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The inner Rummy

Fred Kaplan at Slate has one of the best commentaries I’ve seen on the Rumsfeld “Who am I and why am I here?” memo.

Another question might be added to this list: Have you ever read a more pathetic federal document in your life? What is being stated here can be summed up as follows: We’ll probably win the battle for Afghanistan and Iraq (or, more precisely, it’s “pretty clear” we “can win” it, “in one way or another” after “a long, hard slog”), but we’re losing the struggle for hearts and minds in the broader war against terrorism. Not only that, we don’t know how to measure winning or losing, we don’t have a plan for winning it, we don’t know how to fashion a plan, and the bureaucratic agencies put in charge of waging this war and drawing up these plans may be inherently incapable of doing so.

Rumsfeld’s memo makes plain that our top officials suffer no illusions about the war. They are trying only to sell illusions to the rest of us. The leaking of Rumsfeld’s memo puts a tailspin on the sales pitch.

Where’s the rest of the media on this? Most of what I’ve seen has been an attempt to decipher the mechanics of the internal infighting that led to the memo being published (apparently “leaked” is not the appropriate term).

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