http://www.amconmag.com
July 19,
2004
Time for
Reckoning
Ten lessons to
take away from Iraq
By Andrew J.
Bacevich
Reality has not dealt kindly with
the hopes and expectations conjured up to justify Operation
Iraqi Freedom. Although the war may not be lost, it cannot
be won, at least not as the Bush administration once defined
winning. What then are we to make of this experience?
The question may strike some as
premature. Whether President Bush (or President Kerry)
"stays the course" or cuts American losses, difficult days
lie ahead. The bill yet to be levied for this misadventure
promises to be steep. More Americans and even larger numbers
of Iraqis will lose their lives. Combat operations and the
black hole of "nation-building" will consume additional
billions of dollars, adding to the ocean of red ink that is
the federal budget. Yet even as events wind their way toward
what promises to be a deeply unsatisfactory denouement, the
argument over what it all means must necessarily be joined.
Common sense dictates that we apply to future U.S. policy
what we have learned in Iraq, and the future will not
wait.
With an eye toward that future - and
with no claim that any of what follows qualifies as
definitive - herewith a first cut at identifying the war's
operative lessons.
First, ideology makes a poor
substitute for strategy. With the invasion of Iraq, it
became impossible to deny that in the heady aftermath of the
Cold War American grand strategy became uncoupled from
reality. Certain that history had spoken and that Americans
were uniquely able to interpret its meaning, policymakers
both Democratic and Republican uncorked old vials of
Wilsonian illusion and breathed deeply. As a consequence,
zealotry supplanted calculations of power and interest as a
determinant of U.S. policy.
Bill Clinton entertained visions of
globalization, creating a world without borders in which all
nations would be sure to enjoy the blessings of peace,
prosperity, and democracy. George W. Bush topped Clinton,
vowing after 9/11 not only to eliminate terror (an
impossibility) but also to put an end to evil. But mixing
utopianism and politics is a recipe for miscalculation and
an invitation to strategic bankruptcy - as the Iraq War has
painfully reminded us.
It is the tradition of George
Washington rather than the tradition of Woodrow Wilson that
best serves American interests. The nation's first president
- and successors like Lincoln, both Roosevelts, Truman, and
Eisenhower - understood not only the uses but also the
limits of power. That balanced sensibility, anchored to
considerations of prudence, has vanished from the current
foreign-policy elite. There is an urgent need to restore
it.
Second, wars leave loose
ends. In a political sense, decisive victory - meaning
military success that makes a clean sweep of the complaints
giving rise to war in the first place - is a pipe
dream.
Operation Iraqi Freedom was supposed
to finish the job that Bush's father had left undone in
1991. Oust Saddam Hussein, the war's supporters promised,
and all sorts of good things were sure to follow. War would
transform Iraq into the first Arab democracy, usher the
Middle East into an era of lasting peace, and nudge Islam
toward moderation and modernity. Today, the Ba'athist regime
is gone, but none of the predicted benefits seems likely to
materialize. Instead the United States has exchanged the
limited burdens of containment for the far more onerous
burdens of occupation. We have overthrown a tin-pot dictator
posing no immediate threat to the United States and thereby
energized and encouraged far more dangerous enemies. Rather
than persuading Muslims to see America as liberator and
friend, we have cemented our image as Great
Satan.
War is like a highly toxic drug:
with the cure come side effects. And Iraq reminds us that
the side effects can prove worse than the disease.
Third, allies have choices - and
will exercise them. Across a decade of hyping the United
States as "sole superpower" and "indispensable nation," too
many policymakers persuaded themselves that America's
traditional allies had no alternative but to accede to U.S.
"global leadership." Both the Persian Gulf War of 1990-1991
and the Kosovo conflict of 1999 seemed to show that when
Washington called, others clamored to board the bandwagon.
To opt out was to be left out and left behind: from
Washington's perspective, this was a risk that few "friends"
were likely to take.
Iraq demolished such fantasies.
Allies are not vassals. When interests diverge sufficiently,
"friendship" counts for little. The Iraq experience has,
time and again, affirmed this fundamental principle: when
"old Europe" chose to sit out the war altogether; when
Turkey rejected Washington's request to allow U.S. troops to
cross its territory; when Spanish voters concluded that
occupying Iraq was exacerbating rather than reducing the
threat of terror. At every step of the way, as key allies
stiffed us, the costs borne by the United States have
necessarily risen.
Even before Iraq, the bonds that
once joined what was called "the West" had already (and
perhaps inevitably) begun to fray. Thanks to its insistence
on preventive war, the Bush administration has hastened the
West along the path toward oblivion. Nations whose support
we once assumed to be a given now question the acceptability
of the Pax Americana and may yet muster the collective will
to proffer an alternative. Before launching on more
crusades, we have diplomatic fences to mend.
Fourth, Israel's war is not our
war. President Bush's undifferentiated "global war on
terror" has encouraged the government of Ariel Sharon to
assert that Israel's enemies and America's enemies are one
and the same. But they are not. Indeed, Sharon's misguided
effort to crush resistance to Israel's occupation of the
West Bank and Gaza through brute force serves only to
complicate and exacerbate our own problems. Sharon's policy
will not work, and as Israel's chief supporter we get tagged
with much of the blame.
Resolving the Israeli-Palestinian
dispute will not itself alleviate Muslim antagonism toward
the United States. But absent such a resolution, that
antagonism will fester, thereby providing fertile ground for
Osama bin Laden and other Islamic radicals to enlist new
recruits.
We should not deceive ourselves
about the prospects of bringing real peace to the Holy Land.
Something like partition is probably the best outcome one
can hope for. But brokering and if necessary enforcing such
a partition rather than vainly attempting to democratize the
Arab world at the point of a sword ought to form the
centerpiece of U.S. policy in the Middle East. Further
deference to Israeli hardliners like Sharon, who know
nothing but force, is contrary to American interests. True
friends of the Jewish state will see it as contrary to
Israel's interests as well.
Fifth, "shock and awe" gets you
only so far. More than a decade ago, the previous U.S.
war against Iraq brought to full flower the American romance
with high-tech warfare. Operation Iraqi Freedom has offered
the fullest illustration to date of what this new American
way of war can and cannot do. On the one hand, it affirmed
what we already learned in Desert Storm: U.S. forces will
make short work of any conventionally organized and equipped
adversary foolish enough to put up a fight.
On the other hand, developments
since the fall of Baghdad have also affirmed what we learned
in Mogadishu: against a determined insurgent armed with even
primitive weapons, air power, stealth, and precision weapons
- all the signature capabilities that distinguish the
preferred American style of warfare - won't do the trick.
Defeating guerrillas requires something more and something
different. The United States military is no closer today to
devising a technological solution to the riddle of
unconventional war than it was when Vietnam ended in
defeat.
Sixth, the margin of U.S.
military supremacy is thinner than advertised. Ours is
undoubtedly the mightiest military the world has ever seen,
with a more than ample inventory of high-performance fighter
jets, aircraft carriers, and top-of-the-line nuclear
submarines. But our inventory of soldiers and Marines is
grossly inadequate - inadequate at least to implement
President Bush's grandiose plans for sprinkling the
blessings of liberty throughout the Greater Middle East.
Despite the administration's obdurate insistence to the
contrary, the fact is that the United States today has too
few soldiers doing too many things.
In just one year, the Iraq morass
has brought U.S. ground forces within a hair's breadth of
overstretch. Expedients such as relying on reserves and
hiring thousands of mercenaries have not fixed the problem;
they embody it. Announced plans to divert troops from Korea
to Iraq and to deploy stateside training cadres show just
how bare the cupboard has become.
If the United States is intent on
playing the role of global hegemon, we need to put more
young Americans in uniform - lots more. If as citizens we're
not willing to pay that price, then the Iraq experience
should oblige policymakers to scale back their ambitions.
Seventh, the myth of American
casualty aversion is just that. The conventional wisdom
of the 1990s was that a risk-averse military and a
casualty-phobic public constituted major obstacles impeding
the effective use of force. For the Clinton administration
and its defenders, this became a convenient device for
offloading onto others responsibility for American military
fecklessness. The onus for the pseudo-campaigns of the
decade leading up to 9/11 - the zenith coming in 1998 when
U.S. Navy cruise missiles demolished an empty pharmaceutical
factory in Khartoum - lay not with the commander-in-chief
but with foot-dragging generals and fainthearted citizens
who lacked the stomach for serious military
action.
Historians can debate whether or not
the sensitivity to casualties was ever as great as it once
appeared. But there is little room for debate that the
events of Sept. 11, 2001 swept aside any such constraints.
Traditional American ferocity and bloody-mindedness
reasserted themselves with a vengeance. All that was needed
was competence at the top to harness and direct it. But as
the Iraq debacle has made plain, competence remains, as it
was in the 1990s, in precariously short supply.
Eighth, so too with the myth of
an American genius for spreading democracy. From the
very day that U.S. forces entered Baghdad, the officials
charged with raising a new Iraq out of the ashes of the old
have displayed remarkable ineptitude. However admirable the
hard work of those who have risked life and limb to give the
Iraqi people a fresh start, the overall effort has misfired.
Far from replicating the success
achieved in postwar Germany and Japan after 1945, L. Paul
Bremer has managed to reprise the sorry record achieved in
places like South Vietnam. If the United States insists that
it needs to be in the nation-building business, then it's
time to go back to square one, drawing on the
disappointments of Iraq to devise the techniques, create the
institutions, and develop the leaders to do better next time
out. Or, perhaps more wisely, we might conclude that
bringing democracy to the Arab world is akin to making
bricks without straw - a trick best left to
others.
Ninth, it's hard to win when you
don't know whom you're fighting. Much has been made
about the blunders in strategic intelligence such as the
failure to anticipate 9/11 and the bogus assertions
regarding Saddam's weapons of massive destruction. But the
inadequacies of tactical intelligence have been at least as
great, if not greater.
In a situation truly without
precedent in all of American military history, American
forces in Iraq have for more than a year been engaged in a
full-fledged shooting war and still do not know whom they
are fighting. The reliance on generic terms to describe the
"terrorists," "insurgents," or "foreign fighters" tells the
story. Exactly who is the enemy? How is he organized? Who
gives the orders? What are his aims? We don't know. And as
long as we don't, the enemy will retain the initiative.
In short, the Iraq War shows that
the imperative of intelligence reform goes far beyond any
problems attributed to the CIA.
Tenth, civil-military relations
at the top are broken. The Iraq War has confirmed what
had already become evident during the 1990s: the
relationship between senior military leaders and the top
echelon of civilian officials is dysfunctional. That
dysfunction contributes to flawed decisions on crucial
issues related to peace and war.
During the Clinton era, the problem
was one of a weak commander-in-chief unable or unwilling to
assert effective control over the generals. Donald Rumsfeld
came into office intent on clearing up any confusion about
who is in charge. But the Rumsfeld approach is to treat his
principal military advisers with McNamara-like disdain.
Those who speak up - like the Army chief of staff who had
the temerity to suggest that occupying Iraq might require a
considerable number of troops - are rebuked and
marginalized.
The point is not to suggest turning
war over to the soldiers. Unambiguous civilian control is
essential. But effective civil-military interaction demands
something more than simply throttling generals. It means
incorporating professional military expertise into the
debate over basic national security policy. That in turn
requires a combination of trust, honesty, mutual respect,
and mutual self-restraint that has been absent for many
years. This is an intolerable situation that in all
likelihood the Department of Defense itself cannot fix. It
cries out for serious and sustained congressional attention.
As was the case with Vietnam, the
debate over the lessons of Iraq promises to be a protracted
one. Again as was the case with Vietnam, the temptation to
exploit that debate for partisan purposes will be great. But
the issue is too important to use as an excuse for bashing
neoconservatives, scoring points against President Bush, or
luxuriating in the peculiar satisfactions of Schadenfreude.
To avoid repeating the errors that got us into this mess, we
need to get those lessons right.
Andrew J. Bacevich is
professor of international relations at Boston
University.
His latest book is 'American Empire: The Realities and
Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy'.
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