“New” US strategies for Iraq proliferating

The WaPo’s Ann Scott Tyson was the chosen leakee for this story, out of the Pentagon and the State Department that assures the increasingly skeptical US public that “Yes! Indeed those wise folks running our administration do have a strategy for Iraq that is broader than just the surge!”
Extreme skepticism is still, however, called for.
The “new strategy” that Tyson so breathlessly reported at the top of the WaPo’s front page has been fairly well summarized by Juan Cole as follows:

    1. Back Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki rather than trying to organize a new government.
    2. Expand and build up the Iraqi Army, which is less purely sectarian than some other security forces in Iraq.
    3. And then implementation of 3 points:

      a. Protect the local population from the insurgents so as to allow them to become independent actors in civil society.
      b. Increase capacity and efficiency of government ministries and their integraton with provincial administrations.
      c. Purge Iraq’s government and security forces of “sectarian abusers,” replacing them with “Iraqi nationalists.”

The principal authors of this “new” strategy are the US’s much-lauded (by some people, not by me) military commander in Iraq, David Petraeus; the (ditto) US Ambassador in Iraq, Ryan Crocker; and Petraeus’s (ditto) “senior counterinsurgency adviser”, David J. Kilcullen. As Tyson describes it, Kilcullen basically put together the new plan with the help of a team comprised of, “about 20 military officers, State Department officials and other experts in Baghdad known as the Joint Strategic Assessment Team.”
She wrote that “More than half a dozen people with knowledge of the plan” had discussed its contents with her. Most of these people had, she said, requested anonymity “because they were not authorized to speak about it to reporters.” But the team members whom she does quote by name, as giving details of the plan, include Kilcullen as well as the British scholar of Iraqi affairs Toby Dodge. So it seems quite clear that the leaking-in-Washington was part of Kilcullen’s deliberate strategy there.
(I note that Kilcullen is is the gung-ho Australian Army counter-insurgency “specialist” featured by George Packer in one of his recent pieces in The New Yorker… It really is notable that at this stage of the war the Bushites have run so low on their own supply of the relevant expertise– and remain so distrustful of the numerous never-consulted US experts on Iraq and the region– that they feel they need to import these British/Commonwelth types in to tell them what the heck they need to do.)
Pat Lang, over at his blog, notes percipiently that the new “Kilcullen plan” for what the US should do in Iraq seems in many ways to run counter to this plan, which was leaked to David Ignatius in, presumably, the same time period, and which David wrote about in his column in yesterday’s WaPo in these terms:

    President Bush and his senior military and foreign policy advisers are beginning to discuss a “post-surge” strategy for Iraq that they hope could gain bipartisan political support. The new policy would focus on training and advising Iraqi troops rather than the broader goal of achieving a political reconciliation in Iraq, which senior officials recognize may be unachievable within the time available.

David doesn’t name any of the sources for his column, or identify them in any way more specific than that they are “senior administration officials.”
Lang writes:

    The difference in what is described in these two [WaPo texts] leads me to ask if the two visions of possible futures for America in Iraq are the result of significant disagreements over policy within the executive branch. If that is so, are the contending parties waging proxy-warfare in the press?
    If it is not the case that these articles represent some kind of struggle, then the incoherence of substance and unreality of many of the arguments and positions in these papers may indicate a disintegration of thought that would be alarming.

My informed guess on this is that both of Lang’s explanations for what is happening are partly right. It seems clear there is an intra-administration “war through leaking to the WaPo”… Heck, that much seems quite evident, and is a very, very old Washington-insiders’ trick.
But it also seems clear to me that there is “incoherence” and “unreality” both between the two leaked plans and, indeed, within each of them taken on its own.
On Kilcullen and his alleged “expertise”, we need only look at this little quote from him, down near the bottom of the Tyson piece:

    “Our notion of ‘reconciliation’ . . . is not necessarily where Iraqis are at right now,” said Kilcullen, explaining that the word has no equivalent in Arabic.

What a supercilious ignoramus! Of course Arabic has a word for “reconciliation’. Indeed, it has at least two very valuable words in this field– sulha for the process by which reconciling is achieved in traditional Arab societies, and sulh for the resulting state of being-reconciled…. So here is David Kilcullen, a man who makes a great point about really “knowing your enemy” and understanding any foreign culture in which you do counter-insurgency work. And he’s been working with the US military on Iraq-related things for how long now? But still, he makes this really elementary mistake and talks about these things in this really patronizing fashion…
Reminds of whichever other Bush administration flunky it was who said in a similarly supercilious way that “the French don’t even have a word for entrepreneur!”
Anyway, enough about Kilcullen and his pretensions to expertise… My bottom line for both these “plans” being (competitively) leaked around Washington is that while they have some good and constructive elements to them– especially inasmuch as they stress the importance of political rather than purely military ways to deal with the imbroglio in Iraq– still, they are both far too little, far too late.
Too little, how?
Primarily, because neither of them– nor indeed, most of the discussion on Iraq policy taking place in Congress these days– has gone nearly far enough to recognize that there really is no way for the US to avoid a disaster in Iraq that does not also involve committing to a much more international framework for defusing the current tensions in Iraq and starting to fashion a new security regime for the broader Gulf region.
Ignatius’s anonymous leakers did at least say that, “The post-surge policy would, in many ways, track the recommendations of the Baker-Hamilton report, which senior administration officials say the president now supports.
(Whew! If that’s so, wouldn’t it be, like, just about five months of bloodshed too late for Bush to have finally come around to that position??)
Baker-Hamilton did, of course, urge a noticeably more multilateral approach to Iraq than the almost undiluted US unilateralism that the administration has pursued until now… But even Baker-Hamilton did not go where I thought it– or any other workable plan– needs to go, which is to say that only the United Nations has the global legitimacy and reach that are now required to frame a workable de-escalation in Iraq, including an orderly US troop withdrawal from the country.
And too late, how?
People might take a good look at this little doc that fell into Pat Lang’s hands recently. It’s an unclassified, internal staff notice for the “US Mission in Iraq”, dated May 21, 2007. It’s on this topic:

    Due to a theater-wide delay in food delivery, menu selections will be limited for the near future… [S]hould the food convoys be delayed further, DFACs will be required to serve MREs for at least one meal out of the day…

There’s some significant context to this problem. Throughout history, the distinctive topography of Mesopotamia has frequently stymied the commanders of foreign invading forces. When I first started thinking about what it would take to sustain a large-scale US occupation force in Iraq after the March 2003 invasion, it was immediately clear to me that the logistics of resupply would be a major, major challenge.
In Vietnam, after all, the US Navy more or less had command of the oceans and was able to maintain ports and depots all along South Vietnam’s lengthy coastline. But in Iraq? They have to bring everything in either through the bottleneck of Kuwait, or with much more difficulty along lengthy (and frequently unsafe) roads through Saudi Arabia, Jordan, or Turkey. Moreover, this is an army that (1) is absolutely not designed to “feed off the land” wherever it is, but relies on its own supplies for everything, up to and including bottled drinking water, and (2) likes to live well, even in the field… I note that the authors of this latest “MREs” memo felt they had to apologize that for many soldiers in the field, “Fresh fruits and salad bar items will… be severely limited or unavailable.”
More recently, when I’ve been thinking of the possible forms a “catastrophe” for the US force presence in Iraq might take, I’ve thought more in terms of a massively lethal incident of physical violence like the 1983 truck bomb in Beirut… or perhaps a huge crowd of unarmed protesters marching resolutly toward a US base somewhere and getting mown down by nervous perimeter guards, in large numbers, and in front of t.v. cameras…
But maybe we need to go back and look again at the possibility of very serious, near-catastrophic supply-chain problems. What if not just the salad-bar items but also the troops’ drinking water, fuel, MREs, and ammo start to run very low indeed?
Are we talking about the possibility of a “Siege of Kut” type situation developing for the US troops in Iraq?
In that WW1 engagement, some 23,000 British Empire forces– most of them, I believe, Indians– were killed and wounded before, finally, Gen. Townshend surrendered to the Ottomans. I sincerely hope that, if the US forces’ supplies run low, they won’t wait till they reach anything close to those kinds of casualty figures before they do the right thing and request the UN to help them negotiate an orderly exit from all of Iraq.
Until we see our leaders finally acknowledge that they can’t disengage from Iraq without U.N. help, extreme skepticism will still be called for. All these leaks about this “new” US plan or that one will just be political spin and window-dressing.

8 thoughts on ““New” US strategies for Iraq proliferating”

  1. 1) Concerning Bush’s alternative plans if the surge doesn’t work, the Guardian has an interesting report to-day. They made the lead on the fact that Bush will now try to internationalize Iraq. Extract :
    The US plan is expected to call for:
    · Expanded UN involvement in overseeing Iraq’s full transition to a “normal” democratic state, including an enhanced role for UN humanitarian agencies, the creation of a UN command, and possibly a Muslim-led peacekeeping force
    · Increased involvement in Iraq policymaking of UN security council permanent members, Japan and EU countries – in particular, the new conservative government of French president Nicolas Sarkozy

    2) The only element, that may or may not change something is that Chirac and Shroeder have been replaced by Merkel and Sarkozy and that a Corean (what is his name ?) has replaced Kofi Annan. But this Corean is a man who has made all his carreer at the UN (aka it was an internal candidature) and the UN employees haven’t forgoten the way the US/Bush/Bolton and co bullied the UN organizations for now half a dozen years at least, trying to instrumentalize it for their own interest. They haven’t forgotten how the US prevented the UN to play a leading role in the organization of the first elections and the first transitional government. They have not forgotten how Sergio de Mello died, because the US put the UN in such an uncomfortable position (the UN was bombed because it was seen like a tool of the Americans).
    3) Sarkozy can act surprisingly. People say that he will be more pro-American than former French Presidents. At the time of the US invasion, he was a clear supporter of the Iraq war. But during the presidential campaign he changed side, saying that the Iraq invasion had been a mistake : was he sincere ? I doubt it. However, the main thing for which the French remember Chirac and what they appreciated the most, was his opposition to the Iraq invasion. It has come out clearly in the polls and Sarkozy isn’t dumb, he knows that his electorate is much more pro-arab than it is pro-Bush. So it remains to be seen what Sarkozy will do. Right after his election Blair not only sent the usual congratulations. He also hold an address in a Youtube movie, where he congratulated Sarkozy in French (this is the English version). It was to cringe : a labour man congratulating a man of the hard right with so much conviction. It was clear to me that he was expecting a help and a change of the traditional French policy toward ME and a help to end the Iraq crisis.
    4) In order to see how far the international community is ready to help the US out, it may be interesting to look at what succeed with the Iraqi refugees. Recently, the UNHCR has made a large call to countries to accept Iraqi refugees, stating that it is the worst crisis in ME since the 1948 Palestinian refugees crisis. As is usual in these cases, the UNHCR has tried to place contingents of refugees (aka the refugees don’t have to request asilum individually, instead, given the bad security situation they are admitted in large groups, without long procedures). But guess what : the EU countries have refused to admit any outside of the usual individual procedures ! the message was clear : the US has created the problem, she should now provide for the refugees.
    5) Concerning the plan, as described in Juan Cole’s blog, I don’t thing that there is anything new to it. They have already tried all these points, without success, I don’t see why that should work now, that the situation is worse. It’s the same with their wish to call for internationalization : It’s too late now. Human societies aren’t like phsysical sciences : if you experiment and you spoil things, you can’t go back, what is done is done, it can’t be undone.
    6) Concerning your analysis of the supply line, I agree with you. Especially, if the Brittish soldiers are withdrawn and if Basra turns against the occupation (due to the Sadrists) or spiral into chaos (turf for the control of oil smuggling, fight for power between the tribes and different political factions etc..) then the US supply line would be really at risk. I wonder if the US can stay in Iraq alone, once the Brittish have gone.. May be that is the reason why eventually, they want to internationalize Iraq and draw the UN back inside (also not the first time they have been trying).

  2. And then implementation of 3 points:
    a, b,and c?

    If we call this a “strategy” we are all damn stupid guys!!!
    Any minded man he will tels you five years ago same thing, when you going to set a democracy in a conutry or you hold the power in a country what you should do?
    What are these stupid criminals those sitting in Think-Tank and aleswhere, they are just a bunch of criminals and naive people who are not different from those folks who support Hitler or chawchisko and Saddam regimes.

  3. Frank who needs water when you have democracy? Anyway haven’t you seen the PR vidoes on youtube where american occupation troops are handing out fresh water to lucky iraqi children after a bit of a friendly race behind their truck? What a pity we will see no more such US army PR on Youtube.

  4. Christianne: Concerning [HC’s] analysis of the supply line, I agree with . . . . Especially, if the British soldiers are withdrawn and if Basra turns against the occupation (due to the Sadrists) or spirals into chaos (turf for the control of oil smuggling, fight for power between the tribes and different political factions etc..) then the US supply line would be really at risk. I wonder if the US can stay in Iraq alone, once the Brittish have gone. Maybe that is the reason why eventually, they want to internationalize Iraq and draw the UN back inside (also not the first time they have been trying).
    That’s almost, but not quite, realistic enough for my taste. If one tries to think along the same general lines the way a militant Republican might think, that should close the gap.
    In this case, perhaps the best thing for the perps to do would be to replace the Brits in the far south, and simply give up on al-’Anbár and Diyálà and all that sad, oilforsaken sort of place generally — though they cannot abandon New Baghdad altogether.
    If they could thus bring themselves to settle for [1] keeping the Green Zone neorégime in existence (to save the Big Management Party’s face) and [2] being able to get lots of petroleum out (to gratify various big wallets), they might be able to manage both these tasks militarily, supply lines and all, without spending so much taxpayer money or getting so many GI’s killed that America positively puts her foot down and ends the caper altogether.
    Why, they might even optionally allow the UN to preside over the chaos that would be Iraqi Sunnistan! — although that, of course, could be only the most purely notional and nominal sort of presiding. (Christianne and I seem to agree against Dr. Cobban that there is no discernible reason why China and Peru and Turtle Bay should want to try to do what the Crawfordites could not. Why should they? What on earth is in it for them?)

  5. Jeremy: No one is going to be dumb enough to try and bail the boy king out of this hole.
    Ah, “Don’t you know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is bigmanaged nowadays?”
    An Anglophone moralist may take your line easily enough, sir, we sit atop the world securely for the moment, and we need deploy our hyperpowerful violences only as and when and where we freely choose. Other folks are not so lucky, though, and it is unfair and unreasonable and imperceptive to speak only of “dumb” when Lesser Breeds Without suck up to GOP extremism.
    Try to look at the correlation clientside-up rather than patronside-down, sir. Think of all that scrumptious Force that the militant GOP extremists dispose of, all that Amazing Force that could so easily do away with the present parcel of rogues in one’s nation and install oneself and one’s own best buddies as the Crawford-sponsored neorégime thereof! If you can sincerely say that such a Vision of Bliss as that does not tempt you at all, sir, perhaps you ought to leave the human race’s politics alone altogether.
    Of course you are not by any means to yield to such diabolical temptation, or fail to notice how unreliable an “ally” the militant Republican Party has rather consistently proven itself to be to its Little Foreign Friends. You are not to touch the pitch that defiles, not even with an eleven foot pole!
    All the same, unless you can sympathetically imagine — only imagine in the mind, not hanker after in the libido! — what Dr. Ahmad Chelabí used to see in the AEIdeologues and the Heritagitarians and the Hoovervillains before AC somehow got himself excommunicated by his own good ole GOP and “conservative” tank-think buddies, well, how to say politely rather than crudely and rudely what apparently requires to be said to you, sir? Excuse me, please, that I now abruptly give the attempt up.
    Happy days.

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