[JackalsOfSamarra.Com / Benjamin Roberts]
Buckle up for a fast-paced ride of military confrontation, cloak and dagger subterfuge, and assassination attempts. A contemporary scenario where fact and fiction collide. Jackals of Samarra was written in the period immediately preceding the Gulf War. It was just as contemporary then as it is now, as borne out by today's headlines of naval vessels falling victim to terrorist bombs. The Gulf region is a perpetual cauldron, ready to boil over at a moment's notice. The book sets up shop here and uses a scenario of fact and fiction that wends its way back and forth from the Middle East to the West.

Bush Tells Americans To Take A Flying Leap
by Benjamin Roberts, [IMAGE]2007

JackalsOfSamarra.Com / Benjamin Roberts] How many times does George Bush have to tell us in America to take a flying leap before we finally get it? Apparently, a lot. He did so this past Sunday on ABC's 60 Minutes. The segment was advertised and pumped up with terms like "extraordinary' and "unfettered access,' in that it would show unprecedented interviews aboard the Presidential helicopter and inside the usually off limits Camp David presidential retreat, and that it would come with frank questioning by 60 Minutes newsman, Scott Pelley. The interview did as promised. There was close-up access. The questions were frank. However, the subject was the same old Bush complete with tired phrases, leaps of logic, and incredible utterances.

The interview centered mainly on Bush's recent decision to send 22,000 more American troops into the fray in Iraq. The Bush Administration is for some reason calling this a "troop surge.' Such phrases are used quite often, especially in military adventures and misadventures, to disarm and confuse a curious citizenry. The use of the phrase "troop surge' is intended to bring to mind pictures of a tsunami or tidal wave sweeping into Iraq and saving the day. You know, like John Wayne and his posse riding into town and eradicating the malcontents. But we in America need to think of this: tsunamis and tidal waves leave behind untold misery, destruction, and death of innocent life. Ask the unfortunate souls in Thailand and New Orleans. We went into Iraq presumably to save and deliver the Iraqis. A huge number of them have perished by our hand in the course of this war. Now this "troop surge' is supposed to do what? Save them some more?

The use of the term "troop surge' ranks right up there with other all-time favorite misleading phrases like, "Shock and Awe,' "fog of war,' "battlefield combatants,' and "collateral damage.' And we must remember that every one of that 20,000 "troop surge' is the child or parent of a household somewhere in America. Not very long ago Bush was fond of whipping to death the phrase "stay the course.' It has since dropped out of fashion because it was totally ridiculous to continue using it in the face of the depressing disaster and train wreck that is Iraq.. Now even though the phrase has gone, Bush wants to continue and expand the mission by sending more troops. We set a course that led us to war in Iraq. We have held the course by staying there despite huge setbacks and descent into chaos. Now we are adding more troops to the effort. Is this not a continuation of "stay the course?' You see what I mean when I say the interview revealed the same old tired Bush.

A part of the 60 Minutes interview involved George Bush going to a closed door interview with families whose children and parents have fallen in this war. Following this, Bush came out to be questioned by Scott Pelley on what went on. When Bush came out of that encounter his demeanor showed some remarkable things. The cadence of his voice seemed strained and distressed. He seemed flustered and totally out of sorts. Honestly, I have to say that Bush appeared to have been moved by the encounter with the families. But not moved in the way one would imagine a Commander In Chief to be by such an event. One would expect possibly a display of compassion, of soberness, or possibly resoluteness and determination on hearing what the families had to say. If those in America advocating against this war can be likened to chickenhawks, as they usually are, then Bush came away from the families looking like Chicken Little. Befuddled, in over his head, and wondering what to do. The man looked genuine at this point. But that is where it ended. Because following this, Bush returned back to his advisers and managers. And this is where we see a different Bush, as revealed by the ongoing questioning by Scott Pelley.

Pelley, in a different setting in the interview, asks Bush about his decision to send more troops to Iraq, explaining how Americans are opposed to him and his decision, and wants to know what Bush thinks of this. Bush responds that it does not bother him that Americans dislike his decision and actions in the undertaking. This is not the same Bush who emerged from a meeting all by his lonesome with families of fallen soldiers. There he displayed what seemed to be, "Whadda I do? Whadda I do?' Bush has had time to sit down with his advisers and managers. And despite the Iraqi Commission report calling for withdrawal from Iraq, despite the recent elections where Americans have clearly said "we want out of Iraq,' and despite growing opposition to this Iraqi misadventure by military types, Bush response is very different. Gone is the Chicken Little who becomes flustered, out of sorts, and even a wee bit human, when he comes face to face, on his own, with those families. The essence of America. Here we see a propped up, assertive Bush operating comfortably from a distance. From here he couldn't care less what the America thinks or wants. From here he has four words for us. In this case it appears to be "Take a flying leap.'

And keep in mind that this is not the first time that George Bush has, in essence told us to take a flying leap. Leading up to war in Iraq, or shortly after, he was interviewed by Bob Woodward. One question dealt with his refusal to hand over documents to the General Accounting Office to shed light on his Administration 's Department of Energy dealings with Enron. Bush insisted that he was not giving over the documents and added "I'm the President of the United States. No one tells me what to do.' In other words, "take a flying leap America.' At the outset of hostilities in Iraq Bush and Rumsfeld were warned by the world, and America, to be mindful of the Geneva Convention in dealing with prisoners of war. They both scoffed at such oversight and basically told us all to take a flying leap because America was now in charge. The result was Abu Ghraib. The worst stain on American credibility in ages. It is clear that whenever we let Bush have his way and tell us to take a flying leap this country suffers almost irreparable damage.

JackalsOfSamarra.Com / Benjamin Roberts

Maryland

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