O’Hanlon comes clean with Greenwald

The Brookings Institution’s Michael O’Hanlon caused quite a stir a couple of weeks ago with an NYT op-ed, co-written with Ken Pollack, on U.S. “progress” in Iraq. The piece immediately became The Most Important Opinion Piece Ever, at least as far as Bush and his supporters are concerned.

The two, who recently returned from an eight-day visit to Iraq, argued that U.S. forces are “finally getting somewhere in Iraq.” O’Hanlon and Pollack added that they were “surprised by the gains” they saw, and now believe there’s a potential for “sustainable stability that both we and the Iraqis could live with.”

The White House, GOP presidential candidates, and the rest of the GOP establishment embraced the op-ed as gospel — and proof that any talk about troop withdrawal is premature. After all, the right said, O’Hanlon and Pollack work for the “liberal” Brookings Institution, and are “critics” of the war, at least as far as the media was concerned.

Within a few days of the NYT op-ed being published, the two started backpedaling just a bit, conceding the lack of political progress in Iraq, which was, of course, the original point of the surge. O’Hanlon shed additional light on his perspective in a fascinating interview with Salon’s Glenn Greenwald, which was published today.

The whole thing is worth reading, but Glenn emphasized a point that was omitted in the original Times piece, and went largely unmentioned in the ensuing coverage: O’Hanlon’s and Pollack’s perspective was shaped in large part by what the Pentagon allowed them to see.

GG: The first line of your Op-Ed said: “viewed from Iraq where we just spent the last eight days interviewing American and Iraqi military and civilian personnel…” How did you arrange the meetings with the Iraqi military and civilian personnel?

MO: Well, a number of those — and most of those were arranged by the U.S. military. So I’ll be transparent about that as well. These were to some extent contacts of Ken and Tony, but that was a lesser number of people. The predominant majority were people who we came into contact with through the itinerary the D.O.D. developed.

O’Hanlon was also fairly forthcoming about his support for the war.

As Glenn explained:

O’Hanlon was, from the beginning, a boisterous supporter of the invasion of Iraq. While he debated what the optimal war strategy was, once it became clear exactly what strategy Bush would use, O’Hanlon believed — and forcefully argued — that George Bush was doing the right thing by invading Iraq: “As you rightly reported — I was not a critic of this war. In the final analysis, I was a supporter.”

He believed with virtual certainty that Saddam Hussein possessed WMD and that that fact constituted the principal justification for the invasion. In February, 2003, O’Hanlon wrote — in a column entitled “Time for War” — that the “president was still convincing on his central point that the time for war is near” and decreed that “it is now time for multilateralists to support the president.” Not a single one of the television interviews Pollack and O’Hanlon gave about their Op-Ed included any reference to the fact that they were both supporters of the war and of the Surge.

It’s a very informative interview. Be sure to take a look.

This comports much more with Anthony Cordesman’s observation.

  • Were they snowed?

    Probably.

    They may be right or wrong. Who knows? No one can predict the future. The fate of Iraq will be obvious, …once it happens.

    However, it is largely immaterial. Military progress is nice, but political progress is necessary.

  • Nice to see that GG also exposed to the public the role of Haim Saban, who should be rights need to sign on as a paid agent of the Israeli Government. That Likud-neocon connection needs to constantly be pushed, because the neocons are not loyal to America – their loyalty lies elsewhere.

  • Greenwald asked the right questions and O’Hanlon, to his credit, seemed to acknowledge the legitimacy of Greenwald’s points. Of course, this is all after the fact and on a Salon blog — not in the NYT. I’d feel a lot better if O’Hanlon would make these clarifications himself, submit them to the Times, and then go on all the networks to sell a more honest telling the the way he sold his previous article. Somehow, I can’t see that happening…

  • For a different perspective on Iraq, here is an extract from this Sunday’s Guardian newspaper:

    Where once the war in Iraq was defined in conversations with these men by untenable ideas – bringing democracy or defeating al-Qaeda – these days the war in Iraq is defined by different ways of expressing the idea of being weary. It is a theme that is endlessly reiterated as you travel around Iraq. ‘The army is worn out. We are just keeping people in theatre who are exhausted,’ says a soldier working for the US army public affairs office who is supposed to be telling me how well things have been going since the ‘surge’ in Baghdad began.

    The full article can be found .

  • I waited a while cuz I didnt want to disrupt the thread. Greenwald’s book ‘A Tragic Legacy’ is relentless and well documented as to bush’s delusions and malleability, but fails to seriously address the pernicious nature of the agenda he follows like a puppy. Iraq is only the most obvious and not the most dectructive of the actions of this administration.

  • The predominant majority were people who we came into contact with through the itinerary the D.O.D. developed. — O’Hanlon

    Well, of course; they weren’t going to be allowed to wander around at will, even if they had had a will to wander around, unprotected. Half a second’s worth of thought would have made it obvious to anyone capable of that effort. It seems that the “lefty bloggers” (such as Benen) and their readers had no trouble connecting the dots. The fRight wing, OTOH, resorted to the old Polish method: “the drowning man will grasp even a straight razor (too save himself)”

    beep52, @#5,
    Agree on both counts. Nice of O’H to have answered Greenwald’s questions without hedging or further obfuscation. And it would have been nicer still, if o’H gathered all those new insights he got (about himself and his old op-ed) from the interview into a new NYT op-ed. Not gonna happen, though, or not before Nov ’08 at the earliest.

  • If only Greenwald’s interview would be published in a MSM outlet. It won’t.

    And the people are worse off for it. The damage is done, and that’s what the MSM puppet-masters knew would be the case. And they were right.

    Ignorance is strength.

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