Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the former top commander in Iraq, gave a speech last week that gained considerable attention for its blistering criticism of the conduct of the war. He called the war plan “catastrophically flawed” and the war itself a “catastrophic failure” and “a nightmare with no end in sight.”
But as Spencer Ackerman argues persuasively in a piece for The American Prospect, the Sanchez speech was not an example of another general falling on his sword but rather a bitter and self-serving broadside from a figure disgraced by the war:
Sanchez’s speech is very different from the criticisms offered during the so-called “general’s revolt” of 2006. Those accounts indicted the strategy of Donald Rumsfeld, the wisdom of commanders like Sanchez, and the opportunism of the administration as a whole. Sanchez’s occasionally hysterical speech represents a triumph of embitterment, coupled with a cynical willingness to blame practically every civilian institution — prowar, antiwar, whatever — for the war’s failures. “Our nation has not focused on the greatest challenge of our lifetime,” Sanchez said. “The political and economic elements of power must get beyond the politics to ensure the survival of America.” That’s right: the survival of America.
Contrary to its billing, this was no mere attack on the administration. Sanchez’s speech is perfectly positioned to accelerate the stabbed-in-the-back myth of explaining the war now emerging on the right. That corrosive idea, revived most recently by revisionist Vietnam historian Mark Moyar, holds that sybaritic and feckless civilians recklessly squander the hard-won gains of the military.
The current crop of right-wingers is too close to the Iraq war to accept Sanchez’s vituperation, since it contains an attack on Bush. But as the war recedes and the need for scapegoating expands — particularly if conservatives lose the White House next year — Sanchez’s speech reads like a foundational text for an aggrieved conservative worldview that the war was too virtuous for the country that fought it. And it makes a lot of sense that it’s Sanchez, the most disgraced general of the entire war, who issued this j’accuse.