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Like a
Mirage in the Desert: U.S. exit from Iraq may recede into the time
horizon
By Charles Knight ccun.org, August 18, 2008
Key advisors to
Barack Obama have put forward an Iraq withdrawal policy which they
have labeled "conditional engagement." In their words:
“Under this
strategy, the … time horizon for redeployment would be negotiated
with the Iraqi government and nested within a more assertive
approach to regional diplomacy. The United States would make clear
that Iraq and America share a common interest in achieving
sustainable stability in Iraq, and that the United States is willing
to help support the Iraqi government and build its security and
governance capacity over the long-term, but only so long as Iraqis
continue to make meaningful political progress.” [from Colin Kahl,
Michele A. Flournoy and Shawn Brimley, “Shaping the Iraq
Inheritance”, Center for a New American Security, June 2008. <
http://www.cnas.org/en/cms/?2311 > ]
This policy may as
well be called “conditional withdrawal” because the degree and speed
of withdrawal is related directly to "conditions" of progress that
are largely dependent on the cooperation of Iraqis and on continuing
intrusive military activity by the US. Such conditionality of
withdrawal makes this centrist Democratic policy approach much
closer than many realize to the Republican position of "staying
until victory." In this case victory is defined as “sustainable
stability.”
The goal of stable,
secure, well-governed, and prosperous Iraq is a worthy one,
especially for Iraqis. It is the work of decades, not years. It is
principally a political job and it is principally the job of
Iraqis. We must get over the notion that stabilizing Iraq is
something for the US to do; that it is something the US can do. US
troops have in effect been destabilizing Iraq since the invasion and
Iraq can only move so far toward re-stabilizing as long as US troops
remain in that country.
Nevertheless, Iraqis
will continue to need substantial international support. Since US
intervention is a contributing factor to Iraqi national problems,
effective outside help will have to move through international
agency, not bilateral arrangements or narrow multi-lateral
arrangements dominated by Western nations. Support dominated by the
US will continue to get in the way of progress. Therefore any
strategy that involves staying militarily in order to achieve
stability is in fatal tension with itself. It is easy to see how
such a strategy will keep US armed forces in Iraq for decades to
come.
Looking at the
details of the conditional engagement policy proposal, one finds
structures of dependency that have no end point. For instance, the
Center for a New American Security report <
http://www.cnas.org/en/cms/?2311 >
suggests that the US will need to manage the Sons of Iraq formations
the US has been supporting by "preventing them from acquiring heavy
weapons, tightly restricting their jurisdictions and movement, and
closely monitoring them for compliance so that they do not rub up
against rival militias." Such a level of control over native forces
is more typical of a colonial power, and certainly not a reasonable
mission for an army that is planning to leave anytime soon. Embrace
that sort of mission and you will be there for a very long time.
If Barack Obama is
elected President it is likely that his defense and foreign policy
team will include a significant number of centrists who will want to
pursue sustainable stability in Iraq with continued application of
US military power. Such is the composition of the Democratic
national security establishment in Washington. There are also other
advisors who believe that the Iraq war is a turning point for a US
middle east policy that needs significant revision and renovation.
If Obama is inclined toward the centrists and follows their advice
he is likely to face considerable frustration in meeting his goal of
ending the war in Iraq. Sooner or later he will turn his attention
to other options. It is well worth the effort in the meantime to
develop those options.
I was one of the
organizers of the Task Force for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq
<
http://www.comw.org/pda/taskforceresponsiblewithdrawal.html
>. We have published a set of 25 initiatives that complement and
support a short timeline military withdrawal. We call for getting
all the troops out within eighteen months while also remaining
responsibly engaged by non-military means in Iraq and the region.
We would disengage from failed policies of the past -- policies
based on strategic error and that have led us into a strategic
disaster.
Military occupation
of Iraq is the central feature of this strategic error. No amount of
clever adjustment at the tactical and operational levels will get us
where we need to be. Only strategic change can get us on the road to
recovery.
Three fundamental
strategic errors have been made:
First, the US
miscalculated what might be accomplished by force of arms and failed
to appreciate the limits on the utility of military power;
Second, our leaders
in Washington failed to appreciate the power and dynamics of
identity politics... and the likely reaction to foreign occupation.
Third, the US failed
to take seriously the importance of international cooperation and
legitimacy in the eyes of the world.
The price the US and
others are paying for these blunders is not measured in blood and
treasure alone -- although these costs are already terribly high.
One example of these extraordinary costs we have addressed in the
Task Force report:
There are now
millions of refugees and millions of internally displaced persons,
totaling nearly 15% of the Iraq population. The displacement of a
proportional number of Americans would mean: 45 million forced from
their homes, the equivalent of emptying out the population of
America's ten largest cities. This happened under the American watch
in Iraq. It is an immense failure for an occupying power; one still
receiving the most 'care less' of responses from Washington.
In addition the US
has:
* weakened and
misdirected its security assets -- since 2004 the Army has been at
an unsustainable operational tempo with accumulating harm to that
service;
* severely damaged
its reputation, especially in the Muslim world;
* damaged its
alliances;
* created a
catalyst for communal conflict and provided a recruiting gift to
Iraqi extremists;
* provided a
motivator for jihadism and for terrorist tactics worldwide;
* handed Iran
strategic and economic benefits which accrue every day US troops
remain in Iraq;
* tarnished the
meaning and the promise of democracy -- and undermined efforts to
promote it.
Moving from the
level of strategy to consider US operational policy in Iraq, it
becomes clear that we must proceed on an entirely new basis -- one
that puts the Iraqis at the center and that gathers the
international community to our side as equal partners in supporting
reconciliation and recovery for this traumatized society.
The "new basis"
necessarily begins with setting a credible -- meaning short --
timeline for withdrawal. This, because:
* Withdrawal is
essential to drawing the remaining "rejectionists", Sunni and Shia
alike, into the political process;
* Withdrawal is
essential to further reducing the appeal of al Qaeda in Mesopotamia;
* Withdrawal is
essential to restoring the credibility of the Iraqi government as
sovereign and as a leader of an inclusion and reconciliation
process, and;
* Withdrawal is
essential to unblocking international cooperation -- especially that
of key contact states -- who can do more to help stabilize Iraq.
Only some of the
benefits of setting a credible withdrawal timeline will materialize
simply by announcing the withdrawal. In addition it will take
effective diplomacy and considerable resources, before and after, to
draw the rejectionists in and catalyze international cooperation and
support. Much of this is specified in the Task Force Report
<
http://www.comw.org/pda/0806taskforcereport.html
>.
The "new basis" of policy implies a new realism about what the US can hope to accomplish in Iraq and how. It means finally coming to terms with a number of uncomfortable facts: * American military presence and action has been part of the problem. ... It is an affront to Iraqi national and communal identities. And a stimulant to rejectionism and insurgency and violence;
* From the start,
the US has been handicapped by being an alien power in Iraq. It
means US troops are judged by a different standard. And it tars
everyone who works with the US ... it makes suspect every process
the US presumes to lead.
* US "moral
authority"... the ability to truly win "hearts and minds" in
sufficient numbers has been undercut by too much firepower and too
many house raids, checkpoint killings, road rams, jailings, and
varied abuses of power. (Others may have done much worse, but that
doesn't matter. The US in Iraq is judged differently because it is
an alien presence in Iraqi culture.)
* US authority is
also undercut because US troops and contractors wear their privilege
and self-interest on their sleeves. It's evident in the US
insistence of immunity for its nationals and in the details of
basing agreements and oil deals the US tries to cut.
So we shouldn't be surprised, when opinion polls find that very few Iraqis think the US is doing a good job in their country. Nor should we be surprised when focus groups conducted for the coalition military command find, as the Washington Post reports < http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/18/AR2007121802262_pf.html > that "Iraqis of all sectarian and ethnic groups believe that the U.S. military invasion is the primary root of the violent differences among them, and see the departure of 'occupying forces' as the key to national reconciliation." Sentiments like these contribute to Maliki's recent push back on basing agreements and to his support of a withdrawal timeline.
The surge has
brought down the level of violence… and today the level of violence
in Iraq is comparable, proportionately, to the worst years of the
"Troubles" in Northern Ireland. It is a very good thing that fewer
are dying in Iraq, but that improvement alone is far from sufficient
evidence from which to conclude that US policy is now on the right
track.
And how did the
reduction in violence come about? Not principally by the
application of increased US military power or by adopting new
counter-insurgency doctrine, but by accommodating and supporting the
desire of Sunnis for local control and by "coming to terms" with
Moqtada al-Sadr and by his decision, encouraged by Iran, to
stand-down his armed contest with the Badr brigades.
As we assess the
so-called "surge strategy," it is important to note its limits:
* The surge has
reduced violence by leveraging and reinforcing the inter-communal
and intra-communal divisions that plague Iraq -- think of the walls
American soldiers have built to separate Sunni and Shia enclaves in
Baghdad; And,
* The fact remains
that none of the powerful Iraqi groups or leaders with whom the US
is currently allied share the American vision or purpose -- not even
the Kurds. US alliances inside Iraq are marriages of convenience --
and shaky ones at that.
Indeed, the surge
marks the limit of what the United States might accomplish in Iraq
by military means. Now the task is to bring into the political
process most of the remaining rejectionists and to catalyze the type
of international support that will facilitate this inclusion and a
national accord. And this requires US military withdrawal.
Some proponents of
staying warn us about backsliding if the US leaves, including the
specter of a failed state wherein al Qaeda will thrive. This
warning displays a basic misunderstanding of al Qaeda in Mesopotamia
which was founded as a reaction to the US invasion. When the US
leaves Iraq it looses its primary motivation for its adherents and
rather than thrive, it is very likely to fade.
In addition,
political instability does not equal a failed state -- there are
many ways of avoiding that outcome that do not involve keeping US
troops there indefinitely. Iraq is a traumatized society and that
condition is a major contributing factor to why Iraq will be
politically volatile for a long time to come. But seeking to shape
or control Iraqi politics with Army brigades is to perpetuate the
use of a blunt and inappropriate tool that does at least as much
harm as it does good. Staying means staying for a very long time!
US presence is one cause of the violence – its troops will always be
seen as a foreign invader to be resisted.
If it is
strategically important to leave, we must understand that it is an
illusion to think we'll just linger a while longer to fix things up
in Iraq before we leave. As long as the US stays in Iraq the goal of
national reconciliation will recede into the time horizon like a
mirage in the desert.
______________
Adapted from a panel presentation on The Future of the U.S. Military Presence in Iraq < http://www.usip.org/events/2008/0725_us_iraq.html > at the United States Institute of Peace, 25 July 2008. The panel consisted of Kimberly Kagan, Colin Kahl, Charles Knight, and Rend al-Rahim, with Daniel Serwer, moderator. Charles Knight is the co-director of the Project on Defense Alternatives (http://www.comw.org/pda/). |
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