Worrisome, But Need to Address

Annie

Diamond Member
Nov 22, 2003
50,848
4,827
1,790
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/716cmfoq.asp?pg=1


The Battle for Iraq
From the October 11, 2004 issue: Forget gradualism and Iraqification--send in the Marines.
by Reuel Marc Gerecht



WHAT SHOULD WE DO IN IRAQ? The U.S. presidential election will likely be won or lost over the war and its aftermath. If the United States fails in Iraq--if it is driven out by violence, and the country descends into internecine strife--then former ambassador (and current Kerry adviser) Richard Holbrooke may well be right: Iraq will be "a mess worse than Vietnam." It's a good bet that few people in the administration, as in the country at large, think the counterinsurgency is going well.

It is quite striking to listen to President Bush's speeches about Iraq--about its centrality to the war on terror and the future of America's security--and then talk to officials in the State Department, the Pentagon, and the White House who would rather change the subject. If nothing else, America's second Gulf War will test whether the president of the United States can successfully commit the country to an enormous undertaking--the democratization of an important Muslim state--about which many, if not most, of his diplomats, intelligence officials, and senior soldiers are, at minimum, ambivalent.

President Bush may have seen the necessity of removing a genetically aggressive, weapons-of-mass-destruction-loving Saddam Hussein from a post-9/11 world. He certainly went on to see the essential need to transform the dysfunctional political culture of the Middle East--the nexus between autocracy and Islamic extremism--and the unavoidable task of trying to aid the Iraqis in building a democracy in the Arab world, the birthplace of bin Ladenism. But probably relatively few of the "foreign-policy professionals" and "intelligence experts" below the president see the world similarly.

Washington's foreign affairs and intelligence bureaucrats are more or less at one with Senator John Kerry: President Bush has been a rash revolutionary who, among other things, has committed them to an unwanted task that will likely unsettle if not rack them for years to come. President Bush's strategic vision aside, do his administration's tactics in Iraq make sense? Are any of Kerry's criticisms of the president's plan valid? Is the senator's game plan in any way more astute? The likely answers to these questions are not encouraging.

There is a decent chance that the tactics now in use in Iraq will produce the opposite of what is intended: The insurrection in the Sunni triangle will deepen, and the clerical rebel Moktada al-Sadr and his Sadriyyin followers may well roll forth again, with even more force, from their Baghdad Shiite stronghold. Many American officials certainly hope, and appear to believe, that the "gradualist" course now chosen will eventually win the day: If U.S. forces abstain from the siege-and-conquest of truly difficult insurgent towns in the Sunni triangle in favor of behind-the-scenes, Iraqi-led negotiations backed by CIA largesse, aerial bombardment, quick ground assaults, and the gradual deployment of more Iraqi paramilitary and police units, an inglorious but lasting victory will follow.

Yet the administration may well be setting itself up for a perfect storm of Arab Sunni intransigence, fundamentalism, and betrayal. The White House should take little comfort in knowing that Kerry's ideas are even worse. Kerry's plan, when not surreal--the French and the Germans, who tried to ease sanctions on Saddam Hussein, and who opposed the war on nationalist, internationalist, European, pacifist, and capitalist principles, have little desire to aid America now--is unsound, precisely because it repeats and amplifies the bad counterinsurgency ideas of the Bush administration.


[…]

But this bipartisan position is likely to be our undoing. Basic point: The United States is engaged in a revolution in Iraq. We have toppled Saddam Hussein, the Baath party, and the Sunni Arab dominion over the country. We have promised to help the Iraqi people establish a democracy, which means that we are the midwife of a political system that will empower the Shia, who constitute at least 60 percent of Iraq's population. This is an enormous shock to Iraq's Arab Sunnis, who may represent as much as 25 percent, but quite possibly no more than 15 percent, of all Iraqis. Many in the Muslim Middle East hate and fear the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. One of the principal reasons is Sunni antipathy for the American-delivered Shiite new order.

Even Iraqi Arab Sunnis who loathed Saddam Hussein (probably a majority) and were happy about his fall (perhaps a majority) remain enormously anxious about the rise of the Shia. Many of them surely would like to believe a new Sunni order could be established. A year ago in Iraq, before the violence in the Sunni triangle became ferocious, I could feel the hope among ordinary Sunnis that their power and prestige could somehow be recovered. I could feel it among Sunnis who had no love of Saddam Hussein and the Baath, and only mildly disliked the Americans for liberating them. And a failure to fully appreciate the revolutionary implications of America's actions for the Sunnis led to the second major error. (The first was the Pentagon's failure to prevent the looting of Baghdad.)

After the rapid fall of the capital, the Americans didn't aggressively vacuum up former Baathist military officers and intelligence officials into detention camps. Communities and towns built by and for Baathists were left largely undisturbed. These men really hope that the old order in some fashion can be reborn. Their desired new order is, even more than the old, aggressively non-Shiite, since the Shiites showed in April 2003 they had no problem with President Bush's liberation of their country.

The Americans then made another large mistake. The Pentagon, the State Department, and the CIA--the three powers running the Coalition Provisional Authority--did not realize how religious identity among Arab Sunnis had grown. The signs of a vibrant fundamentalism were there: the sermons, the preachers, the change of dress, personal manners, and language, and the graffiti written on the walls, and the hard-core books and pamphlets in the markets. The Americans and their highly secularized Iraqi translators often mistook Iraqi salafis for foreign fundamentalists. (The same may be true today for Prime Minister Allawi and other highly secularized, older Iraqi exiles, who have a noticeable blindness when it comes to seeing the vibrancy of Islamic militancy in post-Saddam Iraq. We would be wise to be skeptical about Allawi's contention that foreign jihadists are "pouring" into the country.)

In the spring of 2003, Washington delivered demarches to Riyadh protesting Wahhabi missionary activity. The growth of Sunni fundamentalism in Iraq perhaps started in the 1970s. It's very difficult to know for sure since the Orwellian tyranny of Saddam allowed for no reliable Western or Arab observation and comment. Elsewhere in the Sunni Arab world, including in Baathist Syria, the 1970s saw fundamentalism take off. What seems sure is that by the late 1980s and 1990s it was growing in Iraq. The country was catching up with the rest of the Sunni Arab world, where Islamic activism was gaining the intellectual and moral high ground.

From the late 1980s forward, Saddam Hussein became an enthusiastic mosque-builder--perhaps the most energetic mosque-builder Islam had seen. Regardless of what lurked in Saddam's soul, the Butcher of Baghdad knew the changing sentiments of his Sunni base. With the fall of Saddam and his withered Baathist creed, the Sunni religious identity blossomed. The Shiites, too, have experienced an increased religiosity since April 2003, though it appears to be tempered by their traditional clergy and the much-discussed excesses and failures of the clerical regime in Shiite Iran.

State Department, CIA, Pentagon, and National Security Council officials usually talk about a Baathist core to the insurrection in the Sunni triangle. Perhaps. It is more likely, however, that Sunni fundamentalism has been consuming the Baath for years. Since Saddam's collapse, this slow-motion invasion of Baathist body-snatchers has likely gained significant speed. In Falluja, this is obviously the case. The growing range and boldness of the guerrilla-cum-terrorist actions suggests something more vigorous and young than the remnants of the Baath.

SUNNI MILITANTS are unquestionably men of hope, who believe fervently that they can drive the Americans out and create another Sunni-dominated state. And the Americans have certainly given them cause to cheer. The "gradualist" approach of the Bush administration has been a gift. The American retreat at Falluja was an enormous fillip to their pride and self-confidence. As the militants have grown stronger, U.S. soldiers have increasingly withdrawn from Iraqi streets. While the Americans have wanted to seem less provocative to the Iraqi people, they have certainly sent a different image to the holy warriors and ex-Baathists. Washington forgot historical rule number one about getting enemies to surrender and acquiesce: You must first beat them. They must see clearly that they have no hope. In a Middle Eastern context, your hayba, the awe that comes with indomitable power, must overwhelm them. This has not happened in Iraq since the fall of Saddam.

[…]

If it becomes apparent to all that the Iraqification option isn't going to work in the Sunni heartland, it may be nonetheless enormously difficult for Prime Minister Allawi to abandon the idea. He has staked his career on his ability to corral the Sunni insurrection. If he cannot do so except through repeated American frontal assaults against Sunni neighborhoods, towns, and cities, he may find himself at odds with the Sunni ex-Baathists who have always made up his inner circle. Allawi may be prepared to do this. The recent, apparently successful attack on Samarra gives one hope. Then again, he could buckle and oppose the necessary American military actions. […]The U.S. embassy in Baghdad really has no good idea of how many Arab Sunnis are willing to support a new democratic Iraq, which inevitably will be Shiite-dominated. (This same problem is directly connected to the U.S. military's and the CIA's inability to get a clear picture of the insurrectionists, their number, coordination, and command structure.)

[…]

The administration may enjoy more maneuvering room in Iraq than most of its critics believe: The Kurds and the vast majority of the Arab Iraqi Shia have not, and likely will not, go into rebellion against the Allawi government owing to events in the Sunni triangle. (Better numerous American failures than a Shia assumption of responsibility for quieting the Sunni hard-core.) And the Bush administration and Allawi are in some places making progress.

Not without justification, they grouse that the press, (understandably) intimidated by the violence in Baghdad and on the highways, is no longer capable of reporting the good news of the counterinsurgency, in places like Samarra and Ramadi, where American and Iraqi efforts have, so far, kept the towns from becoming new Fallujas. This may not be great news--given the hatred of Saddam Hussein, his Tikriti clan, and the Baath party among Samarra's rather bourgeois tribal elders, one would hope to do better than a seesawing victory in what was one of the more pro-American Sunni Arab towns in April 2003. But such "progress" means the insurgency doesn't yet have decisive popular support.

The Sunni triangle, let alone Iraq, is not yet Vietnam.
The Bush administration's plan of action is obviously a work in progress, which is as it should be. As the president stated in Thursday's foreign policy debate, he and his administration have and will again adapt to circumstances in Iraq. Events dictate strategy (not a strong theme in the State Department's much-touted and little-read treatise on post-Saddam Iraq), and it's entirely possible that the administration's "gradualist" approach will be jettisoned if insurgents continue to increase the tempo of violence, or if the White House decides it must make a serious try to pacify the Sunni triangle before the first round of national elections in January 2005.

Yet the odds of a massive November surprise offensive, after the U.S. elections, aren't high given how thinly spread American combat forces are across the country. Also, Secretary Rumsfeld's remark about partial elections may indicate that the secretary, who has consistently looked askance at deploying more troops, has little intention of adopting counterinsurgency tactics requiring a lot more manpower (for example, simultaneous or even sequential house-to-house offensives in Falluja, Ramadi, Baquba, Mosul, or the worst sections of Baghdad).

The president could order thousands of Marines from East Asia and the United States to Iraq fairly quickly. But such an offensive in November or December would be essentially an all-American affair: Even the most expedited deployment of Iraq's new, American-made army would likely be too late for an all-out assault in 2004.In any case, we should plan on the worst: The Sunni triangle will probably become much more savage, and Moktada al-Sadr may well again come at us and Grand Ayatollah Sistani, his primary foe, when we are stressed by battles with Sunnis.

We should assume, as Senator Biden fearfully predicted, that we will inherit the wind in Iraq, and we should meet that wind head on. The president should transport all the Marines he can to Iraq, and then take and hold the centers of the Sunni insurrection, starting with Falluja. The administration shouldn't fear the Arabic satellite TV networks' broadcasting the horrors of the American offensive. Bin Ladenism grew by preaching the gospel of American weakness, not strength.

The Ottoman empire, the greatest of Islam's holy-warrior states, attracted vastly more jihadists from its realms and beyond when it had Europe's Christian kingdoms on the run. If the Americans win--and win we will--these TV networks will not be able to camouflage defeat. But we first have to recover lost ground. Falluja was a serious defeat for the United States. Prime Minister Allawi and his Iraqi soldiers cannot now ride to the rescue. A resurrected and reformed Sunni Baathist army never could.

Iraq's Arab Sunni community must have the opportunity to participate electorally in the future of the country. It is possible they will choose to drive right over the cliff. A centuries-old habit of power is a hard thing to let go of. But if they choose not to free themselves from old ways, then they will have only themselves to blame. The United States can then begin what it should have done from the beginning: slowly constructing a new Iraqi army primarily with Arab Shiites and Kurds--the foundation of Iraq's future democracy.
Reuel Marc Gerecht is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard.

© Copyright 2004, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.
 
*bump*

Well one of the bots was 'slurping' this, that was good 2 years ago, better now.
 

Forum List

Back
Top