Cut and Run
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: Fleeing Self Destruction is Common Sense
This article appeared in AToL on November 20, 2006
Success can sometimes vindicate faulty policies temporarily
in the short run. Still, faulty policies always foil ultimate success in the
long run. The simple truth is that final victory is only achievable with sound
policies. But when even short-term success is out of reach with a faulty
policy, a quick and clean disengagement is just common sense.
The Iraq War proves that the Bush Administration’s War on
Terrorism has been a monumental strategic error, with its reliance on
regime-change militarism creating by the day more danger than security to the US
and to world peace, with its geopolitical unilateralism depriving the US
of support from the rest of the world. Wars, especially one on as elusive an
enemy as terrorism, cannot be fought by hitting wrong targets indiscriminately.
The terrorist attacks in New York
and Washington on September 11, 2001 altered global geopolitics
and upset the established realpolitik
agenda. The US response
to unprecedented attacks on its homeland has been overwhelmingly militaristic,
with a vengeful declaration of war on terrorism. This is a strategic overshoot
because terrorism is an amorphous organism that cannot be eliminated by
military operations, however overwhelming, but only by social and political
justice. Further, in a world order of sovereign states, war can only be
declared on and fought between states. Thus the US
was compelled to conjure up the notion of “rouge states” that gelled into an
“Axis of Evil” allegedly linked to state-sponsored terrorism. Such evil states
can then be identified as legitimate targets for regime change. This is a new
approach in US
foreign policy. The US
entered World War II to resist Axis expansionism that upset the existing world
order. All through the Cold War, the US
aimed to contain communist expansion against existing states. In 1990, the US,
in the name of preserving regional and world order, went to war to reverse a
regime change by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
a “rouge state” in Iraq’s
eyes. To invade another state in a war on terrorism, evidence of a direct link
between the targeted regime and terrorists is required, or if such evidence is
missing, intelligence data must be manipulated to support the pretext for
pre-determined war.
The decision to go to war against Iraq
forced the Bush Administration to manipulate intelligence data otherwise
unsupportive of war. Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, then
as Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee told CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson on
September 9, 2006: “The absolute cynical manipulation, deliberately
cynical manipulation, to shape American public opinion and 69 percent of the
people, at that time, it worked, they said ‘we want to go to war.’ Including
me. The difference is after I began to learn about some of that intelligence I
went down to the Senate floor and I said ‘my vote was wrong.’” Rockefeller
accused the Bush Administration of manipulating intelligence data to falsify Iraq’s
link to al-Qaeda to provide a
disingenuous pretext to invade, thus distorting the purpose and diminishing the
effectiveness of the War on Terrorism. Further, the Iraq War is showing that
terrorism cannot be fought effectively with state terror because a war on
terrorism provides a hot bed for terrorist groups to mushroom faster than
military operations can eradicate. An intransigent prolongation of a faulty
policy to fight terrorism by off-target unilateral militarism will only lead to
self destruction of the war-making nation.
It is clear that the US
electorate in the 2006 mid-term elections expressed growing dissatisfaction
with the lack of success in the Iraq War, notwithstanding the Bush
Administration’s argumentative defense with a debate on the proper definition
of success. Bush defines success in Iraq
as an unflinching will to “stay the course” and to decry as a moral deficit the
idea of “cut and run” in the face of an evil enemy. The war party dismisses the
imperative of not sacrificing in vain the lives of helpless US
soldiers caught up in the random hazard of a collapsing edifice of state from
which the US
field command is unable to provide effective requisite protection. The
destruction of the Iraqi state had been pointlessly set off three years earlier
by an ill-conceived US
policy of senseless regime change. Continuing US
occupation of Iraq
only impedes needed nation building in the shattered Iraqi political landscape.
Foreign occupation will not bring about sectarian harmony, social stability or
cessation of hostility toward foreign occupiers and collaborators. More than
2,800 US
soldiers had been killed and over 20,000 wounded in Iraq
by election time 2006 and more can be expected with every passing day with no
end in sight and for no clear definable purpose.
The size of the US
occupation force of 140,000 is pitifully inadequate for controlling a country
the size of Iraq,
with a population of 27 million and an area of 450,000 square kilometers. New
York City alone, with a population of just 8 million,
has a police force of over 40,000. And the police in New
York are not occupiers of a hostile foreign nation
and do not have to face insurgents willing to die to remove them. Attempts to
rebuild a new Iraq
police and military with reliable loyalty to the new regime have been thawed by
effective insurgent targeting of new recruits with lethal castigation for
treason. The US-installed puppet government of Prime Minister Nuri Mamal
al-Maliki cannot hope to command any respect from the Iraqi people as long as US
occupation continues. Yet as soon as US forces withdraw, the puppet government
put in place by foreign occupation will fall from lack of domestic popular
support. Influential sectarian leaders, such as Shi’ite cleric Moktada al-Sadr,
as they allow themselves to be co-opted into the evolving governing circle
under US
tutelage, face a predictable loss of support from their core constituents and
desertion by radical members of the militia they supposedly lead.
Accurate information on the size and strength of the Iraqi
insurgency is hard to come by. In January 2005 Iraqi intelligence service
director General Mohamed Abdullah Shahwani said that Iraq’s insurgency
consisted of at least 40,000 hardcore fighters, out of a total of more than
200,000 part-time fighters and volunteers who provide intelligence, logistics
and shelter. This means that the insurgent force is larger than the 140,000 US
occupation force. With each passing day, the size and strength of the
insurgency are increasing, possibly at an accelerated rate. Historical data
suggest that a ratio of 20 to 1 is necessary for an occupation force to deal
with, let alone eliminate an indigenous insurgency. This ratio would put the
needed size of the US
occupation force at 4 million, larger than the entire US
military. At current troop level of 140,000, US forces perform only one
function: that of sitting duck symbol of foreign occupation targeted by all
sides of the resistance. This is the strongest argument for immediate
withdrawal, unless the US
is prepared to send in its entire military and risk it on one single hot spot
in a world of numerous hot spots created by US
policy of unilateral militarism.
Shahwani reported that the resistance enjoys popular backing
in the Sunni provinces of Baghdad, Babel,
Salahuddin, Diyala, Nineveh and
Tamim. He said the Ba’athists, with a core fighting strength of more than
20,000, have split into three factions. The main one, still owing allegiance to
jailed leader Saddam Hussein, is operating out of Syria.
It was led by Saddam’s half-brother Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, number 36 (six of
diamonds) on the list of 55 most wanted, with the US government offering a $1
million bounty on his head, until his capture on February 27, 2005 by Syrian
authorities and handed over to Iraq as a goodwill gesture. The faction is now
led by Saddam’s former aide Mohamed Yunis al-Ahmed, also with a bounty of $1
million on his head, providing funding to their connections in Mosul,
Samarra, Baquba, Kirkuk
and Tikrit, reconstructing the Ba’ath Party. Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri, deputy
chief of the revolution command council under Saddam, now heads a new wanted
list with a $10-million bounty on his head. He was number six and the king of
clubs on the original Pentagon list. He is believed to be operating underground
in Iraq as an
operational leader of the insurgents. Two other factions have split from
Saddam, but have yet to mount any attacks. Other Islamist factions range from
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who was killed on June
8, 2006, to Ansar al-Sunna and Ansar al-Islam.
London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies
estimates roughly 1,000 foreign Islamic jihadists
have joined the Iraqi insurgency. And there is no doubt many of these have had
a dramatic effect on perceptions of the insurgency through high-profile
video-taped kidnappings and beheadings. However, US occupation commanders
believe that the greatest obstacles to stability are the native insurgents that
predominate in the Sunni triangle. Significantly, many secular Sunni leaders
were being surpassed in influence by Sunni militants. This development mirrors
the rise of militant Shi’a cleric and militia leader Moqtada al-Sadr vis-à-vis
the more moderate Shi’a cleric Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani. On Iraqi domestic political dynamics,
continuing US
occupation can contribute no positive or constructive influence.
By their votes, the US
public showed that they measured success in Iraq
very differently from the way the Bush Administration did. More precisely,
voters measured the lack success in Iraq
by the rising number of US soldiers and Iraqi police and civilians killed and
wounded every day for three long years for no achievable purpose or discernable
progress. The public saw only failure in the worsening political fragmentation,
social instability and general chaos exacerbated by an unwanted and unhelpful US
presence. They were disgusted with the incessant shockingly graphic news
reports of atrocious tactics forced into routine practice by a desperate
occupation force in distress and consumed by fatigue, that betray otherwise
laudable US moral values. Also, reports of widespread corruption associated
with reconstruction contracts and war profiteering insult the American sense of
business ethics. In the mean time, civil liberty and personal freedom are
visibly curtained at home in the name of homeland security, the threat to which
does not seem to have been reduced by three years of mismanaged war on
terrorism.
Even the neo-conservatives who were early vocal proponents
of the US-led invasion of Iraq
have abandoned the Bush Administration, complaining that while the war aims
remain valid and policies correct, the implementation has been wanting. They
now say a dysfunctional administration has turned sound US
policy into an unmitigated disaster.
Richard Perle, an assistant secretary of defense under
President Reagan and former chair of a committee of Pentagon policy advisers
early in the current Bush administration, card carrying neo-con, reportedly
told Vanity Fair magazine in its
upcoming January issue that “had he seen at the start of the war in 2003 where
it would go, he probably would not have advocated an invasion to depose Saddam
Hussein.” Perle added he would have
advocated instead “other strategies for dealing with the thing that concerns us
most, which is Saddam supplying weapons of mass destruction to
terrorists.” Yet Perle must know by now
that no WMD was found in Iraq
after the war. It was not possible for Iraq
to supply terrorists with something it did not have. So the pre-war phobia was
only a neo-con fantasy. Apparently neoconservatives do not make policy based on
facts nor will they learn from facts.
Still, Perle unwittingly confesses that there were “other strategies”
available but war was the neo-cons’ strategy of choice. By extension, there
must be also other strategies than “stay the course” now that war has proved to
be a disaster of self destruction.
Three days before the mid-term elections, White House
National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe was reported to have said,
responding to the upcoming Perle article, “We appreciate the Monday-morning
quarterbacking, but the president has a plan to succeed in Iraq,
and we are going forward with it.” The morning after the 2006 mid-term election
returns which showed the Republicans suffering, in Bush’s own words, a thumping, a drastic reversal of fortune
from the “Road to Victory” engineered by Karl Rove only two years ago in the
2004 presidential election, the old “plan to succeed” in Iraq was history, with
the forced resignation of Perle’s former boss, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, symbol of the bankrupt Iraq invasion policy. Logic would suggest that
any new plan to succeed cannot preclude quick disengagement.
Kenneth Adelman, former Defense Policy Board member
reportedly told Vanity Fair he is now
"crushed" by the dismal performance of Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld. A year before the war, Adelman
predicted that demolishing Saddam’s military power and liberating Iraq
would be a “cakewalk.” But he told the magazine he was mistaken in his high
opinion of Bush’s national security team. Having declared in the Washington
Post on March 23, 2003 that he had “no doubt we’re going to find big stores of
weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq after the war, Adelman now laments that
neo-conservatism, “the idea of using our power for moral good in the world,”
has been undeservedly discredited with the public by the Bush team’s
incompetence and “it's not going to sell” after Iraq. While the incompetence
charge may have some validity, the assertion on the validity of
neo-conservatism does not. Moral good cannot come from the misuse of power.
Failure is an orphan. There is now much backbiting among
those associated with the Bush Administration who had pushed for the ill-fated
invasion of Iraq.
Perle told Vanity Fair “you have to
hold the president responsible” because he didn’t recognize “disloyalty” by
some in the administration. He said the White House’s National Security Council
(NSC), then run by now-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, did not serve Bush
properly. What he meant was that the NSC presented for presidential decision a
balanced and complete range of views from within the Administration, including
those of the State Department which Perle considered as “disloyal”, rather than
promoting only the neo-con-dominated Department of Defense. Yet anyone familiar
with the official mandate of the NSC knows that to present a comprehensive
range of views is precisely its official function.
Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense for policy,
charter member of Rumsfeld’s gang of neo-cons at the Pentagon, loyally wrote in
the neo-conservative Weekly Standard
a defensive his-dog-loves-him political eulogy for Rumsfeld, his dismissed
boss. According to the Nelson Report, Feith, standing in for
the Defense Secretary at a 2003 interagency “Principals Meeting” on the Middle
East, gave his summary of the position of the Pentagon, after which then
National Security Advisor Rice reportedly quipped, “Thanks Doug, but when we want the Israeli position we’ll invite the
ambassador.” The ruinous role Feith
played in shaping catastrophic US policy on the Mid East and in Iraq has been amply covered by
Pulitzer-deserving journalist Jim Lobe in AToL. (See: Losing Feith by the formidable Jim Lobe
in AToL)
But the voice that really hurt came for the military rank
and file. The Military Times Media Group, a Gannett subsidiary that publishes
Army Times and other military-oriented periodicals, the voice of the men and
women doing the actual fighting, announced three days before the mid-term
elections it would run an editorial on election eve again calling for Bush to
fire Rumsfeld. The first call was in May 2004, when the Abu Ghraib prison
torture and prisoner abuse scandal broke.
The Military Times Media Group editorial, published the day
before the elections in four periodicals, says active-duty military leaders
were beginning to voice misgivings about the war's planning, execution and
dimming prospects for success. “Rumsfeld has lost credibility with the
uniformed leadership, with the troops, with Congress and with the public at
large,” the editorial says. “His strategy has failed, and his ability to lead
is compromised. And although the blame for our failures in Iraq
rests with the secretary, it will be the troops who bear its brunt.” The
editorial concludes: "Regardless of which party wins Nov. 7, the time has
come, Mr. President, to face the hard bruising truth: Donald Rumsfeld must
go.” Army Times' editor Robert Hodierne
insists the timing was not prompted not by the mid-term elections. Rather, it
was inspired by Bush’s statement earlier in the week that he wanted Rumsfeld
and Vice President Dick Cheney in their posts through the end of his term. What
the editor did not know was that the president, by his own admission to the
press the day after the mid-term elections, had been working behind the scene
to replace Rumsfeld with Gates days before. It was another occasion that the
president did not tell the country the truth.
Conservatives have opposed the neo-con war from its
beginning. After three disaster years, even Republican leaders in Congress
began to criticize Bush’s policies on Iraq.
Senator John Warner of Virginia, Republican chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, returning from a trip to Iraq in early October, described
the situation in Iraq as “drifting sideways” and suggested that the US should
consider “a change of course” if the violence there did not diminish soon. The
failure of the Bush White House to respond to this timely opportunity to
announce a policy review as its “October Surprise” relating to a key campaign
issue allowed the Democrats to turn the Warner description into their own
“October Surprise” in the mid-term elections in November. Many Republicans have
since been furious at the incredibly inopportune timing of the White House’s
Iraqi policy shift, delaying until after the anticipated thumping at the voting booths, given that Iraq
was a key issue in the mid-term elections. It was a classic case of closing the
barn door after the horse escaped.
The “Coalition of the Willing” is also dissolving. In
October, Gen Sir Richard Dannatt, the head of the British Army, said Britain’s
presence was contributing to violence in Iraq.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair conceded on the new English language channel
of al-Jazeerz TV with 40 million viewers world-wide, though still unavailable
in the US, that the invasion of Iraq by the US and Britain had been a
“disaster” and offered his frank assessment of the prospect that the country
could descend into civil war. British Minister for Industry Margaret Hodge, a
long-standing political ally, described the conflict as Blair’s “big mistake in
foreign affairs”, accusing him of “moral imperialism”.
Bipartisan doubt about the war had not been absent in the US
Congress. The Iraq Study Group (ISG), also known as the Baker-Hamilton
Commission, is a ten-person bipartisan panel appointed on March 15, 2006 by the Republican controlled
Congress, charged with delivering an independent assessment of the situation in
Iraq in the
US-led Iraq War and occupation. The idea of a panel was first proposed by
Virginia Republican Congressman Frank Wolf who, being in tune with the public
on the war, easily beat Democrat challenger Judy Feder with 57-41% of votes
cast. Former CIA director Robert M Gates, who served under the elder Bush, was
a member of the panel until he was replaced by Lawrence Eagleburger on November 10, 2006 when Bush
nominated him to replace Rumsfeld. The Gate/Rumsfeld replacement is widely
interpreted as a policy shift on Iraq
from ideology-driven to pragmatism-driven.
Although the final commission
report will be released only months after the mid-term elections, media reports
have hinted at anticipated recommendations of a phased withdrawal of US combat
forces from Iraq
and direct US
dialogue with Syria
and Iran over Iraq
and the Middle East in a regional context. President
Bush and his national security team met on November 13 with members of the
bipartisan commission to devise a new course for the unpopular war in Iraq.
The Group had a close-door joint conference at the White House with President
Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley,
and individual meetings with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, outgoing
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, National Intelligence Director John
Negroponte, and CIA Director Michael Hayden. They also talked with Zalmay
Khalizad, US
ambassador in Baghdad.
During a visit to Iraq earlier, ISG
members met with key players across the Iraqi political spectrum, reportedly
including a Shi’a Sadr representative, President Jalal Talabani, a secular Shi’ite and long-time advocate for
Kurdish rights and democracy in Iraq, Prime Minister Nouri Kamel al-Maliki, Shi’a deputy leader of the Islamic Dawa
Party, a militant Shi’ite group, and
Abdul-Aziz Hakim, member of the Iraqi Governing Council and leader of
the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), a large,
influential, and moderate Iraqi Shi’a political organization formerly based in
Iran.
Commission members met also with
other secular leaders, including even leaders of the Iraq Communist Party. The
exploitation of the Iraqi communists to neutralize the influence of Iranian
Islamic theocracy appears to be part of the new game plan, a reversal of US
Cold War strategy of promoting Islamic fundamentalism to contain communism in
the Middle East.
Attempts to include Sunnis in the
new government, seen as key to establishing law and order and neutralizing
Iraqi insurgency, whose supporters are largely Sunnis, have not been
successful. Yet the Shi’a bloc, known as the United Iraqi Alliance, failed to
win an absolute majority in the December
15, 2005 election, despite the fact that Shi’ites constitute over
60% of the population. The Alliance
took 128 of the 275 seats, Kurdish parties 53 and the main Sunni Arab bloc 44
seats. Sunnis still allege poll fraud and continue to challenge the result.
Thus the Alliance must govern with
a coalition and has been forced to set up committees to hold talks with Kurdish
and Sunni groups in the new Parliament trying to form a coalition with Sunni
factions but on condition that they do more to calm the insurgency. It is a
demand that moderate Sunni politicians cannot meet because their cooperation
with the coalition government will set them up as treasonous targets for
insurgents.
Moqtada al-Sadr, the young Shi’ite cleric,
was given the Ministry of Health portfolio in the coalition government on the
condition that he would disband his militia after clashing with US forces in
April, 2005. Moqtada cannot afford an
image of having been co-opted into the US controlled evolving governing
establishment, lest he should face a loss of support from his core constituents
and desertion by radical members of the militia he supposedly controls. The
Sadr militia continues to be a potent and potential threat to
both occupational troops and Iraq’s
fledgling government. The Mahdi Army controls Sadr
City, a Shi’ite stronghold in
northeast Baghdad, flouting
government-imposed curfews in the area. US
troops remain largely outside Sadr City,
and the anemic Iraqi police and security forces dare not challenge Sadr’s
forces there.
A rumored proposal by the Baker Commission is a coup in
Baghdad by the new US-trained Iraqi military, reconstituted from scattered
elements of Saddam Hussein’s Ba’athist army, to oust the ineffective al-Maliki coalition
government and replace it with one led by a more effective figure, former
Ba’athist Iyad Allawi, with a presidential pardon and political rehabilitation
for Saddam. In preparation for the parliamentary elections that took place in Iraq
in December 2005, Allawi formed an alliance between diverse political groups,
including secular Sunni and Shi’a groups and the Iraqi communist party under the
Iraqi National List, which did not score well at the polls due to CIA
obstruction. Allawi is a blood relative and
political rival of Ahmed Chalabi, a prominent anti-Saddam exile who was hailed
by neo-cons as the “George Washington of Iraq”. Chalabi, now disgraced and abandoned by his
US handlers, was the person who convinced Rumsfeld that US invasion troops would
be welcomed with flowers and kisses by the Iraqis and that establishing
democracy would be a “cake walk” in Iraq.
Ironically, Chalabi told the New York Times Magazine in a
November 5 front cover profile, two days before the mid-term elections, that “America’s
big mistake was failing to step out of the way after the fall of Saddam and let
the Iraqis take charge.” Chalabi maintained that a new Iraqi government would
have acted even more harshly than Saddam’s government, adding “even brutally to
regain control of the country,” and the Iraqis would have been without
foreigners to blame. They would have “appreciated a firm hand.” There would be
no guerrilla insurgency and if there were, it would be a small one that the new
Iraqi government would quickly ferret out and crushed on its own before it had
a chance to spread. An Iraqi government would have brought Moqtada al-Sadr into
the government and house-trained him and the US
soldiers would have been gone way before now. Chalabi’s formula was a
reintroduction of a tougher version of Saddam’s ruling style which he asserts
most Iraqis recognize as fitting for Iraq’s
political culture. Iraqi domestic
politics and Arabic geopolitics are Byzantine in complexity, and beyond the
comprehension of most Western “experts”, be they neo-liberals or
neo-conservatives, ideologues or pragmatists. As Colin Powell said after the first
Iraq war in
explaining why the first Bush administration did not topple Saddam: “You get
rid of Saddam, you get another Saddam worse than the first Saddam,” or words to
that effect.
While the Baker Commission’s final report is not expected to
be released before the end of 2006, preemptive criticism has already been
launched by Michael Rubin, neo-conservative editor of the Middle East Quarterly,
a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. In an article in the
neo-conservative Weekly Standard on
October 30, 2006 entitled: Conclusion
First, Debate Afterward, Rubin attacks the Baker Commission as “tilted”,
resurrecting failed old approaches of geopolitical pragmatism as new promising
approaches devoid of “moral clarity”. Rubin points out that in May 2001, Hamilton
co-chaired an Atlantic Council study group that called on Washington
to adopt a “new approach” to Iran
centered on engagement with Tehran.
And, in 2004, commission member Robert M. Gates co-chaired another study group
that called for a “new approach” of engagement toward Iran.
The problem, according to Rubin, is that “this ‘new
approach’ hasn't been good for US national security,” implying that the neo-con
inspired invasion has been good for US national security, a claim publicly challenged
by Senator Rockefeller, now Democratic chairman of the Senate Armed Service
Committee. “The world would be better off today if the US
had never invaded Iraq,
even if it means Saddam Hussein would still be running Iraq,”
Rockefeller told CBS News in September.
Rubin discloses that in the weeks prior to the Iraq war,
Washington once again allegedly naively engaged Tehran in a move of confuse
moral clarity. Zalmay Khalilzad, the current US ambassador to Baghdad, who, at
the time, was younger Bush’s chief Iraq adviser on the NSC, solicited a
noninterference pledge in post-war Iraqi politics from Iran’s UN ambassador in
New York, in exchange for a US bomb attack and blockade of the Mujahedeen
al-Khalq camp, an Iranian opposition group inside Iraq, against which the head
of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, General Rahim Safavi, had called on Iraq
in February 2000 to take action to curtail its activities, warning that if
Baghdad did not take action, Iran’s armed forces would respond strongly. Iranian conservative cleric Ayatollah
Mohammed-Taqi Mesbah Yazdi had suggested during the 2000 election that the US
CIA had infiltrated Iran’s
reformist government and bribed moderate journalists as well as supporting
Iranian opposition groups in Iraq.
These Iranian opposition groups in Iraq,
former US
allies against Iran,
became priority military targets of the US
invasion force.
Of course, the prospect of Iranian non-interference in Shi’a
politics in Iraq
after the fall of Saddam or anywhere else in the region is only neo-con utopian
fantasy. Yet Rubin has the chutzpah to write: “Effective realism requires
abandoning the utopian conviction that engagement always works and partners are
always sincere.” Rubin warns that in Iraq
“perception trumps reality”. Actually, in neo-con-dominated Washington,
more respect for reality would be an improvement.
Rubin attacked Baker for his role in Operation Desert Storm
in 1991 for failing to support rebellious Kurds and Shi’ites who responded to
President George H.W. Bush’s called upon Iraqis to “take matters into their own
hands and force Saddam Hussein the dictator to step aside.” Had the US
intervened militarily in Iraqi domestic politics in 1991, it would have landed
in the same trap the US
finds itself in 2006. In 1991, the US wisely allow Saddam to retain control of
Iraq to avoid a collapse of balance of power in the region, to contain the rise
of Iran through the Shi’ite connection, and to avoid risk of destabilizing
Turkey which has a large Kurd minority. Baker’s pragmatic regional geopolitical
approach in the State Department served US security interests infinitely better
than the ideological “moral clarity” fantasy of the neo-con gang in the Defense
Department under Rumsfeld.
Neo-cons spinners, now out of government, accused Baker of
bringing back ‘the left’ into US
foreign policy after “the left” had been purged from the younger Bush
administration. To the neo-con extremists, the “left” is centrist-right
Republican. It is a familiar charge from the likes of Douglas Feith, notorious
former Pentagon official who was investigated by the Senate Intelligence
Committee for distorting prewar intelligence on Iraq
to support invasion. Feith was also questioned by the FBI in relation to the
passing of confidential Pentagon documents by one of his Defense Department
underlings to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which in
turn passed them to the Israeli Embassy.
The neo-conservative agenda is promoted by a well-oil
propaganda machine manned by a team of intellectuals which includes David
Wurmser, former advisor to Vice President Cheney and aide to former Undersecretary
of State for Arms Control and International Security, now unconfirmed
ambassador to the UN John Bolton. Others in the neo-con team include William
Luti of the Office of Special Plans (OSP), a secretive Pentagon outfit whose
players included Feith and Abram Shulsky, a Leo Strauss scholar and
intelligence expert associated with the neo-conservative Project for the New
American Century (PNAC). In 2002, Shulsky co-authored with Gary Schmitt, the
director of the PNAC, Silent Warfare:
Understanding the World of Intelligence, which argued that “truth is not
the goal” of intelligence operations, but “victory.” It is a step beyond Dr.
Goebbel who at least only applied the perverse principle to propaganda, but had
the sanity to stop before applying it to intelligence.
The neoconservative view on bureaucratic interagency
infighting over policy turf is that the State Department, supported by the
analysis section of the CIA, is basically a seditious center of resistance to
the Global War On Terrorism (GWOT), lately reframed as Global War On Extremism
(GWOE). The State Department’s multilateral diplomacy is opposed by the hawks
in the Department of Defense, supported by the covert operation section of the
CIA, who promote US “exceptionalism” through unilateral militarism. While
Joseph McCarthy saw communists infesting the State Department of the 1950s,
neo-cons see multilateral pragmatists in the State Department of the 21st
century aiding and abetting the enemies of democracy by negotiating with them,
jeopardizing a foreign policy based on “moral clarity.”
According to investigative reporter Seymour Hersh, Luti and
his OSP cohorts were charged with assembling intelligence on Iraq
that would support the Department of Defense’s case for invasion. The OSP,
conceived by Paul Wolfowitz, began its work soon after the 9/11 2001 terrorists
attacks, bringing “a crucial change of direction” in US intelligence from
objective information gathering to supporting an predetermined agenda, relying on
predisposed data provided by the Iraqi National Congress (INC), the anti-Saddam
exile group headed by Chalabi.
The OSP neo-con agenda was echoed by salon intellectuals
outside of government, such as Christopher Hitchens whose aim in life is to be
the living celebrity who proves that if you go far enough towards the left you
would end up a neo-con, and William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, home and incubator of neo-conservatism owned by
median magnate Rupert Murdock.
Chritopher Hitchens, a former Oxford
Trotskyite who morphed opportunistically into a noisy neoconservative after 9:11 to earn from British anti-war MP George
Galloway the label of “drink-sodden former Troskyist popinjay,” now acts as a
fervent evangelical for his new-found pro-war cause. In a Slate
piece entitled “Losing the Iraq War - Can the left really
want us to?” Hitchens presented a post-modernist deconstruction of the
case for war: “There is a sort of unspoken feeling, underlying the entire
debate on the war, that if you favored it or favor it, you stress the good
news, and if you opposed or oppose it you stress the bad. I do not find myself
on either side of this false dichotomy. I think that those who supported regime
change should confront the idea of defeat, and what it would mean for Iraq
and America and
the world, every day. It is a combat defined very much by the nature of the
enemy, which one might think was so obviously and palpably evil that the very
thought of its victory would make any decent person shudder. It is, moreover, a
critical front in a much wider struggle against a vicious and totalitarian
ideology. It never seemed to me that there was any alternative to confronting
the reality of Iraq, which was already on the verge of implosion and might, if
left to rot and crash, have become to the region what the Congo is to Central
Africa: a vortex of chaos and misery that would draw in opportunistic
interventions from Turkey, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. Bad as Iraq
may look now, it is nothing to what it would have become without the steadying
influence of coalition forces. None of the many blunders in postwar planning
make any essential difference to that conclusion. Indeed, by drawing attention
to the ruined condition of the Iraqi society and its infrastructure, they serve
to reinforce the point.”
Hitchen’s is
a café-society argument for moral imperialism that relies on the alleged evil
nature of the enemy. Aside from the dubious usurpation of the godly prerogative
to decide what is evil, the argument promotes a rationalization for eliminating
evil with more evil. In essence, when one gets past the convoluted Oxford
prose, it is a tiresome rehash of the old “domino theory” of the Vietnam War
era. The US
“lost” China to
evil communism, as it did in Vietnam
after French imperialism, having lost Algeria
to national independence, cut and ran from evil Vietnam
communism after the disaster at Dien Bien Phu. Yet none of these countries nor the region
turned into a “vortex of chaos and misery” flowing the expulsion of Western
imperialism. This very week, the president of the US
is in Hanoi to attend an APEC
summit amid talks of an Asian Century.
In a September 2005 article entitled: “A War To Be Proud Of” Hitchen wrote with a straight face: “Prison
conditions at Abu Ghraib have improved markedly and dramatically since the
arrival of Coalition troops in Baghdad.”
The remark has since become a late-night TV comedy line. Try as he might,
Hitchens was unable to pronounce with a straight face that life in Iraq
has improved since the occupation began.
Notwithstanding the brash assertion of the likes of
Hitchens, the disaster war in Iraq
was a key factor in the Republican defeat in the mid-term elections. The
replacement of Rumsfeld was in motion even before election day. After the
elections, victorious Democrats immediately called for a phased pullout of US
troops. “We have to tell Iraqis that the open-ended commitment is over,” said
Carl Levin, the incoming chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
adding that he wanted phased troop withdrawals beginning in a few months and he
said some Republican senators were preparing to back him.
The Baker Commission reportedly thinks that “staying the
course” is an untenable long-term strategy, and is looking at two options, both
of which amount to a reversal of the current Bush administration stance. One is
the phased withdrawal of US troops, and the other is to seek help of Syria
and Iran to
stop the fighting. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, whose views have
been sought by the Baker Commission, told the BBC on November 19 that military
victory is no longer possible in Iraq.
Presenting a bleak prognosis of Iraq,
Kissinger said the US
must enter into dialogue with Iraq’s
regional neighbors including Iran
if progress is to be made in the region. But Kissinger warned against a rapid
withdrawal of coalition troops, saying it could destabilize Iraq’s
neighbors and cause a long-lasting conflict. History shows that in Vietnam,
more than four years would pass from the time of the need to withdraw was
recognized by Lyndon Johnson to the time Richard Nixon was able to actually honorably
withdraw. It is hard to see how the US
can afford that kind of time in Iraq
this time.
Next: Looking to Syria
and Iran for
Help
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