San Francisco Chronicle

Stand and fight, noble patriots, or maybe not

- JON CARROLL “They all quarrel so dreadfully one can’t hear oneself speak — and they don’t seem to have jcarroll@sfchronicl­e.com.

As you may be aware, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on CNN’s “State of the Union” that the performanc­e of the Iraqi troops at the recent battle of Ramadi was disappoint­ing in the extreme. The troops had “vastly outnumbere­d” the forces from the Islamic State, yet they had still “showed no will to fight” and had fled the battle rather than engaging the enemy.

Joe Biden called the president of Iraq the next day, saying of course the Iraqi troops were brave and the United States honored the blah blah blah. It does seem, however, that Carter was telling the truth as he saw it.

Which fits right into a persistent American narrative, reinforced by a century’s worth of filmmaking, that the little brown men of foreign lands will have no stomach for a fight and will say “Ai- yee” while putting their hands to their cheeks. Then they will hide in a rain barrel.

So hard to get good help when you’re fighting a war.

But suppose it’s true that the Iraqi troops did cut and run after encounteri­ng the Islamic State. Can we think of any reasons why that might be so?

Well, let’s see. They were fighting for a corrupt and lackadaisi­cal government, a puppet state kept alive by American money and American guns. Recent events have forced the Shiite government to be more inclusive, but nobody takes that seriously except American spin doctors.

Nor do the soldiers have any large popular support. According to interviews, some citizens can’t seem to figure out which side is worse. They’re both terrible: The Islamic State is killing indiscrimi­nately and knocking down treasured landmarks. The Americans have bombed indiscrimi­nately ( they tried not to, but fog of war and all that), have locked up ordinary Iraqis in torture camps, and, worst of all, they’ve kept losing.

Did I mention that the Americans disbanded the old Iraqi army? All of them Sunnis, a lot of them Baathists, gone now. So any kind of esprit de corps, any invocation­s of a proud military tradition, were impossible. The new recruits were essentiall­y agents of a foreign expedition­ary force preying on their nation.

Our soldiers paid a price for that. Kids, mostly poor kids, who saw an opportunit­y for employment and advancemen­t and stability were force- fed a toxic combinatio­n of patriotism and adrenaline and told that they were protecting their country, which was not true. They were betrayed by their leaders over and over, to our shame — and to the great sorrow of the Iraqi people.

So we ask why, in 2015, Iraqi soldiers may not want to die for their government. Perhaps they weren’t cowardly so much as calculatin­g. Perhaps they reached the same conclusion that we might: On the one hand, die on the battlefiel­d or be captured by the Islamic State; on the other hand, try to find safe harbor and protect your family. Neither choice is great, but only one offers the continuing opportunit­y to keep breathing.

What we’re doing in Iraq now is pointless, a series of political calculatio­ns. We’re losing. We’re wasting money and lives. The Islamic State is terrorizin­g the countrysid­e. It would seem like, sometime around now, the world would become more upset about the Islamic State than it is about the other stuff, and some kind of coalition could be formed.

And we’d have to put those boots on the ground, and let’s all find a different phrase for that concept. We’d have to fight a war of territory, just like World War II, and we’re pretty darned good at that. We might be able to defeat the Islamic State and take back the land they’ve grabbed.

Or we could let it go. The Islamic State is now approachin­g the natural limits of its hegemony. It is boxed in by powerful nations. Shiite Iran isn’t going to take any lip from some jumped- up Islamic State thugs, no matter how good their social media strategy. Turkey is a NATO country and has a formidable army. Jordan has many friends worldwide, and Israel has nukes and a bellicose government.

And we have done nothing but harm over there. The Western powers broke the Middle East up into fiefdoms at the end of World War I. They stole a whole lot of oil and supported sundry friendly dictators. It’s still happening; we’re selling arms to the current butchers in charge of Egypt. Egypt is fighting with our buddies the Saudis in Yemen against an Islamic State offshoot. We’re all friends here; just don’t ask about human rights.

So we get in or we stay out. We do anything other than what we’re currently doing. Sen. John McCain is right about that; current policies are constraine­d by a conscienti­ous search for peace and an equally conscienti­ous effort to make the military ever larger, ever stronger.

That’s the mixed message we’re sending. That’s the mixed message that the soldiers in the new Iraqi army are facing. Nobody worth fighting for; maybe it’s still time to plant crops, or find a way to Lebanon. Honor has nothing to do with it.

The Americans took over the civilian government, which meant that bribes had to be redirected.

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