Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
President Bush's "new and improved" plan for "prevailing" in the Iraq War he started almost four years ago to send an additional 21,500 US troops into the chaos of Baghdad and Anbar Province turns out to be nothing more than a coward's way of trying to avoid having to say the war has been lost.
Over 3000 Americans and several hundred thousand innocent Iraqis have died because Bush and his handlers decided early in his first disastrous administration that they needed a bully little war to solidify his position, win the Congress, and grab dictatorial powers by setting him up as a "war president."
The scheme worked at first. Bush got his war, he won control of Congress in 2002, and squeaked back into office in 2004, all by running as a commander in chief in time of war. He also managed to usurp powers from Congress and undermine the Constitution, again by playing commander in chief.
But his war didn't go as planned.
The Iraqi people didn't want to be invaded, much less occupied, and a
home-grown insurgency in that ravaged nation of 24 million, armed with
just RPGs and AK-47 rifles, has brought the world's most powerful
military to its knees.
Rather than admit that his Iraq adventure has been an unmitigated
disaster one which has essentially handed the world's third largest
oil-producing nation over to the control of its neighbor, Iran Bush
has decided to escalate the slaughter.
The 21,500 additional troops, 17,500 of whom will be in Baghdad, and
4000 of whom will be in Anbar, will be fighting the overwhelmingly
popular Mahdi army of Moktada al Sadr in Baghdad, and the entrenched
and battle-hardened Sunni fighters in Anbar. Casualties on the American
side will predictably soar. The slaughter of innocent Iraqis in both
places, but particularly in the slums of Baghdad, will also mount,
because the way Americans fight is with heavy (and indiscriminate)
weapons and aerial bombardment, not hand-to-hand.
This carnage will not produce peace and stability in Iraq, but will
rather energize support for the resistance to US occupation, and in
turn, the influence of Iran, which backs that resistance.
Bush, in his address to the nation, continued the fiction that the
violence in Iraq is the work of Al Qaeda and "foreign fighters," though
the military brass, and soldiers on the ground, know otherwise.
As Lt. Gen (ret.) William Odom, commenting after Bush's address in an
interview on ABC News, put it, "I expected to hear a clearer view of
the enemy we are fighting. What I heard was `foreign fighters.' In
fact, there are several wars going on: US against many forces, Sunnis
against Shias, and Al Qaeda as allies of the Sunnis. So I dont think
he (Bush) understands the nature of the war."
Odom may be correct as far as our inarticulate and famously
uninquisitive president is concerned. You can't learn too much when
your entire research effort consists of scanning one-page executive
summaries each day. But Bush's advisers, and particularly his political
advisers, are well aware of what they are up against, and know that the
war is already a lost cause and one which at least 70 percent of the
American public have already decided should be ended.
Since they can't admit to that, they've decided to let some more young
Americans (and a hell of a lot of innocent Iraqi men, women and
children) take the bullets for them, in hopes that they can stretch out
the day of reckoning past January 19, 2009, when it will be the next
president's job to watch the helicopters departing from the US embassy
roof of the Green Zone.
Or maybe ABC commentator Mark Shields was onto something when he
suggested, following the Bush speech, that perhaps it was all a plan to
"give everything" to the Iraqi government, say it's the Iraqi
government's chance to get the country in order, and then blame the
failure on the Iraqis.
If so, it's just another dirty trick on the Americans who are being
sent into battle to kill and die as cover for Bush's debacle.