Empire then and now

The British historian Elizabeth Monroe must have been born in about
the same year as my father– 1910.  I have Monroe’s1981 book
Britain’s Moment in the Middle East, 1914-1971
here
in front of me, and in the bio note it says , “After serving on the staffs
of the League of Nations and Chatham House, she obtained a Rockefeller Travelling
Fellowship in 1937 for study in the Mediterranean area.” (After that, she
headed the British government’s Middle East Information Division during
World War 2; then she was ME correspondent for the Economist
for 15 years before settling down at St. Antony’s College, Oxford, to
write history.)

My father, James (JM) Cobban, gained his degree from Cambridge in Classics
in, I think, 1933.  Then in 1935 he published his first book,
Senate & Provinces, 78 -49 B.C.; Some aspects of the foreign policy
and provincial relations of the senate during the closing years of the Roman
Republic
.  

I have that in front of me, too, along with another volume that
I inherited from my dad’s estate after he died eight years ago.  It’s a
volume by Percy Sands, who had been my dad’s Headmaster at the Yorkshire Dales
“public” (i.e. private) school where he spent nine of his most formative
years. Many decades later JM would tell me that Sands had been his most important role model as he grew up. And as I look at Sands’ book today I see that on his book’s title page– as on my father’s–
it notes that this piece of work in ancient history won Cambridge’s 
“Thirlwall Prize” for history.

Percy Sands’ book was published in 1908.
 Its title was The Client Princes of the Roman Empire.
under the Republic

Why am I telling you all this?  Well, mainly to demonstrate that the kinds of quandary George Bush faces in the
Middle East are not new… Not new at all!  Indeed, many whole sections
of Sands’ book The Client Princes could be applied
almost exactly to situations in the US empire today.  (Remember, too,
that a number of the “provinces” and the “client princes” written about in his book, as in my father’s book, were in what we now think of as the Near, or
Middle, East.)

One example of the similarities then and now:  Sands’ Appendix B cites
both Latin and Greek sources to provide evidence of more than a dozen instances
in which various client kings (read “Ahmad Chalabi”, etc) had bribed
men of presumed influence within imperial Rome…

And then, in his final chapter Sands segués effortlessly from
his consideration of client-center political relationships within ancient
imperial Rome to client-center political relationships within the then-contemporary
British Empire.

In his Section 90, for example, he writes:

Continue reading “Empire then and now”

Moqtada’s interview at La Repubblica, translated

    Here is a translation of Moqtada’s interview with La Repubblica, contributed to JWN’s comments section earlier today by “JHM”, who modestly writes, “Please let me know if there is something wildly wrong with the translation.”
    I gratefully say, “Thanks, JHM!”


“A Secret Army Against Us, But the Shiites Will Know How to Fight Back”
by Renato Caprile [correspondent of La Reppublica of Rome]
He feels stalked and goes into hiding. He sleeps no more than one night in the same bed. Some of his most faithful allies have already turned their backs. He has even moved his family to an undisclosed location. Muqtada al-Sadr feels that the end is near. Enemy forces, forces infiltrated amongst his own people! Yet for him it is not about al-Málikí, whom he considers little more than a puppet, so much as about ’Iyád al-‘Alláwí, the former prime minister, whom the Americans have never stopped aiming [to empower]. He [‘A.] is the true director of the operation which proposes to wipe him [S.] off the face of Iraq, him and his Mahdi Army.
[Q1] How is it that al-Málikí, who up until a short time ago even saw to it that there were six ministers of your movement in his cabinet, is suddenly so aware that the religious militias, and especially yours, are the true problem that must be solved?
[A1] Between me and Abú Asárá [al-Malikí] there has never been much good will. I have always suspected he was up to something and I never confided in him. We only met a couple of times. The last time he said to me, “You are the backbone of the country,” and then went on to admit to me that he was “obliged” to fight. Obliged, you see?
=
[Q2] The fact remains that he is on the brink of [?] unleashing an iron fist against his own people.
[A2] It is effectively unleashed already. Yesterday evening they arrested four hundred and some of my people. It is not we that they wish to destroy, it is Islam. We are only one obstacle. For the moment we shall offer no resistance.
=
[Q3] Do you mean you are going to disarm?
[A3] The Qur’án forbids killing in the month of Muharram [21 January through 18 February 2007]. So they’ll do all the killing then. There is no better time for a true believer to die, Paradise is guaranteed. But God is merciful, we are not all going to die. After Muharram, we’ll see.
=
[Q4] Some claim that the army and police have been extensively infiltrated by your men and that the Marines by themselves will never manage to disarm you.
[A4] It’s really exactly the other way around: it is our militia which is swarming with spies. It doesn’t take much doing to infiltrate an army of the people. It is precisely those people who by soiling themselves with unworthy actions have discredited the Mahdi. There are at least four armies ready to unleash themselves against us. A “shadow” about which nobody ever talks, trained in great secrecy in the deserts of Jordan by the American armed forces. On top of that, there is the private army of Allawi, the unbeliever who will soon succeed Maliki, which stands ready at the al-Muthanná military airport. On top of that, there is the Kurdish _peshmerga_ and finally the regular American troops.
=
[Q5] If what you say is true, you have no hope of resisting.
[A5] For all that, we are still who we are. [Commenter Christiane renders the foregoing as “”We are many, too.”] We represent the majority of the country that does not want Iraq turned into a secular state and a slave of the Western powers, as Allawi dreams to the contrary.
=
[Q6] For a week now you have been officially targeted. The regime claims that without their leaders the religious militias are much weaker militarily.
[A6] I am well aware of it. That is why I have moved my family to a safe place. I have even made a will and I continually move around so they have trouble knowing exactly where I am. But even should I have to die, the Mahdi would continue to exist. Men can be killed, but not faith and ideas.
=
[Q7] It is said that you were present in the crowd at Saddam’s execution. Is that true?
[A7] It’s utter nonsense. If I had been there, they would have killed me also. As for Saddam, I’m certainly not going to cry for the man who massacred my family and my people by tens of thousands. The only thing is, I would have executed him in a public square so that all the world saw it.
=
[Q8] If you were not there yourself, do you deny that there were a lot of your men in that room?
[A8] No, they were not my men. They were people paid to discredit me. To make me look like the person really responsible for that hanging. Listen to the audio again, the proof is that in reciting my prayer they left out some basic passages. Stuff that not even a child in Sadr City would ever have done. The object was to make Muqtadá look like the real enemy of the Sunnis. And they’re getting away with it. At a time when I have been received with full honours in Saudi Arabia! But suddenly after that show under the scaffold, my spokesman al-Zarqání, who was on the pilgrimage to Mecca, has been arrested. A subtle way to let me know that I am no longer on their list of friends.
=
[Q9] In any case, the war between you and the Sunnis goes on.
[A9] It is true that we are all Muslims and all sons of the same country, but they must first distance themselves from the Saddamites, from the radical groups, from men like Bin Ladin, over and above just repeating their “No” to the Americans. The only thing that will be enough is for their ulema to accept our conditions [and issue a fatwa against killing Shiites]. So far they have not done so.
=
[Q10] Perhaps there will be nothing but bloodshed in Iraq’s future?
[A10] If the future is a country split three ways, I see no alternatives. And that is what Bush wants, so as to have better control. It is certainly not what the Iraqis want. In my opinion, there is only one possible way to arrive at a solution: immediate American withdrawal.
——————
Update Saturday p.m.: Christiane just sent me a great document that’s a three-column tabulation of the Italian original, JHM’s translation, and her own. It’s a Word doc. She has picked out in red the few points where she feels JHM probably misunderstood the Italian, but says in an accompanying email that she thinks his English is far better than hers. Thanks, Christiane, and thanks again, JHM. You’re once again showing us the great information-leveraging power of the internet.

Washington’s shaky political house in Baghdad

I honestly can’t decide whether it’s hilariously funny or just plain downright tragic, the extent to which the Bushites’ have built their entire political “house” in Iraq on a foundation long ago laid and since then assiduously maintained by Teheran and Damascus.
Honestly, has nobody among the Bushites ever noticed this?
* There, back in the day, was Ahmed Chalabi, back in February and March 2003, going back to Iraq as the US-sponsored “liberator”– but travelling there via Teheran, where he held close consultations with the regime’s intelligence people.
* There has been Jalal Talabani, now the US-installed “President” of Iraq, visiting Syria over the past few days–m the first visit by an Iraqi head of state to Syria in over 30 years. The trip is scheduled to last six days. Talabani made the gracious gesture of traveling to the Asad family’s home village of Qardaha to visit the tomb of the late president Hafez al-Asad… Yes, that would be the same Hafez al-Asad who gave Talabani refuge for roughly 15 years, from 1975 through 1991.
* And there is SCIRI leader Abdel-Aziz Hakim, long puffed up by the Bushites and their obedient press corps as “the strongest Shiite politician in Iraq”, etc. The same man whom the Bushists were hoping– along with his always politically malleable sidekick, Adel Abdul-Mehdi– would help them organize the anti-Moqtada, anti-Maliki ‘coup’ they were planning a few weeks ago… And there he was, yet again today, still whingeing publicly about the US forces’ “arrest” (or actually, capture) of five employees from Iranian consular offices in northern Iraq last week.
… Well, we can forget for now (but probably not forever) about Chalabi. But let’s just look at the positions now being espoused by the kingpins of the US political “plan” in Baghdad: Talabani, Hakim, or, for example, Iraq’s ethnic-Kurdish Foreign Minister, Hoshyar Zebari (who on Sunday told the BBC that Iraq needs a constructive relationship with Iran); or, come to that, PM Maliki himself….
So where are there any “converts” at all within the Iraqi political firmament for the Bushists’ plan for Iraq, namely that a firm battle has to be fought inside Iraq,and the broader region, against both Iran and Syria?
There are none. (AP’s Robert Reid, from Baghdad, has also made this point well.)
The Bushists’ anti-Iranian, anti-Syrian political plans for Iraq are built on sand.
This quite evident idiocy of the political dimension of the Bushists’ “Anything But Baker-Hamilton” plan for Iraq means that no level of military expertise– whether in the area of counter-insurgency or in any other kind of operations– can bring about “victory”.
(War, after all, being “an extension of politics by other means.” D’you think Bush has ever heard about that?)
And that makes the decision to pour an additional 21,500 US service-members into the imbroglio in Iraq even more unforgiveable.

Good cop/ bad cop???

Down near the bottom of his blog post today, Juan Cole wrote this:

    Al Franken had me on his radio show on Air America Tuesday and suggested that Congress and Bush could play bad cop, good cop with PM al-Maliki. As I understood the argument, he suggested that Congress cut off funding for the extra troops such that it would run out by the end of this summer. Bush could then tell al-Maliki that there has to be substantial progress on curbing militias and national conciliation by then, because Bush can’t guarantee a sustained US commitment now that his party has lost Congress. I told Al that his plan sounds good to me. I do think a lot of the problem here is that the top Shiite and Kurdish leadership doesn’t feel a need to compromise with the Sunni Arabs because they know if the latter make trouble, the US will deal with them. They might not be so cocky, and might compromise more readily, if they thought they’d have to fight them themselves.

Why do I find Juan’s position there so politically naive and so morally troubling??
Politically naive:
(1) Juan– and also his host there, Al Franken– both seem to have bought, hook, line, and sinker the whole (administration-propagated) narrative that portrays what is going on in Iraq as exclusively a power-play between Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds– one in which the “poor beleaguered Americans” find themselves caught in the middle, earnestly and benevolently trying to establish the optimal “balance” among those wild and unpredictable local forces… (See my analysis of the manipulative and politically inspired roots of this narrative, here.)
(2) Juan also apparently believes that threatening to withhold US troops from Iraq is a threat that can force Maliki to comply with US wishes on the political front??? But as I noted here, that’s a totally non-credible threat. Maliki wants the US troops to leave. How come Juan doesn’t seem capable of factoring that into his calculus? It’s true that Maliki seems like a timorous, diffident political figure; and it’s quite probable that the US have given him all kinds of cash inducements while he’s been PM, to get him to stay “on the team” with their plans. But despite all such inducements he– and more importantly the political coalition of Daawa and Sadrists of which he’s a member– have all remained committed to a speedy and total US withdrawal from Iraq.
So all this business about “the top Shiite and Kurdish leadership … might not be so cocky, and might compromise more readily, if they thought they’d have to fight them themselves” bears what kind of relationship to political reality there in Iraq??
Morally troubling:
(1) So we have a large and well-grounded political movement in this country that’s getting closer and closer to (a) bringing the Bushites into some form of accountability re their handling of the war, and (b) forcing the administration to withdraw from Iraq completely…. And Juan– and apparently also Al Franken– wants to compromise and blunt this movement by having it enter into some form of intentional and neocolonialist coalition with Bush on his handling of Iraq?
(2) And to do this, moreover, by explicitly joining with the Bushites in the “divide and rule” game they’ve been playing inside Iraq since April 2003, whereby they try to dole out incentives and very lethal punishments in such a way that it divides the Iraqi groups against each other and deliberately attempts to suppress the (still existing) nationalist Iraqi movement whose major leitmotif is “end the occupation”??
(3) Just the bullying language Juan uses there is a giveaway… “Bush could tell Maliki…” “if they make trouble, the US will deal with them…” et., etc.
… Honestly, I can’t imagine how someone like Juan Cole , whose probity and good intentions I generally strongly admire, has gotten anywhere near expressing support of this “good cop/ bad cop” idea. We in the US who are deeply disquieted over the tragedy that our government’s actions have inflicted upon the people of Iraq should do our utmost to reverse the administration’s policies as fast as possible. That is, to lift the yoke of ill-considered occupation and brutal “counterinsurgency” off the Iraqis as soon as we can.
“Good cop/ bad cop” sounds like a recipe only for continued colonial-style manipulation of the Iraqis’ tragic fate by Americans.
And I can’t understand why Al Franken– whose reported credentials as a “leftist” are actually much stronger than Juan’s– would have any truck with it, either.

Israel’s political turmoil– leading where?

Just six months ago, Israeli chief of staff Dan Halutz and Prime Minister Ehud Olmert were riding high. On July 12, they had launched what they were still convinced would be the knockout blow from which Lebanese Hizbullah and its Iranian allies/backers would never recover… And on July 17, despite some early signs on setback in that war, they still seemed very upbeat about its prospects of success…
Now, six months later, how are the mighty fallen.
I wrote a long essay in Boston Review about how the flaws in the concept that Halutz used in the war were considerably magnified by the chaos in the decisionmaking of Israel’s national command authorities at the highest level… And the result was a humiliating battlefield and strategic reverse for Israel, which damaged all portions of the Olmert government very seriously.
That damage has continued to play out in the Israeli body politic in the months since the August 14th ceasefire. Israel’s “Winograd” state commission of enquiry into the whole Lebanon episode still continues its work, after an earlier inside-the-IDF enquiry delivered a stinging indictment of the role of the chief of staff…
Halutz finally, today, submitted a resignation that in the view of many Israeli observers was long overdue. Amos Harel wrote in Wednesday’s HaAretz:

    Now, Olmert and Defense Minister Amir Peretz will need to overcome their mutual loathing and decide quickly on Halutz’s replacement. If a lengthy inheritance battle develops, that will only deepen the IDF’s depression.

Harel also wrote,

    by resigning now, [Halutz] increases the pressure on his partners in the war’s failed management, Olmert and Peretz, to follow suit.

Olmert is at political risk not only from the continuing work of the Winograd Commission, not only from his continued humiliating position in the opinion polls and the apparent collapse of the brand-new political party that he heads, “Kadima”… On Tuesday, state prosecutor Eran Shendar announced he had

    ordered the police to begin a criminal investigation into Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, on suspicion of having tried, in his former role as finance minister, to influence a tender for the sale of a controlling stake in Bank Leumi.

So there we have it. A fateful time for Israel, indeed, with its national command authorities in a large degree of internal turmoil and disarray and public confidence in the political leadership at rock bottom.
A situation, I should add, that is also mirrored to a great extent in a Washington whose main center of power– in the Vice President’s office– seems to march in near political lockstep with its friends in Israel..
For these reasons, over the past day or two I have again become much more concerned about the launching of a “Wag-the dog” scenario. Desperate times might lead to a truly “desperate” search for remedies.

The Syrian-Israeli back-channel, Part 2

Akiva Eldar does, as I had hoped, have a follow-up piece in Wednesday’s HaAretz to the article he had today about the existence and negotiating “achievements” of an unofficial Syrian-Israeli back-channel between 2004 and July 2006.
The notable additions in the follow-up piece included a report, attributed to “senior officials in Washington” that “U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney was kept in the picture about these indirect talks between Syria and Israel.”
Eldar also wrote:

    Ibrahim (Ayeb) Suleiman, the Syrian representative, also said this at his meetings with former Foreign Ministry director general Alon Liel, adding that Cheney had made no move to stop him from participating in the talks. Suleiman is a Washington resident.

Eldar also reported this:

    Meretz-Yahad Chairman Yossi Beilin said in media interviews Tuesday that the European mediator in the secret talks was Nicholas Lang, head of the Middle East desk at the Swiss Foreign Ministry.
    Lang also played a key role in organizing the Israeli-Palestinian meetings at which Beilin and Yasser Abed Rabbo drafted the Geneva Initiative, their proposal for a final-status agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. Liel, who was the driving force behind the secret meetings with Suleiman, is one of the people closest to Beilin.

So, the Swiss. Interesting.
But I find even more interesting the way that Eldar refers to Dick Cheney in that casual, matter-of-fact way, as being the US official whom one would really most seek or expect to see taking an interest in any serious back-channel talks of this nature.
Yeah, why bother with the “President” or his portion of the White House, at all these days? Go to the real source of the power, instead.

Akiva Eldar’s leak about Syrian-Israeli contacts

There are many interesting aspects of the story that HaAretz’s Akiva Eldar published today, telling about some back-channel negotiations pursued– somewhat indirectly– between Syria and Israel, from September 2004 through July 2006.
First, of course, is the content of the not-officially-endorsed “draft agreement” the participants had reportedly arrived at.
Second is the story of who the participants were and how they pursued their contacts.
Third is the reported reason why the initiative became blocked last summer. (Eldar writes: “the Syrian … called for a secret meeting at the level of deputy minister, on the Syrian side, with an Israeli official at the rank of a ministry’s director general, including the participation of a senior American official. Israel did not agree to this Syrian request.” So the contacts ended.)
Fourth is the question of the timing of having this news leaked now, in January 2007, five months after the contacts in question ended. Is this part of an attempt by Israeli or American officials to embarrass Syria while at the same time trying to indicate– especially to other, more fearful Arab governments– that in the event of a big confrontation between the US and Iran even the Syrian regime may secretly be happy not to side with Teheran?
As you may imagine, since Syrian-Israeli relations is something I’ve published two books about, I have quite a lot of thoughts on this topic. Indeed, if I have time this evening I might try to make one of my annotated-table thingies based on Eldar’s reporting and published documents, as a way of organizing these thoughts.
However, I want to dwell a little first on this question of the timing of the leak.
Eldar is far, far coyer than most US journalists would be about the circumstances of his acquisition of the documents and reports in question, and he does nothing whatever to speculate on the motivations of the person or persons who provided them to him.
Maybe in tomorrow’s paper?
You can find HaAretz’s summary of the talks, and the descriptions of the main dramatis personae in this timeline article.
Regardless of who it was who first tipped Eldar off to this story and slipped him the “draft agreement” produced through this channel, he (then or later) succeeded in getting a terse confirmation from lead Israeli participant Alon Liel, a former director-general of the country’s Foreign Ministry, that the contacts in question had taken place… But he got few further comments from Liel.
He wrote that Liel,

    refused to divulge details about the meetings but … [said] that meetings on an unofficial level have been a fairly common phenomenon during the past decade.
    “We insisted on making the existence of meetings known to the relevant parties,” Liel said. “Nonetheless, there was no official Israeli connection to the content of the talks and to the ideas that were raised during the meetings.”

Eldar got a lot more information from Geoff Aronson, who is Director of Research and Publications at the Washington DC-based Foundation for Middle East Peace:

    According to Geoffrey Aronson… who was involved in the talks, an agreement under American auspices would call for Syria to ensure that Hezbollah would limit itself to being solely a political party.
    He also told Haaretz that Khaled Meshal, Hamas’ political bureau chief, based in Damascus, would have to leave the Syrian capital.
    Syria would also exercise its influence for a solution to the conflict in Iraq, through an agreement between Shi’a leader Muqtada Sadr and the Sunni leadership, and in addition, it would contribute to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, including the refugee problem.
    Aronson said the idea of a park on the Golan Heights allows for the Syrian demand that Israel pull back to the June 4 border, on the one hand, while on the other hand, the park eliminates Israeli concerns that Syrians will have access to the water sources of Lake Kinneret.
    “This was a serious and honest effort to find creative solutions to practical problems that prevented an agreement from being reached during Barak’s [tenure as prime minister] and to create an atmosphere of building confidence between the two sides,” he said.

Eldar then has another para there, unattributed, in which he writes:

    It also emerged that one of the Syrian messages to Israel had to do with the ties between Damascus and Tehran. In the message, the Alawi regime – the Assad family being members of the Alawi minority – asserts that it considers itself to be an integral part of the Sunni world and that it objects to the Shi’a theocratic regime, and is particularly opposed to Iran’s policy in Iraq. A senior Syrian official stressed that a peace agreement with Israel will enable Syria to distance itself from Iran.

Well, obviously Eldar’s not telling us who he got that from, precisely…
This is all very reminiscent of what I was writing about back in my 2000 book on the Syrian-Israeli negotiations of the 1990s, where I wrote “The general effect of the Syrian-Iranian link on the Israeli-Syrian negotiations of the mid-1990s can be viewed in a number of different (and not mutually incompatible) ways… ” Buy the book and go to pp. 179-80 to see how I characterized those ways… Or if I have time I’ll look for my old floppy disks of the text and see if I can retrieve that chunk.
So okay, Eldar is telling us that he has talked to Liel and to Aronson. It’s not certain if he has talked to the unnamed “senior official” of an unnnamed “European country” who also– along with Aronson– played a mediating role during these contacts, and whose government provided, apparently, all the logistics for at least one phase of them. I would say, from reading Eldar’s articles there, probably not. Things he reports that are attributed, in a general way, to “the European mediator” could as easily have come from the detailed reporting that this mediator presumably gave to Liel and his two other (unnamed) Israeli colleagues in the venture.
You ask about the attitude toward these contacts of official Washington? Well according to Eldar, back near the beginning of this channel, in 2004, the key Syrian-American “Mr. Fix-it” involved, Abe Soleiman, told a Turkish diplomat who had helped to open up the channel that year, that,

    the Syrians were prepared to begin negotiations with Israel immediately: formal negotiations, certainly not “academic talks.” The Prime Minister’s Bureau in Jerusalem didn’t care whether Liel and his friends sat down with the Syrians to hear what they had to say − but no negotiations. The Israeli reason (or excuse): The Americans are not prepared to hear about contact with Syria.

In my judgment, if the Sharon government at that time had really wanted to sit down and negotiate with Syria, it would not have been deterred by any signs of displeasure from Washington. However, I don’t doubt that there were signs of such displeasure from the Bushites– then, as there would be now if any official, authorittative peace talks with Syria were being proposed by Olmert. (Which they aren’t– though his FM, Tzipi Livni, has made some remarks expressing interest in the idea.)
But anyway, back to Eldar, and the circumstances of, and possible motivations for, this latest “leak”.
Firstly, it seemed to come much more evidently from the Israeli side than from the Syrian side.
Secondly, in that paragraph full of “unattributed” material, in particular, it looks as though there’s a manipulative and quite possibly intentionally mendacious political hand at work. In “one of the Syrian messages to Israel… the Alawi regime [asserted] that it considers itself to be an integral part of the Sunni world and that it objects to the Shi’a theocratic regime, and is particularly opposed to Iran’s policy in Iraq”?? This is crass and barely believable stuff. Is it just Eldar’s unfamiliarity with the details and context of what he is writing about there? Or did somebody else give him explicitly this message that he should try to get into his article?
What is not credible in that report is that anyone representing the Syrian regime would use that particular kind of sectarian discourse (“part of the Sunni world”) rather than continuing the use of the secular Arab-nationalist discourse with which it has always sought to disguise its minoritarian sectarian status. Also, I don’t find it believable that any Syrian official would say straight out to someone communicating with an Israeli interlocutor that Syria “is particularly opposed to Iran’s policy in Iraq”.
There are a number of possibilities here. The possibility of sloppy “reporting” of Damascus’s position or words by Abe Suleiman can’t be ruled out. (On the other hand, his reporting was also being paralleled by the European mediator for most of the relevant time.)
Well, I’m not close enough to that whole story any more to do any independent digging into it of my own. (Though h’mmm, maybe I should go to Damascus sometime next month, when I’ll be in Cauiro, anyway? In 1998, when I was working on my 2000 book, I did some really interesting interviews with officials there and with former officials in Israel who’d participated in the relevant diplomacy…)
Maybe Eldar will give us more of the details we need, in follow-up articles.
Next up, if I have the time: just a few further questions into the status of the quite amazing map that Eldar published with his piece. It quite clearly conveys that the whole of the area of Syrian Golan that is now occupied by Israel will be included in the “Peace Park” that is a key device used by those unofficial negotiators to try to resolve some outstanding issues of borders and water access.
However, the text of the (still completely unoffical) “Draft Agreement” that the “negotiators” had come up with states clearly (Art. VI-1) that “The park will extend from the agreed upon border [that is, the long-agreed June 4, 1967 line between the two countries] eastward to a line to be determined by mutual agreement.”
It notably does not say it will extend from the June 4 line eastward to the present disengagement line, which is the picture that Eldar’s map there clearly conveys. The half-million-plus Syrian citizens who are the people displaced/”cleansed” from this occupied area in 1967-8, and their offspring, will no doubt look at Eldar’s map with its park-like tree icons dotted all over their former towns, villages, hamlets, and farms with some dismay. (As always, you can read about the human dimensions of the Golan question here.)
Anyway, now I truly need to run.

Another “mission” ahead for Team Bush?

Tuesday, so we have Froomkin again.
Scroll down through the account of the Scooter Libby starting up in DC today, to Froomkin’s presentation of highlights from the interview Bush gave to Scott Pelley of CBS t.v. last weekend. He says we should,

    give the CBS correspondent some credit for addressing the elephant in the room: Bush’s lack of credibility.
    “PELLEY: You know better than I do that many Americans feel that your administration has not been straight with the country, has not been honest. To those people you say what?
    “BUSH: On what issue?
    “PELLEY: Well, sir . . . .
    “BUSH: Like the weapons of mass destruction?
    “PELLEY: No weapons of mass destruction.
    “BUSH: Yeah.
    “PELLEY: No credible connection between 9/11 and Iraq.
    “BUSH: Yeah.
    “PELLEY: The Office of Management and Budget said this war would cost somewhere between $50 billion and $60 billion and now we’re over 400.
    “BUSH: I gotcha. I gotcha. I gotcha.
    “PELLEY: The perception, sir, more than any one of those points, is that the administration has not been straight with . . . .
    “BUSH: Well, I strongly disagree with that, of course. There were a lot of people, both Republicans and Democrats, who felt there were weapons of mass destruction. Many of the leaders in the Congress spoke strongly about the fact that Saddam Hussein had weapons prior to my arrival in Washington, DC. And we’re all looking at the same intelligence. So I strongly reject that this administration hasn’t been straight with the American people. The minute we found out they didn’t have weapons of mass destruction, I was the first to say so. Scott, all I can do is just tell the truth, tell people exactly what’s on my mind, which is what I do.
    “PELLEY: You seem to be saying that you may have been wrong but you weren’t dishonest.
    “BUSH: Oh, absolutely.”
    Pelley let his tough questions drop too soon, and didn’t do the requisite debunking. For instance, Bush had access to a lot of intelligence that Congress hadn’t seen, some of which raised serious doubts about WMD claims — and the president was among the last to acknowledge there were no WMD, not the first.

Froomkin packs a lot into today’s offering. Further down yet he directs us to a story by Susan Page in (today’s) USA Today:

    Page writes… : “President Bush’s address to the nation last week failed to move public opinion in support of his plan to increase U.S. troop levels in Iraq and left Americans more pessimistic about the likely outcome of the war. . . .
    “Approval of Bush’s handling of Iraq moved up a tick, from a low point of 26% before the speech to 28% now. His overall job-approval rating dipped 3 points, to 34%.”

    Here are the poll results.
    Asked to choose between four options, an all-time high of 56 percent of Americans said they support either an immediate withdrawal (17 percent) or a withdrawal in 12 months (39 percent), compared to 29 percent who favor keeping troops in Iraq as long as needed, and 13 percent who want to send more troops.

I’ve been waiting to see the results in the opinion polls that the Prez got from his long-awaited “address to the nation” last week. If he won from it only two percentage points on Iraq, while losing three on overall job-approval rating, then that confirms that the guy is in deep, deep political trouble.
Maybe he, Dick, and Karl will conclude– in light of all the above, including the Libby trial– that they need to rev up the plane engines for an dog-wagger attack on Iran very soon. Another sad, sick, tragic “mission” to “accomplish”?

‘Delicious’ feed acting up; Great Chazelle essay

The ‘Delicious’ feed to the blog sidebar is acting up and presenting some very old tags instead of the fresh ones with which I keep feeding it… I can’t figure out why. Sometimes their software is a little unstable, I’ve noticed. (And it’s unstable in other ways right now, too.)
Maybe the Pentagon, CIA etc are just having a fine old time rummaging through my Delicious tags? If so, guys, please could you put my whole Delicious account back into good order immediately.
Meantime, what I wanted to share with you was this, from Bernard Chazelle at Princeton. My “notes” there were:

    Elegant and searingly witty writing; rapier-sharp argumentation; super footnotes; photos and epigraphic captions to ground the whole essay. Take a bit of time to read this, to cry, and yes, to laugh. Or head straight for his skewering of the US MSM.

Thanks for sending it, Bernard.
And the rest of you, when you see his piece heading that Delicious portion of the sidebar, you can infer that the Delicious is behaving properly once again. Let’s hope.

Vietnam/Iraq

Yesterday, the WaPo carried a series of three essays on the parallels between the US wars in Vietnam and Iraq, in which the authors all also tried to draw out some policy conclusions for today.
Robert Kaiser is a longtime WaPo foreign-affairs journo. His piece was titled Trapped by Hubris, Again.
He wrote,

    For a gray-haired journalist whose career included 18 months covering the Vietnam War for The Washington Post, it is a source of amazement to realize that my country has done this again. We twice took a huge risk in the hope that we could predict and dominate events in a nation whose history we did not know, whose language few of us spoke, whose rivalries we didn’t understand, whose expectations for life, politics and economics were all foreign to many Americans.
    Both times, we put our fate in the hands of local politicians who would not follow U.S. orders [!], who did not see their country’s fate the way we did, and who could not muster the support of enough of their countrymen to produce the outcome Washington wanted [!]. In Vietnam as in Iraq, U.S. military power alone proved unable to achieve the desired political objectives.
    How did this happen again? After all, we’re Americans — practical, common-sense people who know how to get things done. Or so we’d like to think. In truth, we are ethnocentric to a fault, certain of our own superiority, convinced that others see us as we do, blithely indifferent to cultural, religious, political and historical realities far different from our own. These failings — more than any tactical or strategic errors — help explain the U.S. catastrophes in Vietnam and Iraq.

I note, first of all, the apparently unconscious– or anyway, unremarked– hubris with which Kaiser writes there about the local politicians “not following US orders” and “not producing the outcome Washington wanted.”
Does the guy have any sense of self-awareness or of irony?
Also, regarding his question, “How did this happen again?” I’d love for Bob Kaiser to go back and reflect much more transparently on some of the journalistic decisions that he himself and his colleagues were making, regarding Iraq, back in 2002/2003. In a well-researched 2004 article in the New York Review of Books titled “Now they tell us” Michael Massing dissected some of the decisions the editors at the WaPo, the NYT, and other major US print media had made in the run-up to the war that had the effect of suppressing and/or hiding the widespread doubts there were even inside large and relevant sections of the US government back then, regarding the veracity of the case the Bushites were making against Iraq.
Massing wrote, in particular, about how two pieces very critical of the Bush case that veteran WaPo intel-affairs writer Walter Pincus wrote in mid-March 2003 were first resisted by his editors– including, I assume, Kaiser– and then, once they were published, were buried deep inside the paper rather than being spotlighted on page 1. Massing added,

    The placement of these stories was no accident, Pincus says. “The front pages of The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times are very important in shaping what other people think,” he told me. “They’re like writing a memo to the White House.” But the Post’s editors, he said, “went through a whole phase in which they didn’t put things on the front page that would make a difference.”

When senior journos at the WaPo and the NYT hurried to rebut Massing’s accusations, the NYT’s rebuttals came from Judith Miller (!) and from a senior NYT editor. The WaPo’s came from Kaiser, who signed off his letter as “Associate Editor and Senior Correspondent.” He huffed, “does Massing really mean to imply that editors who will run a story on A10 somehow lack courage if they won’t put it on A1? That suggestion seems silly.” No it doesn’t at all. Kaiser also said nothing about Pincus’s claim that one of his key doubt-Bush stories was at first resisted completely by the WaPo editors, and was published only after Bob Woodward– of all people– intervened.
… In light of which, Kaiser’s present rhetorical question of “How did this happen again?”, i.e., the 2003 launching of an an ill-considered war, seems disingenuous, at best.
The “lessons” Kaiser draws from the present state of affairs is also extremely half-hearted:

    Before initiating a war of choice — and Vietnam and Iraq both qualify — define the goal with honesty and precision, then analyze what means will be needed to achieve it. Be certain you really understand the society you propose to transform. And never gamble that the political solution to such an adventure will somehow materialize after the military operation has begun. Without a plausible political plan and strong local support at the outset, military operations alone are unlikely to produce success.

But how about this lesson, from Helena Cobban, instead:

    Forget about ‘wars of choice’. Forget about trying to sustain– and also ‘justify’– US military dominance over the whole of the rest of the world. Instead of that, let’s find ways to work constructively with other governments to find nonviolent ways to resolve our differences and concerns, and strengthen the international institutions that will help us do that.

Noooo. I guess Bob Kaiser is not quite ready enough to let go of his own “ethnocentrism” or his “certainty of his own country’s superiority” to be able to do that.
… And moving right along, the second essay was a piece of “realist” analysis from Les Gelb and Dick Betts, under the (eminently realistic) title We’re fighting not to lose.
Gelb and Betts long ago co-authored a book about Vietnam. Titled “The Irony of Vietnam: The System Worked,” it argued that although U.S. policy in that war was disastrous, the policymaking process performed just as it was designed to. (H’mmm, bad system maybe?)
Now, looking at the comparison between Vietnam and Iraq, they write:

    In both cases, despite talk of “victory,” the overriding imperative became simply to avoid defeat.
    How did these tragedies begin? Although hindsight makes many forget, the Vietnam War was backed by a consensus of almost all foreign-policy experts and a majority of U.S. voters. Until late in the game, opponents were on the political fringe. The consensus rested on the domino theory — if South Vietnam fell to communism, other governments would topple. Most believed that communism was on the march and a worldwide Soviet-Chinese threat on the upswing.
    The consensus on Iraq was shallower and shorter-lived. Bush may have been bent on regime change in Baghdad from the start, but in any case a consensus emerged among his advisers that Saddam Hussein was on the verge of securing nuclear weapons capability — and that deterrence and containment would not suffice. That judgment came to be shared by most of the national security community. Congress also saluted early on. The vote to endorse the war was less impressive than the Gulf of Tonkin resolution, which passed almost unanimously, but many Democrats signed on to topple Hussein for fear of looking weak.
    As soon as the war soured, the consensus crumbled. Without the vulnerability of middle-class youth to conscription, and with the political left in a state of collapse since Ronald Reagan’s presidency, the antiwar movement on Iraq did not produce sustained mass protests as Vietnam did by the late 1960s. But the sentiment shows up just as clearly in the polls.

Later on, it seems as though both these guys– neither of whom is in any way a specialist on Iraqi or broader Middle Eastern affairs– look as though they’ve “bought”, hook, line, and sinker the mainstream US narrative about the nature of the situation in Iraq:

    Vietnam was both a nationalist war against outside powers — first the French, then the Americans — and a civil war. In Iraq, the lines of conflict are messier. The main contest is the sectarian battle between Arab Shiites and Arab Sunnis.

Note: no mention of Iraqis having any “nationalist” motivation to fight against outside powers there, at all.
But also, note this:

    In both countries, U.S. forces worked hard at training national armies. This job was probably done better in Vietnam, and the United States certainly provided South Vietnamese troops with relatively better equipment than they have given Iraqis so far. South Vietnamese forces were more reliable, more effective and far more numerous than current Iraqi forces are. [But still, the US didn’t win… Any lessons there? ~HC]
    In both cases, however, the governments we were trying to help proved inadequate. Unlike their opponents, neither Saigon nor Baghdad gained the legitimacy to inspire their troops. At bottom, this was always the fundamental problem in both wars. Americans hoped that time would help, but leaders such as South Vietnam’s Nguyen Van Thieu and Iraq’s Nouri al-Maliki were never up to the job.

So these two guys– one of whom is the politically very well-connected Gelb– have already completely written off Maliki. Interesting.
Then, here is their best-possible scenario:

    With some luck, Washington may yet escape Baghdad more cleanly than it did in the swarms of helicopters fleeing Saigon in 1975.

The erosion of confidence in the possibility of a US “victory” in Iraq has evidently now gnawed deep into the country’s policy-making elite itself. Interesting.
… And then, finally, there was Robert K. Brigham, a professor of international relations who last August published a book titled Is Iraq another Vietnam?
His piece in the WaPo yesterday was titled The time to negotiate is now.
He wrote:

    Despite President Bush’s call for more troops in Iraq, each day seems to bring closer an endgame there that could echo the one of three decades earlier, with U.S. helicopters landing “inside the Green Zone, taking people off the roof,” as Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.) recently put it.
    That image would seem to bring the United States full circle, retreating from another ill-conceived war and nursing an “Iraq syndrome” much like the Vietnam syndrome that limited U.S. foreign policy for decades afterward.
    But there’s a difference: Today’s policymakers have the benefit of the Vietnam experience. It’s not too late to draw on its lessons to ensure a better outcome in Iraq. It’s still possible to snatch victory from defeat — if the Bush administration understands that there is no hope of a narrowly defined military victory in Iraq, and that the best it can wish for is a negotiated settlement that will bring greater stability and security to the region
    As it did in Vietnam, the time has come for the United States to announce a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq. No meaningful settlement can take place while Washington is escalating the war. A schedule for phased troop withdrawal would signal to regional players that Washington is interested in a political settlement to the conflict. It would also allow Washington to pressure the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to take responsibility for rebuilding Iraq’s civil society instead of enabling a civil war. Finally, as difficult as negotiations might be, it is time to think of the Iraq war in regional terms. Because of the sectarian violence threatening to rip the country apart, it will be impossible to settle the civil war without thinking of Baghdad’s more powerful neighbors, including Syria and Iran.
    Granted, the idea of regional negotiations poses significant problems. It could give states such as Syria and Iran more influence over Shiites and events inside Iraq than they deserve. It assumes that the Sunni states can control or isolate the more radical elements of the insurgency. It suggests that most players in the region want to limit the conflict to Iraq. And it relies on a dramatic change in the nature of the relationship between the United States and Israel. Washington is unlikely to abandon its long-standing support of Israel — nor should it — but in a balance-of-power peace settlement, Israel will need to enter into negotiations with some of its regional enemies. Nonetheless, it seems that diplomacy is the best hope for the future.
    If it needs political cover to engage in regional negotiations, the Bush team could simply refer to the Iraq Study Group report.

Oh yes, so it could… If only the Prez were not still so deeply in thrall to all his unresolved psychological father issues.
Brigham goes on to note many parallels between the ISG report and a secret study CIA Director Richard Helms conducted in 1967 into the possible consequences of a US withdrawal from Vietnam. He writes,

    The resulting secret report [in 1967] concluded that the United States could leave without suffering a significant loss in security, global prestige or power. And yet it was six more years before Washington acted on the Helms report.
    Let’s hope it doesn’t take that long this time.

I have two reactions to that. Firstly, I am convinced at this point that it will not take anything like another six years before the US withdraws from Iraq. History is unfolding at a steroid-fueled speed these days, thanks in great part to the expansion and democratization of access to near-real-time information and analysis.
Secondly, I don’t believe that the US has any options left, regarding the manner of its withdrawal from Iraq, that will leave its “global prestige” anywhere near as high as it was back in 2002, before that disastrous decision to invade Iraq was taken.
Every day since that ill-fated day in March 2003 when the invasion started, US “prestige” in the world– and all the concomitant political/strategic power that flows from that– has been undergoing a sharp erosion. The only way the US can stanch that continuing bleeding of national power is to find a way to undertake a total and orderly troop withdrawal from Iraq; and the sooner that is done, the less the total erosion in US “power” will be.
That is a perfectly “realist” piece of analysis from me. Beyond that, I would say the interests of the US citizenry as such will be most effectively and sustainably met over the longer term if we work to transform our country’s relationship with the rest of the world from one of hegemonism to one based on the equality of all human persons and on a strong commitment to reciprocity in all international agreements, the pursuit of nonviolent means of resolving differences among nations, and the building of accountable and effective international institutions.
And the sooner the better. No more Vietnams. No more Iraqs. No more hegemonism. Please!