Liberals (and other Iraq skeptics) unite: take the Krauthammer Challenge!

In Friday’s column, Charles Krauthammer (who’s a columnist I actually have a fair amount of respect for, most days) posted the following blooper in defense of the Bush administration:

Yeah, I had the same reaction you surely did. Pretty much everyone expected a short war to depose Saddam, whether they were for or against it. And everyone with half a brain expected that the real difficulties would begin once we’d ‘won’. The only uncertainty was what form those difficulties would take.

What I’d like to do is find out how many of us here called it in advance: that is, (a) before the shooting started on March 19, you predicted that it wouldn’t take long to end Saddam’s rule in Iraq, and (b) before the statues toppled on April 9, you predicted that the aftermath was going to be dangerous.

My thought is to send a letter to the editor saying just how many people on my favorite message board (whose name I won’t mention; the hamsters are tired enough already) successfully made the impossible prognostication.

Anyhow, I’ll start with me: in this 3/12/03 post, I predicted a short war and a long, large occupation:

Similarly in this 3/13 post:

And in this 3/30 post, I discussed worst-case situations for Iraq after the war:

I predicted a 2-week war rather than a 3-week war, the need for a large occupation force, and a messy aftermath. Maybe not the exact messy aftermath we’ve got, but messy enough.

So, who else got this right? I know there have to be a bunch of you out there; the only challenge is wading through the old posts to find an example of when you said what.

Note to mods: I wasn’t really sure where to put this. It’s not a debate, it’s not a flame, and it’s not a poll (despite superficial resemblances), since I’m not polling people on what they thought before the war; I’m asking them to corroborate a particular stance that they might have taken then. Since the people who’d need to see this would be the participants in the political-debate fora, I’d hope that if you move it anywhere, it would be to the Pit.

I predicted the war would last 10 days so the Iraqis held out longer then I envisaged. I also thought the post-war problems would be greater then they are, but they are bad enough that my position is essentially unchanged.

You lost me there, RTF. I respect you. NOT Krauthammer.

You’ll have to offer some additonal proof that he’s worth supporting.

From every column I read, he’s a true believer. A conservative who believes that conservatives can do no wrong. If you’re a liberal, you’re shit in his eyes. If you’re a conservative, you’re God.

Except, of course, all those hysterics like (at the time) presidential hopeful Gary Hart, who were running around screaming about how we were going to lose “50,000-100,000 Americans”*

And IIRC, (sorry, no cite**) Pat Buchanan was another vocal hysteric who was predicting dire consequences and horrible quagmire doom if we entered Iraq.

And they were far from the only ones. I agree there were many thoughtful people on both sides of the aisle and on both sides of the issue of the war who thought this would be a fairly quick fight. But I strongly disagree that “everyone” expected a short war. My feeling is maybe a 2/3ds of the anti-war types did and maybe 3/4ths or 4/5ths of the pro-war types thought it would be short.

Fenris

*And that’s one of his lower predictions. I heard him say “a million or more Americans” (sometimes phrased as “allies”) on radio and tv inteviews before and during the war and he repeated them on his website on several occasions. He seems to have revised his site to hide the fact that he was…well…an idiot.

**I had the Gary Hart one handy from a previous debate, that’s why.

**U.N. Sees 500,000 Iraqi Casualties at Start of War

A war on Iraq could cause half a million deaths and have a devastating impact on the lives, health and environment of the combatants, Iraqi civilians, and people in neighbouring countries and beyond

Former chief of defence staff Field Marshall Lord Bramall told the BBC there was a risk Britain could be dragged into a long Middle East war.

March 11, 2003 14:05 IST…The International Monetary Fund sees a long war in Iraq cutting global economic growth by up to two percentage points**

As recently as March 11, 2003, the IMF was predicting a long war that would substantially weaken the global economy.

Holy Christ, december, can you even READ? The article quotes the IMF as saying that a long war WOULD cause a global economic slowdown. It doesn’t say they predicted the war would be long!

I mean, surely you agree it would be economically bad IF the war dragged on. It didn’t - but your link doesn’t suggest the IMF said it would. What the hell?

There is no indication, yet, that Lord Bramall was in error. He may turn out to have been in error. However, he simply identified a “long war” and the way that the current gerilla activity continues to ramp up, it may, indeed, be a long war. We have now lost more troops since the “victory” than we lost securing it. I do not know how long the war will last, but Lord Bramall has not yet been proven wrong.

The IMF report does not say anything close to the headline. (The second paragraph is more accurate, using the word “if.”) The actual IMF report, World Economic Outlook Growth and Institutions April 2003 makes no prediction for the length of the war. In the summary, they note that IF a protracted war occurs, there will be repercussions, but the prediction of a long war is simply a headline writer’s illusion.

So half of december’s citations are bogus.

I predicted a short war. We had all the airplanes and the tanks and the missiles. It was impossible not to win quickly. Winning or losing wasn’t the point. It doesn’t make you right just because you win.

Are any of these organizations Dopers ? :wink:
I expected a couple, 3 more weeks before the fall of Baghad, and a shorter delay before the guerilla campaign got going. Somewhere in GD I predicted a degeneration into a west-bank like situation, which is not far off.

This is what I said before the war started:

The missing piece of this is the appearance of an organized guerrilla force. It looks to me like Saddam’s ‘real’ war plan is now being shown - he took his closest troops and went to ground. Now he’s fighting a well armed guerrilla war. That changes things. I was pretty accurate about how long the war would take, and how many casualties there would be (less than 500 American, somewhere between 5,000 and 50,000 Iraqis).

It’s interesting how difficult it is for a democracy to handle a Guerrilla war. It personalizes every casualty. If the war had been won with 1000 American lives lost in battle, it would still have been seen as a rousing success. But if this low-grade conflict kills another 500 Americans, people will be screaming in rage.

It’s one of his little schticks. He turns contingency planning into “predictions” - whether because he actually does not understand the difference or because he can use it (pitibly attempt to) villify opponents I don’t know. In december world, if you take out fire insurance and plan for a fire, that means you’re predicting there will be a terrible fire.

I didn’t post much of anything regarding this in GD (or anywhere else, for that matter), but I figured that Iraqi resistance to US/Coalition/whatever troops would be scrambled, ineffective and foolish at best, and deliberate suicide for no purpose other than “If we don’t do what Saddam says, he’ll kill us. If we do what Saddam says, we die. Gunfire will kill us faster than torture.”

I also thought (again, I guess in the end you’ll just have to trust me on this one) that Saddam, being a slippery guy to apprehend, would probably not be captured, and that if he were he’d probably kill himself before anything could be done to—I mean with—I mean … er…

I think we’ve won inasmuch as the actual invading thing has been transacted, so to speak, and it took about as long as I thought it would (less than a month). But I don’t think troops, barring some sort of UN requirement or Act of Congress (like if the decision was reached that they shouldn’t be there/didn’t belong there), are going to be leaving any time soon.

Here are some quotes by me from the handy Middle East Predictions Thread. I admit I was wrong about a lot of things (like our moving on to another country immediatly after this war), but I did see the current sitation coming.

[Corrected link. – MEB]

Before the war, Even Mohammed Saeed Al-Sahaf, Baghdad Bob, said that while Iraq was spending $20 million a week on inspections, the US government will spen a lot more conducting a war.

He was so right about this.

I am neither agreeing nor disagreeing with what Gary Hart said, but just for the record, your characterization of what he said is not accurate based on the link you provided. He didn’t say we were “going to lose” 50-100,000; it was a worst-case scenario that followed this statement:

He most likely was not screaming, either.:wink:

I disagree with your characterization of my characterization not being accurate. :wink:

The full quote:

First, he’s presenting the two scenarios as equal possiblities. He’s not saying “It’s likely that the Iraqi army will collapse and we’ll only lose 500 people, but if the worst happens…” The way he phrases it, it’s a 50/50 chance either way.

And secondly, 50,000-100,000 is a remarkably silly worst case scenario (and it was one of his lower numbers.) Not quite up there with “Saddam may have an escaped Kryptonian criminal from the Phantom Zone who will use his heat vision from low earth orbit to devistate our troops”, but it’s in the same ballpark. IIRC, that would be about 1/3d of all the US soldiers over there. (I may be wrong about the proportion, but it’s a number that’s so insanely out of whack that it would have been laughable had it not been coming from a presidential hopeful.)

But, as I said, that was one of the more mild of his predictions. When he was toying with the idea of another run at the presidency, he was on the radio/tv in Colorado on a regular basis predicting dire consequences (and using higher numbers).

His usual stchick was to say (parphrased) “IF (emphasis, his) the Iraqui army collapses, it’ll be over quickly. IF it does. But given that we could lose over a MILLION (or whatever number he chose) troops if the Iraqi army resists…” and present the two as at least equal possibilities and emphasising our possible destruction.

Fenris

Er…you might want to get a mod to change the link for you.
[Corrected link. – MEB]

Just send the editor a copy or link to Sam Stone’s excellent Iraq War predictions thread. By and large, the predictions in that thread were amazingly accurate and insightful. Some of them erred on the side of wishful thinking, others erred on the side of disastrous thinking, but the majority were spot on.

Well, I wasn’t 100% correct but I have to say I was impress a little by my super ESP the day I posted on this thread

The Items I was right:

and

Still isn’t…

I don’t think I made any specific time predictions prior to the launching of the invasion, but onMarch 27, I said I expected about two weeks until the major Iraqi cities had been entered and 2-4 weeks additional until Baghdad was secured. So, not entirely wrong, I guess.

I believe I made some general statements concerning a lengthy period of low-level combat post-war, in other threads.

Oh, I would like to make a gratuitious comment: Charles Krauthammer is a braying ass.