Daily Report
E-Journal
Back Issues
Our Mission
Contact Us
Subscribe
Support Us
Links
Documents
About Us
Exit Poll
Search Archive
|
 TheatersBooks
|
Pentagon data reveal grim reality of "surge" —and "resistance"
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Sat, 09/29/2007 - 03:39.
Juan Cole's Informed Comment blog Sept. 24 has an enlightening commentary on a Sept. 20 AP story about the Pentagon's latest report to Congress on supposed "progress" in Iraq. Cole writes that the report, entitled "Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq," "has two graphics that should make us very suspicious about all the declarations that the troop escalation or 'surge' has significantly reduced violence in Iraq... The first graph shows average daily casualties (dead and wounded badly enough to go to hospital) by month in Iraq." This graph indicates that such casualties have (if you will) surged from just over 50 in January 2006 to just shy of 150 in August 2007, with a slight dip in June of this year. In nearly every month, "Coalition Forces" is the smallest category, "Iraqi Security Forces" the next largest, and "Civilians" the big majority. Writes Cole:
The second graph gives the number of attacks per month. Notes Cole: "Obviously, a lot of attacks produce no casualties. Mortars land uselessly in the desert, e.g." Here, in contrast, "Attacks Targeting Coalition Forces" are the big majority each month, with the remainder split about evenly between "Attacks Targeting Iraqi Security Forces" and "Attacks Targeting Civilians." There is an obvious explanation for the discrepancy between the two graphs. Someone taking a pot-shot at a US soldier at a checkpoint counts as an "attack," even if he misses his mark. Whereas a market-place bomb that kills 20 Iraqi civilians also counts as a single "attack." Cole masterfully deconstructs the propaganda of an effective "surge":
That is indeed the message in these figures that mainstream America needs to hear. However, there is another message here that certain elements of the anti-war movement need to hear—such as Troops Out Now!, which states: "It is time for the antiwar movement to acknowledge the absolute and unconditional right of the Iraqi people to resist the occupation of their country without passing judgment on their methods of resistance. Even the founding charter of the United Nations clearly affirms the right of an occupied people to resist by force of arms." The UN charter does not affirm the right of an occupied people to massively kill each other on the basis of their religious affiliation. These sectors of what we call the idiot left refuse to acknowledge that the Iraq conflict is now first and foremost a sectarian civil war, and only secondarily a "resistance" struggle. Idiot left elements have intentionally misconstrued Pentagon data before. In October 2005, we dissected a piece by another idiot left faction, the International Socialist Organization (ISO), cheering on the Iraqi "resistance" and attempting to absolve it of massively targeting civilians. The ISO, we wrote:
Similarly, we anticipate that idiot leftists will isolate the second of the two graphs Cole cites to absolve the "resistance" of sectarian slaughter—without providing the first graph. This is a sleazy trick, but it will be done. Count on it. The most criminal thing about this denial on the American left is that there really is a legitimate civil resistance struggle in Iraq that urgently needs our solidarity. Supporting the armed insurgents constitutes a betrayal of this struggle. As we wrote in 2005:
See our last posts on Iraq, and the politics of escalation and insurgency. |
google2
|
Petraeus acknowledges Ramadan offensive
From the Los Angeles Times, Sept. 29:
Oh? The Pentagon graphs discussed above only show data through August, just before the start of Ramadan. But they indicate the level of attacks is no lower (much less substantially lower) since the surge than in the same period last year. Attacks in August '07 were somewhat less than in August '06. But the reverse is true of July and June.
Yet the LAT's sub-head says Petraeus "notes"—rather than "claims"—that attacks have dropped.
Isn't it obvious to the media yet that this guy is cooking the books?