Rich on Rumsfeld

Donald Rumsfeld’s suddenly-infamous remarks last week to the American Legion’s national convention has been scrutinized and analyzed from just about every angle, but the Defense Secretary’s remarks haven’t been truly put to the test until [tag]Frank Rich[/tag] is done with him.

Last week the man who gave us “stuff happens” and “you go to war with the Army you have” outdid himself. In an instantly infamous address to the American Legion, he likened critics of the Iraq debacle to those who “ridiculed or ignored” the rise of the Nazis in the 1930’s and tried to appease Hitler. Such Americans, he said, suffer from a “moral or intellectual confusion” and fail to recognize the “new type of fascism” represented by terrorists. Presumably he was not only describing the usual array of “Defeatocrats” but also the first President Bush, who had already been implicitly tarred as an appeaser by Tony Snow last month for failing to knock out Saddam in 1991. […]
Saddam
Here’s how brazen Mr. [tag]Rumsfeld[/tag] was when he invoked Hitler’s appeasers to score his cheap points: Since Hitler was photographed warmly shaking Neville Chamberlain’s hand at Munich in 1938, the only image that comes close to matching it in epochal obsequiousness is the December 1983 photograph of Mr. Rumsfeld himself in Baghdad, warmly shaking the hand of Saddam Hussein in full fascist regalia. Is the defense secretary so self-deluded that he thought no one would remember a picture so easily Googled on the Web? Or worse, is he just too shameless to care?

If only I had a nickel for every time I asked myself that one….

Mr. Rumsfeld didn’t go to Baghdad in 1983 to tour the museum. Then a private citizen, he had been dispatched as an emissary by the Reagan administration, which sought to align itself with Iraq in the Iran-Iraq war. [tag]Saddam[/tag] was already a notorious thug. Well before Mr. Rumsfeld’s trip, Amnesty International had reported the dictator’s use of torture — “beating, burning, sexual abuse and the infliction of electric shocks” — on hundreds of political prisoners. Dozens more had been summarily executed or had “disappeared.” American intelligence agencies knew that Saddam had used chemical weapons to gas both Iraqi Kurds and Iranians.

According to declassified State Department memos detailing Mr. Rumsfeld’s Baghdad meetings, the American visitor never raised the subject of these crimes with his host. (Mr. Rumsfeld has since claimed otherwise, but that is not supported by the documents, which can be viewed online at George Washington University’s National Security Archive.) Within a year of his visit, the American mission was accomplished: Iraq and the United States resumed diplomatic relations for the first time since Iraq had severed them in 1967 in protest of American backing of Israel in the Six-Day War.

In his speech last week, Mr. Rumsfeld paraphrased Winston Churchill: Appeasing tyrants is “a bit like feeding a crocodile, hoping it would eat you last.” He can quote Churchill all he wants, but if he wants to self-righteously use that argument to smear others, the record shows that Mr. Rumsfeld cozied up to the crocodile of Baghdad as smarmily as anyone. To borrow the defense secretary’s own formulation, he suffers from moral confusion about Saddam.

It’s easy to forget — despite the video, the Rumsfeld-[tag]Hussein[/tag] meeting still doesn’t get a lot of play — but the man who is now lecturing the reality-based community about “[tag]appeasement[/tag],” sat down with a brutal madman who had recently used WMD, in the hopes of striking some kind of deal with the dictator.

And we’re morally confused?

Not only did he meet with Saddam, he expressly did not bring up the issue of the Iraqis having used poison gas on the battlefield in the Iran-Iraq War for the first time since the First World War and in explicit violation of the Geneva Conventions (I guess that merely shows how much experience Donnie-boy has in ignoring the Conventions). US intelligence knew definitely that Saddam had done this, but it was decided by the Advisors to the Sainted Ronnie that nothing would be said since it was more important to overthrow Iran (and besides, what good white Christian Republican believer in the Empire of Godly American Goodness gives a good goddamn how many of those Third World ooga-boogas get killed anyway?). The following year, after he used gas against the Kurds at Halabja, the Reagan Administration again pointedly ignored this crime against humanity.

It’s said that a person really can’t see a moral failing in someone else unless they have committed the same moral crime. I guess that’s why Republicans are so good at spotting “appeasers,” since they’re the greatest appeasers of dictatorships in history (never put morality between a Republican and someone with money). Wasn’t it a Republican (of course it was, Jeannie Kirkpatrick) who said we had to choose fascist authoritarians over “soft’ democrats who wouldn’t be sufficiently tough against those totalitarian commies???

The one good thing that has happened this week is how the SCLM has stood up and called a spade a spade with this worthless scumbag, and have pointed this out, whether the American people know it or not.

I wonder what the collective blood-alcohol level was at that VFW convention when he spoke?

  • Ah… twenty-three years ago….
    When we were young and hopeful
    And wagged the world’s tail with masculine handshakes.

    We were such virile examples of testosterone back then…
    Top-of-the-Hill stuff…
    Our fur and claws and fangs…
    Black shiny and white lustrous.

    Now look at us today…
    Both of us…
    Fallen from grace and grunting in ignominy.

    Still we both have some fight left in our dinged carapaces…
    And we still continue to defy our vilifiers,
    And vilify our deniers.

    Yes we may be defeated and defunct,
    But still… we yet dare to join the battle again,
    Testosterone patches on our scrotums
    Sagging chins held high,
    Flaccid arms akimbo,
    Our minds apoplectic with insolent rage.
    Our banner yet pawing the sky:

    “Citizens of the world:
    Dare not doubt the omniscience of your war Gods!”

  • Speaking of appeasing dictators… An excellent article in yesterday’s Wash.Po (Outlook section) by Craig Murray, “Her Majesty’s Man in Tashkent”:
    http://tinyurl.com/eb9vq

    A “must read”. Among choice quotes:

    In other words, when the prisoner was boiled to death that summer, U.S. taxpayers had helped heat the water.

    And tht’s much more recent than story than appeasing Saddam. So I’d as soon not hear Rummy talk about appeasement of dictators, moral confusion, etc. He has no leg to stand on.

  • If only I had a nickel for every time Rich wrote a brilliant, hard-hitting column. He is one of the few, and most devastating, in the MSM today. I used to send Time Magazine his columns (in the days I used to subscribe to Time) to show them what journalism should be.

  • Rumsfeld is neither incompetent, inexperienced nor misguided. He’s flat-out criminally insane. That Congress has yet to rescind its approval of him as Defense Secretary, at the very least, shows that they are also criminally insane.

  • “If they want to, they can study the thing” already, Hatch asserted. He also said he had some problems with the president’s proposals to expand wiretapping. If there was a real opposition party in the US this type of hypocrisy would be plastered all over country!

  • If we can refer to the bombing of Pearl Harbor as “a day of infamy,” then can we not, likewise, refer to the current Defense Secretary as “a dimwit of infamy?”

  • Me thinks I remember Rumsfeld baking, or presenting Saddam, with a cake upon meeting him in Bagdad back in ’83. I wonder what flavor that appeasement was?

    Vote ’em out in ’06 and ’08! -Kevo

  • Dear President Bush,

    Please do something positive: fire Secretary Rumsfeld. He has not served the country well.

    I realize you keep him around because he’s one of the few people left that make even you look just a bit good, but, quite frankly, your reputation is water under the bridge too. It’s time to stop worrying about weather you look like a man, remember the oath you took, and act like a man.

    You have endangered the security and welfare of the country with you reckless disregard in Iraq and at home. It’s now time to admit to your mistakes. It’s now time to work with the new Congress and take a new direction to fix as much of the damage as possible.

    It’s time to cut and run from the neo-con idiots.

    Your boss,

    John Q. Public

  • James Wolcott has a good comment – directly at the warbloggers, but also at BushCo for their war rhetoric this past week:

    I have a theory on why the War Party rhetoric has gone skittish and skyhigh, a theory based on casual observation of New York streetfights (streetfights everywhere, really). What I’ve noticed is that the trash talk in a street altercation escalates in proportion to the expanding distance between the two protagonists. When two potential fighters are almost literally in each other’s faces, their words are few, their expressions fierce. It’s when the fist fight has been avoided (or tabled) and they’re putting distance between each other that the taunting becomes louder and more florid. “Get back in my face again, motherfucker, and I’ll pound your face into hamburger meat, motherfucker.” “Come back and say that to my face, lame-ass motherfucker.” Etc. You can supply your own David Mamet expletives and challenges. One of my favorite verbal showdowns occurred on 14th Street one rainy day when two non-pugilists kept up the trash talk until one of them said, “You’re carrying an umbrella, motherfucker–how tough can you be?” Which I must say got quite a chortle from us idle bystanders.

    Now what has this to do with the posings of our militaristic muscle mouths?

    This: It is an index of the frustration and impotence they’re experiencing at not getting their way. They’re waging rhetorical escalation because de-escalation is the unacknowledged order of the day, and there’s nothing they can do about it.

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