New Aims, Not Blame, for Iraq
Congress Must Broaden Its Vision
The heated congressional debate this week over a $121.7
billion spending package to support our troops in the Middle East and care for
them upon their return home is deeply marred by the willful misunderstanding
among supporters of President Bush’s “surge” strategy over the definition of victory
after four long years of war in
Iraq.
Opponents of this critical supplemental budget contend that
a vote in favor of the entire package will lead to a U.S. defeat, chaos in Iraq
beneficial only to Al Qaeda, and future terrorist attacks on American soil—all
because the legislation would set a date certain next year for our troops to begin
redeploying from Iraq and benchmarks for the Iraqi government to meet in order to
avoid earlier redeployment.
The purpose of these talking points: to lay future blame for
the Bush administration’s serial failures in Iraq upon those now seeking to
rescue our nation from this tragic quagmire and enhance our country’s national
security. Such cynicism is stunning when our brave men and women
in uniform are still fighting and dying in Iraq
amid primarily multiple sectarian conflicts that by definition cannot be “won”
by the United States.
But with an eye to the next election cycle, proponents of
the president’s open-ended escalation of U.S.
military forces in Iraq
are arguing that anyone suggesting any another course of action will be held
responsible for the Bush administration's multiple past failures. “You try to
fix it, you're responsible for breaking it,” is their crass political strategy,
turning former Secretary of State Colin Powell’s admonition to the president
back in 2002 on its head.
“You break it, it’s going to shatter,” Powell warned the
president on the eve of the Iraq
invasion. “You own it,” he correctly noted to Bush before the president
launched his war of choice. That warning didn’t faze the president at the time,
but it frightens the wits out of his fellow conservatives today who still must
face the American public.
After all, conservatives are well aware that General Eric
Shinseki was absolutely right when he warned that several hundred thousand
troops would be required to win the peace in Iraq—advice that was belittled by
former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and ignored by President Bush.
Conservatives also know that insufficient forces on the ground
after the 2003 invasion allowed sectarian groups to help themselves to the vast
conventional military stores around the country, contributing directly to the large
number of casualties among U.S.
fighting men and women and the Iraqi people. The failure to lock down all of
Saddam Hussein’s military storehouses stems directly from the deployment of
U.S. forces in search of non-existing weapons of mass destruction—just one of
the many post-invasion mistakes that the president’s supporters today know are
part of the chaos enveloping Iraq.
From phantom WMD to de-Ba’athification to
ideologically driven economic reform plans that bore no relation to the needs
of everyday Iraqis, the Bush administration’s failures in Iraq make victory as defined by the
president’s supporters completely impossible. That’s why progressives today put forward new strategies to
address the administration’s many mistakes and their sadly predictable consequences.
And that’s why conservatives desperately want the American people to instead
blame progressives for failing to embrace an unachievable “victory” in Iraq even
as progressives offer solutions that just might snatch something akin to
victory from the jaws of defeat.
America
deserves a “Plan B” for Iraq
that takes into account the realities in and around the country today, not more
political posturing for domestic political gain. If there is to be any hope of
a national consensus to finish the job in Iraq, Congress and the White House
must broaden the debate beyond timelines and the “surge.”
No number of U.S.
troops can lead to a sustained cessation of hostilities in Iraq’s multiple internal conflicts
today. The “surge” in Baghdad has simply pushed
Sunni insurgents to other parts of the country and driven Sh’ia militias
underground to bide their time until the U.S. troop presence is eventually
decreased. Rather than changing Iraq’s
political realities, the escalation only temporarily obscures them.
For the violence to stop, Iraqis will need to see that it is
contrary to their strategic interests to continue to kill other Iraqis. This is
something not likely to happen in the foreseeable future due to the increasing
ethnic and sectarian divisions and vicious score-settling aimed at addressing
decades-old grievances. The “surge” only masks this reality.
Dedicating our most precious national security assets—our
young men and women in uniform—to do the tasks that the more than 325,000
Iraqis trained and equipped by the United States should be doing is a
self-defeating proposition. The United
States instead should take four key steps to
get its national security priorities back in order.
Begin a strategic redeployment immediately
The United States
should begin a phased redeployment of its troops from Iraq immediately, with the goal of eliminating
the U.S. troop presence in Iraq
by the end of 2008. A phased redeployment gives the Iraqis the incentives to compromise
in search of peace and allows the United States
the best chance to revitalize its ground forces stretched thin by the Iraq deployment so that we can address growing
threats on other fronts in the fight against global terror groups, especially
in Afghanistan.
By redeploying troops to other countries neighboring Iraq and over the horizon around the Persian Gulf,
the United States can
safeguard its core interests, prevent the conflict from spreading outside of Iraq, and better confront the threat of global
terror groups than our massive troop presence in Iraq currently does. Our armed
forces need to regroup to fight the enemies we have, not referee combatants
with other scores to settle.
Partition America’s
policy, not Iraq
Iraq’s
national political stalemate has effectively driven politics and political
authority to Iraq’s
regions, localities, and even neighborhoods. No significant action at the
national level is likely to result in a sustainable political settlement
because of sharp divisions among Iraq’s leaders. But rather than
pursue a futile effort to force Iraqis to agree to some sort of
decentralization of the country, which would require significant compromises at
the national level, the United
States should focus instead on what it can
do and instead decentralize its own policy.
The United States
should dismantle the U.S.
embassy in the Green Zone and reassign U.S.
personnel to its four regional embassy offices in other parts of Iraq.
These regional outposts can then work closely with Iraqi regional and local
institutions and powerbrokers to provide a better quality of life for Iraqi
citizens. An emphasis on security sector support during the next four years
should focus on building local police accountable to local authorities. In
places less hospitable to an American presence, the United
States should focus on simply guarding against the threat
of global terror groups with military operations by U.S. special forces and
intelligence.
Develop pragmatic regional conflict management strategies
Iraq
suffers from four different conflicts in different sections of the country: a
Sh’ia-Sunni civil war in the central part of the country; intra-Sh’ia clashes
in the south; a Sunni insurgency largely centered in the west and central part
of the country; and growing tensions between Arabs and Kurds in the north. Yet
the United States
is not doing enough to contain and manage these multiple conflicts.
The United States needs
to develop tailored conflict-management strategies, each of them focused on the
different internal dynamics in Iraq
and their potential impacts on the broader Middle East.
Most urgently, the United States
must rein in growing tensions in northern Iraq,
where there is the greatest immediate threat of violence spilling over Iraq’s
borders. A smaller contact group involving Syria,
Iran, and Iraq—with the participation of others, such as
the United States—would more
effective in addressing the growing security challenges in northern Iraq.
Similarly, discussions involving the emerging Shi’a leaders in southern Iraq and its neighbors along the Gulf coast
might head off any unnecessary cross-border tensions with Iran, Saudi Arabia,
and Kuwait.
The Shi’a-Sunni civil war raging in central and western Iraq will require even more localized
approaches, with the involvement of Jordan,
Saudi Arabia, and Syria.
Implement a comprehensive yet pragmatic Middle
East diplomatic surge.
U.S. participation in the Baghdad regional security
conference earlier this month, at which American representatives sat at the
table with all of Iraq’s neighbors including states labeled as pariahs, Iran
and Syria, was a good first step in this direction. To achieve tangible gains,
however, these diplomatic approaches need to be targeted. All-inclusive
regional contact groups are not a panacea for the instability in Iraq
and the region.
For instance, just as the United States has started to
engage Iraq’s neighbors on the growing problems of refugees, it should also
work to develop a comprehensive counter-terrorism approach to address an
emerging threat—the “boomerang” effect of foreign fighters in Iraq heading back home as the United States redeploys its forces from Iraq. The
threat posed by global terror groups in Iraq
is better addressed by increased cooperative efforts with all countries in the
region threatened by non-state terrorist groups alongside a smaller, more
nimble U.S. military
presence in the Middle East to target these
terrorist networks ruthlessly and efficiently
Back in early 2003, some of President Bush’s top supporters
of the coming invasion of Iraq
argued that the road to peace in Jerusalem ran
through Baghdad and that an Iraq war would stabilize the Middle
East. Four years later, it is clear that the United States has lost control of the situation
and needs to take pragmatic steps to extricate its military forces from Iraq.
There are no easy answers or solutions, but the third current
military escalation in Iraq in
the past three years will not change political realities in Iraq and the Middle East in a way that advances U.S. interests.
Past mistakes are only compounded by escalation on the one hand and inaction
everywhere else. It’s time to move to a post-Bush strategy on Iraq and the Middle East.