June 22, 2006

Duran: "With Friends Like These..."

For years we have been told we are fighting the Bad Guys. Al Qaeda. Terrorists. Fighting them over there so we wouldn't fight them over here. So we fought and died, trained our Iraqi allies, and depleted our resources to provide the Iraqis with democracy and freedom. Just a few days ago, 2 of our finest were tortured and brutally murdered by evil men drawn to Iraq for the sole purpose of killing Americans. Never before has the face of our global enemy revealed itself in these acts of depravity. Against this foe, we were the Freedom Fighters, the liberators in the "noble cause". It was our duty to rid Iraq and the world of their savagery and lawlessness. It was a Global War on Terror, after all, and they were the enemies of civilization.

Why does the U.S. inprison them here while our "ally" seeks to pardon them over there?

On one hand, the U.S. government is fighting tooth and nail to indefinitely hold enemy combatants of the same sort who mercilessly tortured and killed PFC's Menchaca and Tucker. The Geneva Convention has been cast aside to keep these terrorist away from the "central front of the war on terror". Meanwhile the Iraqis, with our acquiescence, are considering the pardon of these same killers right on our front lines. In the words of the Iraqi leadership, those that kill Americans are guilty only of "legitimate acts of resistance and defending their homeland." That same high-ranking official went on to say, "These people will be pardoned definitely, I believe". There is a contradiction here, and it doesn't make sense.

What has changed?

What has changed is the element of time for we have over-stayed our welcome and purpose. Now, after years of "stay the course" and 2,500 of our best killed, our allies on this Global War on Terror now have "turned the corner" on us claiming that those who shed American blood are now the Freedom Fighters. Killing Americans is now their "noble cause". Liberate and leave has changed to liberate and languish and those that killed PFC Menchaca and PFC Tucker can expect a full pardon providing they had not shed Iraqi blood if the Iraqi government has its way.

How did we go from liberators to "the enemy"?

Liberators liberate and leave. That's what we do and we are good at it. But because we have not begun to drawdown and redeploy as we should, Jack Murtha's toughly worded but honest assessment that we have "become the enemy" has become tragically real to the families of PFC's Menchaca and Tucker. When the majority of the Iraqi people believe it is justified to kill Americans, this pardon/amnesty would make the torture and killing of servicemen like those young men legal. The proposed Iraqi pardon of those who have shed American blood is concrete proof of his honest assertion and will cost us lives and credibility. We know we are not the enemy. We know we were there to give the Iraqis a better life, but a line has to be drawn somewhere when the very same Iraqis believe we are "the enemy" and their government takes steps to legitimize that belief.

...Who Needs Enemies?

We should pull out to the periphery, test the Iraqi national will and allow a government emboldened to pardon whomever they please to finally stand for themselves. If they falter we will be close enough to strike in the same way we struck Zarquawi but far enough away to cease being targets. But to keep our troops where they are, in the service of a foreign government where American lives are just collateral damage is irresponsible and indefensible. We must not allow the enemy that has destroyed the lives of our servicemen and their families a chance to torture and kill again and we must not allow the Iraqi government to legitimize evil in order to keep a fractured country together. With friends like that, who needs enemies?

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