the Dixie Chicks, whose lead singer, Natalie Maines, had said she was ashamed to be from the same state as President Bush. That would be Texas. The chick quickly apologized, but it may have been too late. The new PC warriors are taking names.

In The Washington Times, the feisty voice of Washington conservatives, for example, a front-page headline read, "Foundation Cash Funds Anti-war Movement." Beginning with a phrase about "tax-exempt status" and 990 tax forms -- a reminder that the government gives and the government can take away -- the article lists the Ford Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, the Turner Foundation and the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation. All of them and several others, says the Times, have given unrestricted grants to organizations and committees that have questioned the majesty of government policy in Iraq.

Not only singers and foundation executives better watch what they say and do. The most powerful "liberal" newspapers in the country are obviously watching what they say, too. The accidental killing of seven Iraqi women and children by American soldiers at a roadblock near their homes did not make the front page of The New York Times. The headline, in the "B" section of the paper, not only did not mention Americans or killing, it blamed the victims: "Failing to Heed Warning, 7 Iraqi Women and Children Die."

The Washington Post did play the story on its front page, but it also avoided any mention of Americans or killing, with headlines that, except for the small print, could have been about a traffic accident in New Jersey: "A Gruesome Scene on Highway 9. 10 Dead After Vehicle Shelled at Checkpoint."

As for "outcome," the military outcome of this war has never been in doubt -- and, hopefully, the worst of it is over. We are going to win the fight for territory and postwar control, at least in the beginning. Whatever mistakes were made in Washington and in the field -- particularly the White House's dismissive denials that wars against evil might involve any sacrifice of lives or money -- will soon be forgotten by the masses watching victory parades. The longer-term political outcome could be disastrous for us, but by then we will be on to other things. That is the way politics has worked for at least the five centuries from Machiavelli to Madonna.

The trick now for the figure at the center of all this, the bold President Bush, is to focus attention on the military outcome and then to hold off the political accounting until after his re-election in 17 months. That will not be as easy as persuading Americans that Saddam Hussein was the bad guy behind the killings of Sept. 11, 2001. With the probability that the U.S. economy may not be in the best of shape during 2004, the president may have to try to keep war fever up and political opposition down for the next year and a half. The voices of the few will have to be stifled by the crowd -- and that may mean more war.
_______________________________________________________

*RICHARD REEVES is the author of 12 books, including President Nixon: Alone in the White House. He has written for the New York Times, the New Yorker, Esquire and dozens of other publications. Email him at rr@richardreeves.com.



To: JohnM who wrote (89349)4/3/2003 4:58:59 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Michael Kelly has been to war before. And he can write about it.

washingtonpost.com

Across the Euphrates

By Michael Kelly

Thursday, April 3, 2003; Page A23

EAST OF THE EUPHRATES RIVER, Iraq -- Near the crest of the bridge across the Euphrates that Task Force 3-69 Armor of the 1st Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division seized yesterday afternoon was a body that lay twisted from its fall. He had been an old man -- poor, not a regular soldier -- judging from his clothes. He was lying on his back, not far from one of several burning skeletons of the small trucks that Saddam Hussein's willing and unwilling irregulars employed. The tanks and Bradleys and Humvees and bulldozers and rocket launchers, and all the rest of the massive stuff that makes up the U.S. Army on the march, rumbled past him, pushing on.

On the western side of the bridge, Lt. Col. Ernest "Rock" Marcone, commander of Task Force 3-69, stood in the sand by the side of the road, smoking a cigar and drinking a cup of coffee. Marcone's soldiers say he deeply likes to win, and he seemed quietly happy. At 2 a.m. yesterday, Marcone had led his battalion into the assault with two objectives, both critical to the 3rd Infantry's drive to Baghdad. The first was to seize the Karbala Gap, a narrow piece of flat land between a lake and a river that offers a direct and unpopulated passageway to this bridge. The second was the bridge itself, the foothold across the Euphrates, last natural obstacle between the division and Baghdad.

Marcone's tanks, infantry and artillery, supported by Air Force bombers and the division's Apache and Blackhawk helicopters, had taken the Karbala Gap by 7 a.m. and the bridge by 4:20 p.m. "We now hold the critical ground through which the rest of the division can pass to engage and destroy the Republican Guard," Marcone said.

Saddam Hussein, of course, knew the Americans coming from Kuwait would have to cross the Euphrates. But he did not know where the crossing would be made. The American forces' plan, drafted and revised and revised again under intense pressure in the field, centered on keeping the regime in confusion on this one great question.

There were surprises. No one anticipated the degree to which the regime would be able, using guerrilla tactics, to harass and, for a brief while, stall the offensive in the south. But the basic structure of the plan never changed. It was to employ repeated feints to deceive the enemy as to the true direction of the assault north. This would force him to redeploy his key forces away from the Karbala Gap, while exposing his moving troops and his artillery to a devastating air campaign.

On Tuesday, after the division's 2nd Brigade conducted a successful two-day feint at the bridge across the Euphrates at the town of Hindiyah, and after days of increasingly intense targeted bombing and counter-battery artillery had reduced the Iraqi artillery in the area of the Gap to no more than two battalions, Gen. Buford Blount, the commander of the 3rd Infantry, approved the assault for the following morning. As the main brunt of the assault -- two tank companies and an infantry company -- began to move out toward the Gap, the task force's 3-7 infantry company moved east in one last feint, threatening the city of Karbala, to fix any Baath Party irregular forces in place there. The main assault, three columns of armored and soft-skinned vehicles, made its great, loud, dusty way across sand tracks through the Gap.

Weeks before, the battle for the Karbala Gap had been expected to be fierce. But misdirection and bombing had done great work of attrition. The night before the assault, Marcone had said, he expected to find little resistance left at the Gap. And he found little -- a small and lightly armed force.

The task force took 22 prisoners at the Gap, killed no one, suffered no casualties and pushed on as fast as three columns of armor can move, which is not fast at all, toward the bridge. There they found the first organized, coherent and serious military opposition in the war to date: what Marcone judges to be two battalions' worth of infantry, one of irregulars on the western side and one that he thinks might have been Republican Guard. The troops had rigged the bridge to explode and had established what Marcone said were excellent defensive positions on the eastern side.

But none of this affected the outcome, or even much slowed the advance. "First we destroyed all the near-side forces," Marcone said. "Then with artillery and aviation we destroyed much of the far side. The 3-7 crossed the river in boats, six of them, with engineers, to deal with the demo [explosives]. That was followed by an armored assault by three companies, two tanks and one infantry."

The fight lasted only several hours but was intense, Marcone said. "We took no prisoners," he said. "They fought until they died."

There were no American fatalities. By full dusk, the sporadic mortar fire had ceased, and everything was quiet except for an occasional bit of light arms fire in the farm fields beyond the bridgehead.
washingtonpost.com



To: JohnM who wrote (89349)4/3/2003 8:29:27 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Getting to the point that even the NYT can't spin the war anymore.

April 3, 2003
Marines Race 20 Miles This Morning to Ouskirts of Baghdad
By DEXTER FILKINS

NEAR BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 3, American marines chased away a Republican Guard division this morning and raced almost unimpeded toward the outskirts of Baghdad.

The marines, heading from the southeast as part of a multi-pronged assault, covered 20 miles just this morning, with tanks barreling at top speed. Iraqi tanks came under withering fire, and Iraqi troops once again offered little resistance.

The Republican Guard may be ceding this territory, thinking their forces must make their stand in Baghdad in the days to come. But in an unexpected sign of popular sentiment, some residents streamed out of the city and greeted the American troops as they approached.

As the marines advanced in a long column along the Tigris River, other lead units of the American assault were approaching Saddam International Airport, 12 miles outside of the city. Army troops closed in from the southwest after crossing the Euphrates River.

"We're pushing on really fast," Captain Kevin Jackson of the Engineer Brigade of the 3rd Division, told Reuters.

As in previous days, relentless airstrikes cleared the way for the marines' advance here, as they positioned themselves for a final push into the capital.

On Wednesday, the marines poured across the Tigris River, and some members of the First Marine Division wondered why they did not meet the tough resistance they had expected from the Republican Guard.

"They're cowards," Capt. Ted Card, who commanded a company of marines who captured the area around Numaniya, said on Wednesday. "It's the same thing everyday; the Iraqis fire a few shots, we train our guns on them, and it's over in five minutes."

REST AT:http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/03/international/worldspecial/03CND-MARI.html