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The New York Times
30 April 2004
In Front of Your Nose
By PAUL KRUGMAN
We are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then,
when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show
that we were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for
an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief
bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield." That's from George
Orwell's 1946 essay "In Front of Your Nose." It seems especially relevant right
now, as we survey the wreckage of America's Iraq adventure.
Tomorrow a year will have passed since George Bush's "Mission Accomplished"
carrier landing. Throughout that year ‹ right up to the surge in violence this
month ‹ administration officials assured us that things were going well in Iraq.
Living standards, they said, were steadily improving. The resistance, they
insisted, consisted of a handful of dead-enders aided by a few foreign
infiltrators ‹ and each lull in attacks brought pronouncements that the campaign
against the insurgents had turned the corner.
So they lied to us; what else is new? But there's more at stake here than the
administration's credibility. The official story line portrayed a virtuous
circle of nation-building, one that could eventually lead to a democratic Iraq,
allied with the U.S. In fact, we seem to be faced with a vicious circle, in
which a deteriorating security situation undermines reconstruction, and the lack
of material progress adds to popular discontent. Can this situation be saved?
Even among harsh critics of the administration's Iraq policy, the usual view is
that we have to finish the job. You've heard the arguments: We broke it; we
bought it. We can't cut and run. We have to stay the course.
I understand the appeal of those arguments. But I'm worried about the
arithmetic.
All the information I've been able to get my hands on indicates that the
security situation in Iraq is really, really bad. It's not a good sign when, a
year into an occupation, the occupying army sends for more tanks. Western
civilians have retreated to armed enclaves. U.S. forces are strong enough to
defend those enclaves, and probably strong enough to keep essential supplies
flowing. But we don't have remotely enough troops to turn the vicious circle
around. The Iraqi forces that were supposed to fill the security gap collapsed ‹
or turned against us ‹ at the first sign of trouble.
And all of the proposals one hears for resolving this ugly situation seem to be
either impractical or far behind the curve.
Some say we should send more troops. But the U.S. military doesn't have more
troops to send, unless it resorts to extreme measures, like withdrawing a large
part of the forces currently in South Korea. Did I mention that North Korea is
building nuclear weapons, and may already have eight?
Others say we should seek more support from other countries. There may once have
been a time ‹ say, last summer ‹ when the U.S. could have struck a deal: by
ceding a lot of authority to the U.N., we might have been able to persuade
countries with large armies, like India, to contribute large numbers of
peacekeeping troops. But it's hard to imagine that anyone will now send
significant forces into the Iraqi cauldron.
Some pin their hopes on a political solution: they believe that violence will
subside if the U.N. is allowed to appoint a caretaker government that Iraqis
don't view as a U.S. puppet.
Let's hope they're right. But bear in mind that right now the U.S. is still
planning to hand over "sovereignty" to a body, yet to be named, that will have
hardly any power at all. For practical purposes, the U.S. ambassador will be
running the country. Americans may believe that everything will change on June
30, but Iraqis are unlikely to be fooled. And by the way, much of the Arab world
believes that we've been committing war crimes in Falluja.
I don't have a plan for Iraq. I strongly suspect, however, that all the plans
you hear now are irrelevant. If America's leaders hadn't made so many bad
decisions, they might have had a chance to shape Iraq to their liking. But that
window closed many months ago.
E-mail: krugman@nytimes.com
Copyright 2004 The New York Times
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