Sole-searching from the shoe-thrower of Baghdad

Last Update: 2023-03-16 00:00:00- Source: Iraq News

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The big idea

Sole-searching from the shoe-thrower of Baghdad

The official White House transcript for Dec. 14, 2008, records it as an anodyne “(audience interruption.)” For the people in the room, it was anything but.

Midway through a news conference in a palace in Baghdad, Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zaidi stood up, unprompted, and hurled one of his shoes, then the other, at President George W. Bush. (Bush successfully ducked.) 

  • Other Iraqi journalists grappled with him, then Iraqi security hauled him off in a melee — we could hear his cries of pain, muffled from behind a door, throughout part of the news conference. We found spatters of his blood on the carpet after the Q&A.
  • Reporters on the U.S. side, me included, hunched in our chairs — it’s never good to be between Secret Service agents and a threat to the president. Some of us tried to dictate the news over the phone. We tried to keep our eyes on Bush. Our job.

The shoe-throwing was a remarkable show of hatred and disrespect. Much of the Muslim world sees shoes (especially the soles) as unclean. “This is a gift from the Iraqis; this is the farewell kiss, you dog!” Zaidi shouted in Arabic.

He has no regrets. “This scene stands as proof that one day a simple person was capable of saying no to that arrogant person with all his power, tyranny, arms, media, money and authority, and to say that ‘you (Bush) were wrong,’” he told Reuters in a piece out Tuesday.

“You feel bitterness as you see people's pain 24 hours a day,” said Zaidi, who became something of a cult figure after the incident.

GOP’s 2024 platform: No regime change

His reflections came with the world coming up on the 20th anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq for the purposes of ousting dictator Saddam Hussein. It’s March 19 if your benchmark is Bush’s address to the nation, or March 20 if you’re by airstrikes on Baghdad in local time.

The war, waged on the false charge Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction (or WMDs, which groups nuclear, chemical and biological arms), cost countless Iraqi civilian lives and trillions of American dollars, while more than 4,500 U.S. military personnel paid the ultimate price, and more than 30,000 were wounded.

  • At home, one of the conflict’s effects has been to douse enthusiasm for using force to bring about “regime change” in foreign countries, a euphemism that means “toppling their leadership with our military.”

The GOP’s current mind-our-business mind-set contrasts pretty sharply with where the Republican Party was 20 years ago. Just to jog your memory: Some conservatives were loudly calling for toppling Iran’s government even after Iraq’s WMDs proved to be a mirage.

In the context of a questionnaire about America’s Ukraine policy, Fox News Channel’s Tucker Carlson asked prominent potential candidates for the GOP’s 2024 presidential nomination whether America should seek “regime change” in Russia.

Choosing Russia stacks the deck a bit. Changing regime behavior? Sure. That’s the goal of the U.S.-led sanctions against Russia. But regime change? It’s going to be hard to find someone to run on a campaign platform of trying to use military force to overthrow a leader who possesses enough of a nuclear arsenal to turn America into a radioactive ash heap.

Separating from the past

Still, 20 years after the cheerleading for the “shock and awe” airstrike campaign with which the Pentagon began the war, the unanimity against “regime change” is notable. Not one of the potential candidates Carlson asked came out in favor of making that policy toward Moscow.

And laced through the answers are very obvious snipes at what used to be the GOP foreign policy establishment.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, for instance, said “[a] policy of 'regime change’ in Russia (no doubt popular among the DC foreign policy interventionists).” It’s not, in fact, popular, but the point is that he tied regime change generally to traditional hawks.

(It’s a little curious that Vivek Ramaswamy omits any mention of Iraq even as he rails against intelligence officials with a “track record of being blatantly wrong about ‘intelligence’ assessments” and cites Libya, Yemen and Afghanistan as examples of U.S.-driven regime change gone awry.)

You can talk the talk, but can you vote the vote

This week will test how far the GOP has come: The Senate is expected to hold its first votes on repealing Authorizations for Use of Military Force (AUMFs) against Iraq that date back to 1991 and 2002. The latter effectively was a vote to allow Bush to go to war in 2003 to topple Saddam. But while that dictator was executed in 2006, both Barack Obama and Trump cited the 2002 AUMF to justify military operations in Iraq.

The Senate Foreign Relations recently voted 13-8 to scrap both measures. The full Senate could hold a procedural vote on Thursday and a final ballot early next week. Then it’s on to the House.

And then perhaps to President Biden.

Politics-but-not

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Biden will depart Las Vegas at 3:30 p.m. to return to the White House.

In closing

In the room where it happened ????

Thanks for reading. See you tomorrow.

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