For the better part of the last couple of years, top Bush administration officials, including the president, have tried to assuage discontent over the war in Iraq by drawing a parallel between the conflict and other, more successful, wars from our past.
The latest is Donald Rumsfeld’s attempt to compare Iraq with the Cold War.
[Speaking at the Harry S. Truman Presidential Museum and Library, Rumsfeld said] that America’s impatience and political division over the war on terror mirrors disagreements during the Cold War. He said that during the Cold War the nation was tired after World War II and not in the mood “for more global involvement.”
During the Cold War, he said, “the future then too was unclear, the tasks often seemed insurmountable, and it was difficult to view things with the perspective that only history can offer.”
He said President Truman and other American leaders pressed ahead in the confrontation against communism, bolstering democracies in Western Europe.
For those keeping score at home, that brings the total of comparisons between Iraq and other historic military campaigns, to six, following Korea, the Revolutionary War, World War I, the Civil War, and World War II.
It’s a debatable point, of course, but Rumsfeld’s latest may be the least sensible yet.
Rumsfeld said he sees “impatience and political division over the war on terror.” He’s mistaken; there’s impatience and political division over the war in Iraq, which didn’t have anything to do with fighting terrorism until the administration bungled the occupation. For that matter, the “political division” over the Cold War was practically non-existent among the two parties for the better part of two generations.
Without getting into a lengthy historical review of the Cold War, Rumsfeld’s analogy is a stretch. Regardless, this constant search for a parallel that will help change the public’s mood is rather silly. The war in Iraq is a disaster, filled with tragic incompetence, dishonesty, poor planning, and a foolish ideology.
If the administration is convinced a historical comparison is necessary, an unpleasant example comes to mind.