Ramazani: “Wider Conflict Threatens”

The reputed “Dean” in America of Iran foreign policy studies weighs in this morning on the dangers inherent in the looming US-Iran clash and on a better way to engage Iran. Having published widely on Iran-US matters for over five decades (sic), I’m posting Professor Ramazani’s essay here in full – for the interest of jwn readers. (We look forward to your reactions.)
I will be commenting myself on additional materials separately, including the alleged new “intelligence” that Iran is somehow “killing Americans” in Iraq. Before the neocons at Faux and CNN are done, we’ll have the Iranians somehow aligned with the Taliban in Afghanistan — just like Rice ignorantly claimed in 2000. (Oh wait, General Karl Eikenberry, having presided over a deteriorating situation in Afghanistan for the past 21 months, just claimed “links” between Iran and the Taliban — without mentioning Pakistan! Utterly cynical nonsense.)
As argued in the current issue of Vanity Fair, the very same “wonderful folks” who brought us the war with Iraq are yet again pulling the strings to provoke a confrontation with Iran.
Here’s Professor Ramazani’s sober analysis:
—————-
Wider Conflict Threatens
By R. K. Ramazani
(originally published in The Daily Progress, February 11, 2007)

The Bush administration’s aggressive confrontation with Iran over the war in Iraq and Iran’s nuclear program threatens armed conflict throughout the Middle East. A better approach would be for the administration to seek a constructive way to engage Iran.
President Bush’s pledge to “seek out and destroy” the Iranian networks allegedly fueling sectarian war in Iraq and to “kill or capture” Iranian operatives suspected of killing American soldiers could spark a proxy war between Iran and the U.S. on the chaotic battlefield of Iraq.
Furthermore, the Bush administration’s campaign to create a regional alignment of Sunni states against Shia Iran promises to stoke the fire of ancient enmities between Sunnis and Shia, Arabs and Persians, enhancing the prospects of armed conflict throughout the Middle East.

Threats of military strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities also could lead to war between America and Iran. Claims by the United States that it desires a diplomatic resolution ring hollow so long as it insists it will join negotiations with Iran only after Iran stops enriching uranium. Iran claims that its nuclear program is essential for producing electricity and helping economic development to meet the needs of a growing population.
But the U.S. pretense of diplomacy with Iran could be a prelude to war just as it was before the invasion of Iraq.

Continue reading “Ramazani: “Wider Conflict Threatens””

Choice time: unravel Al-Qaeda or fight Iran?

So just how firmly do the Bushists want to pursue the campaign to unravel Al-Qaeda? In today’s WaPo, Dafna Linzer has a story, attributed largely to unnamed but concerned administration insiders, in which she gives some disturbing new information about the extent to which they have subordinated this campaign to their current push to escalate tensions with Iran.
The back-story is that, as Linzer writes,

    Since… the winter of 2001, Tehran had turned over hundreds of people to U.S. allies and provided U.S. intelligence with the names, photographs and fingerprints of those it held in custody, according to senior U.S. intelligence and administration officials. In early 2003, it offered to hand over the remaining high-value targets directly to the United States if Washington would turn over a group of exiled Iranian militants hiding in Iraq.
    Some of Bush’s top advisers pushed for the trade, arguing that taking custody of bin Laden’s son and the others would produce new leads on al-Qaeda. They were also willing to trade away the exiles — members of a group on the State Department’s terrorist list — who had aligned with Saddam Hussein in an effort to overthrow the Iranian government.
    Officials have said Bush ultimately rejected the exchange on the advice of Vice President Cheney and then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who argued that any engagement would legitimize Iran and other state sponsors of terrorism. Bush’s National Security Council agreed to accept information from Iran on al-Qaeda but offer nothing in return, officials said.

Now, Linzer has learned that, in addition to Osama Bin Laden’s son Saad, those in Iranian custody include al-Qaeda spokesman Sulaiman Abu Ghaith of Kuwait and Saif al-Adel of Egypt, both of whom are reportedly members of the “al-Qaeda operational management committee.”
It is not clear to me how much the Bushists really care about the interests of that militant Iranian opposition group, the Mojahideen e-Khalq (MEK), around 3,000 or so of whose members had been in armed training camps in Iraq back in Saddam’s day, and have been kept in a detention camp in Iraq under the Americans. It is important to remember that, as Linzer noted there, the MEK is still on the State Department terrorism list, in connection with some very lethal acts its members carried out inside Iran in the 1980s.
(So you’d think the US government might want to actually put on trial at least the leaders of the MEK people they have under their control in Iraq, wouldn’t you? Nah… instead they have kept them there– under conditions that may or may not at this point include their complete disarming– as a way of keeping up the pressure on Teheran.)
You can see there, of course, the extent to which the Bushists have been willing to manipulate the quite legitimate global “concern” about terrorism for their own ideological ends.
What also seems very clear from Linzer’s article is the degree to which the top levels of the Bush administration are ready to compromise the anti-Qaeda campaign in the interests of maintaining their current campaign to isolate, encircle, and threaten Iran.
This is completely cock-eyed. Yes, Americans and others have a number of remaining concerns about Iran’s behavior. (And Iranians, about ours.) But numerous diplomatic channels remain, through which all these concerns can be put on the table, fairly addressed, and resolved. If the Bushists continue with their campaign to isolate and threaten Iran, this runs the risk of unleashing not only a war between these two nations but also a tsunami of instability that will “surge” throughout the region and the world…
But already, even before we have got to that point, it is clear that the Bushists’ campaign of anti-Iran escalation has forced many unwelcome costs on the world community. One of these is that the anti-Qaeda campaign– to which the Iranians have already made many significant contributions– is being compromised. We should all be very, very concerned.

CSM column on Arab opinion, more background

Scott H. was amazingly quick in getting his kind commentary on my latest CSM column up onto the blog. (I’ve also archived the column here.) I just want, quickly, to give y’all a bit more background to the piece.
I planned the column in discussions with my editor at the CSM on Monday. (That, taking into account the fact that he was running this op-ed piece, which is more on the inside-Iran effects of a US attack on Iran, on Tuesday.) I wrote mine on Tuesday. It came in at around 960 words. Yesterday, after doing some tweaking with the text and bringing it down to around 850 words, the editor called me to say he really, really needed me to be ready to cut it further– to around 680. I took out my scissors and did one big “snip”, taking out 2-3 paras I’d had up near the top reiterating the strong plea I expressed in this CSM column in September for the establishment of a reliable hot-line between these two combat-ready militaries.
I just made a choice there. In my original version I was making two main arguments– and clearly there was only room for one. Should I repeat the argument that I’d already made back then, or focus on this other one, which is backed up by solid new evidence that I’ve gathered while here in Cairo so far, about the rosiness or otherwise of the expected regional scenario in the event of a US attack on Iran? … I guess in the end it was a no-brainer; and the resulting scissor-work was clean and easy.
But I don’t want anyone to forget that important argument about the need for a hot-line!
… So now, I just want to fill in a little more background on the piece. I’ve been meeting some really interesting Egyptians (and some other Arabs) during the time I’ve been in Cairo, but because of the way my schedule has been structured so far, these have included many more people of fairly strong pro-US inclinations, than they have people more opposed to the US. Thus, for example, the three people I quoted in that column– Saad Ibrahim, the former Egyptian ambassador, and the high-level Saudi executive– are all people whom I’d judge to be of generally pro-US bent. And I have found that among these pro-US people, the warnings about the disastrous consequences of a US attack on Iran and the resulting opposition to the idea of such an attack have both been expressed in extremely strong terms, and either unanimously or nearly so.
I imagine that when, as I soon hope to, I get to interview people associated with the Muslim Brotherhood or other parties and trends less friendly to the US, I will probably find their level of opposition to a US attack on Iran to be even stronger.
But what I want to note here is that the people I quoted in the column, and the other Egyptians and Arabs I’ve talked to here who have all expressed opposition to an attack on Iran are not by any means people of a deep anti-US bias. I think that’s a very important point to get across, and I wish I’d had the wordage in the column to be able to make it there.
(Nice to have this blog and be able to make it here, huh?)
I also want to note that I am really glad that this week, in particular, I have been able to be here in Cairo and provide a little of my own “ground truth” to a US elite discourse that has become worryingly drenched in the “spin” and otherwise misleading general impressions being disseminated by some of the juggernauts in the MSM.
For example, in the NYT of February 6, Michael Slackman and Hassan Fattah had this long article about what they described as “Saudi Arabia’s more pronounced public posture to counter Iran’s rise.”
Slackman and Fattah noted– rightly, imho– that the Kingdom has gone into something of a frenzy of new regional diplomacy within the past 4-6 weeks. But they wrote of this shift into diplomatic activism that it,

    is occurring with encouragement from the Bush administration. Its goal is to see an American-backed alliance of Sunni Arab states including Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt, along with a Fatah-led Palestine and Israel, opposing Iran, Syria and the radical groups they support.

So what they’re saying is that the Saudis are working with Washington to help assemble the American-backed alliance of Sunni Arab states (a.k.a. in Issandr el-Amrani’s immortal phrase, “the Sunni Arab-Dominated Dictatorships Against the Mullahs, or SADDAM.”)
Yes, S&F do also warn along the way that “Riyadh’s goals may not always be in alignment with those of the White House, and could complicate American interests…”
But don’t you really think that their whole, very nicely funded piece of writing– with content from handsomely compensated reporters in Riyadh, Jiddah, Washington, and Cairo– might have included some reference to the warnings I heard again and again from the people I’ve talked to, namely that the anti-Americanism in the Sunni Arab countries is far stronger and deeper than the more recent concerns that have been expressed about the rise in Shiite or Iranian influence?
By not including those warnings– which surely, they would have heard from their interlocutors if they even started to ask the kinds of questions I’ve been asking– don’t you think these reporters are just helping to construct the kind of “rosy scenario” regarding outcomes that, today as in 2003, can make launching of an attack much more conceivable for members of the US policy elite, and therefore significantly more probable?
I would also characterize the motivations and content of the Saudis’ current diplomatic activism very differently from these NYT-ers. Where S&F write about the Kingdom’s “public posture to counter Iran’s rise”, I would describe its posture as being more aimed at energetically exploring the potential of mediation and other forms of diplomacy to help resolve the region’s burning problems and thereby de-escalate the tensions that threaten to engulf all of it.
There is, of course, a world of difference between an anti-Iran posture and a pro-mediation posture. Yet S&F seem unable to tell the difference and want to convey to Americans that the Saudis are almost completely on the US side in the confrontation with Iran?
Look, I’ve been in this business of reporting on and analyzing the behavior and attitudes of Arabs and Israelis for 32 years now. I know there’s always a lot of nuance involved in trying to “read” actions such as the ones the Kingdom has been undertaking over the past few weeks. But the big question I’ve been asking all the Egyptians and other Arabs I’ve been meeting so far has been “Do you think a US attack on Iran would be a good idea?” And unanimously, the answer I’ve heard– from all these very pro-US people I’ve been talking to– has been “NO!”
And that is really the bottom line that people in decisionmaking circles inside the US need to hear right now.

Sunni Arab view of US-Iran Tensions

If jwn readers and our generous host will pardon me, I (Scott) wish to draw early attention to Helena Cobban’s important column in today’s Christian Science Monitor. Writing from Cairo, Helena provides us with her reading of Sunni Arab sentiment towards a war with Iran.

As the level of tension rises between the US and Iran, I am very concerned that the Bush administration is trying to paint a scenario of the probable consequences of a possible US military action against Iran that is far more rosy than the situation warrants.
One key example: Both Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley have talked about the great threat that Sunni Arab countries perceive from Iran, which is predominantly non-Arab and Shiite. Some advocates of an attack (in the US and Israel) have argued that a US strike on Iran would be welcomed in Sunni-dominated nations and would therefore generally bolster the region’s forces of stability. My current tour in Egypt contradicts that. The Egyptians I’ve talked to so far – including retired diplomats, experienced political analysts, and journalists – have expressed unanimous opposition to any US attack against Iran.

This profoundly “different” observation challenges depressing contentions here in the US that some Sunni Arab governments may, like the Israelis, be pushing for the US to confront Iran militarily. Helena’s Arab sources are not nearly so enthused.
Recalling how wrong the “cake walk” scenarios for invading Iraq were, the respected Egyptian scholar and reformist, Saad Eddin Ibrahim tells Helena that, “A US attack on Iran could spread the same chaos we now see in Iraq to a number of other Arab countries. No one wants that.”
As for Hadley’s claim that Sunni Arabs feel threatened by an Iranian pursuit of nuclear options, Helena notes the telling counter view of one Egyptian diplomat: “We have lived beneath Israel’s nuclear weapons for many years, so even if Iran gets nuclear weapons it wouldn’t be anything new. Anyway, they are not that close to it.”
To the repeated mantra that Sunnis – as Sunnis – are fearful of an aggressive “Shia arc” stretching from Iran to Lebanon, Helena observes an even deeper rising regional anger – at America:

It’s true there are some concerns among Sunni Arabs about the growing influence of the (sometimes Iran-backed) Shiite populations present in many Arab countries. But well-informed Egyptians have stressed to me that anti-Americanism now runs much, much deeper than any concerns about Iranian or Shiite influence. That anti-Americanism has been hardened, they say, by the policies Washington has pursued toward Iraq and the Palestinian territories, and toward Israel during its destructive attack on targets in Lebanon last summer.
Many Sunni Arab leaders find themselves trapped uncomfortably between those popular attitudes and their own strategic alliances with Washington. Their reactions during last summer’s Israel-Hizbullah war were instructive. They started out expressing timid support for Israel’s attacks on Hizbullah. But as their publics swung behind Hizbullah, they quickly joined the growing calls for a very rapid cease-fire. In the event of a US strike on Iran, these leaders will probably need to show similar responsiveness to public pressure. And that pressure is now strongly anti-American.

How convenient it has been for Hadley & Rice to forget Pogo and instead try to change the subject – to blame Iran for the dark shadow across the region. That might work in America, but not, as Helena sees it thus far, in the Middle East.
In case you missed it, the subtitle for Helena’s column reads:

There’s virtually unanimous opposition to a US attack on Iran.

“Bottom line” implication follows for Americans:

In 2007, as in 2003, they need to be very skeptical indeed of the rosy scenarios being conjured up by the advocates of war. An attack on Iran risks bringing terrible harm to US forces and innocent civilians both in and far beyond the locus of any such attack.
Back in 2002-03, the Bush administration ignored the advice offered by the vast majority of Middle East specialists. Listening only to ideologues and others with a strong pro-war bias, it rushed the US into a war that continues to have terrible consequences for everyone concerned. We cannot let that happen again. Now, as then, there is no rosy scenario. Now, as then, many diplomatic channels for resolving our differences exist. Our leaders must now use them.

Well said Helena! No doubt you will have much more for us to “see” from your independent listening post in Cairo…

Ramazani: “Surging Backward”

We have featured several essays by R.K. Ramazani here before, and I am happy to draw attention to his latest pithy oped entitled, “Bush’s ‘new way leads backward.”
Ramazani, like most “independent” (e.g., “outside the beltway”) academic observers of the Gulf, is not impressed with President Bush’s plans to add 20 thousand or so additional US troops into the Iraq maelstrom. Deeming the President’s plan as charting “a way backward,” rather than forward, the Bush surge

“promises to deepen the quagmire in which America finds itself. And it carries the enormous risk of widening the theater of war to the detriment of American interests in the Middle East.”

Then and now, blind arrogance guides the Bush-Cheney Administration:

The president made his decision in defiance of counsel from military experts and experienced field commanders. Just as in 2003, when he dismissed the warning of Gen. Eric K. Shinseki, the army chief of staff, that occupation forces at the time were too small, he recently ignored the view of Gen. John P. Abizaid, head of the Central Command, that troop increases were no answer in Iraq.
The president also flouted the advice of civilian experts, most notably, the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, chaired by former Secretary of State James Baker and former Congressman Lee Hamilton. The study group’s report urged the Bush administration to set a goal of early 2008 for the withdrawal of almost all U.S. combat troops.
The Bush administration failed equally to heed the message of the mid-term congressional elections, a message heard loud and clear in the halls of the new Congress. The day after the president’s State of the Union address, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, by a vote of 12-8, repudiated his plan to send more troops to Baghdad.
Yet on the same day, Vice President Dick Cheney voiced the president’s defiant stance. He said: “We are moving ahead… . [T]he president has made his decision.”

But can such arrogance prevail “in the face of deepening frustration” of publics at home and abroad? Ramazani cites polling data indicating a strong majority of Americans oppose increased deployments of troops to Iran. He then contends that the tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of protestors who recently took to the cold streets of Washington “were reminding legislators that the people had elected them and expected them to act as a check on the executive branch.”

Continue reading “Ramazani: “Surging Backward””

War-clouds over Iran?

Are the imminent arrival of the additional US Navy carrier battle group to the waters of the Persian/Arabian Gulf and the despatch of an admiral as the first-ever head of US CentCom decisive signs that some form of an American military strike against Iran is about to begin?
Other signs of this include the increase in the volume of the continuous barrage of anti-Iranian accusations made by the Bush administration, and their apparent orchestration of a very broad anti-Iranian propaganda campaign by their principal aid-recipients in the Arab world. (I’m now in Egypt. You can certainly see some signs of that here.)
In a well compiled contribution to Open Democracy the British analyst Paul Rogers writes:

    Today, in the context of the changed mood in Washington – and even though it is an extraordinarily dangerous prospect and seems so far-fetched as to be unbelievable – the risk [of such an attack] can no longer be ignored.
    …As the United States predicament in Iraq has steadily deteriorated, the reaction among the more hawkish opinion-formers in the US has been to insist in the strongest terms on the need for victory in Iraq, while seeing Iran as the real reason for current failures. Iran therefore must be dealt with, initially at least in terms of destroying any nuclear capability it may possess or be seeking to acquire. This objective is aided by the rhetoric of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, especially his holocaust-denial propaganda..
    In one sense, Iran was always the main issue for neo-conservatives: “the road to Tehran runs through Baghdad” was their mantra. Indeed there was a strong view in 2003 that the best way to deal with Iran was by installing a client administration in Iraq, secured by a substantial permanent American military presence at four large bases. Iraq would become a western bastion, with the added double benefit of reducing the significance of a somewhat unpredictable House of Saud while ensuring the Iran would know its place. In essence, regime termination to Iran’s east (Afghanistan) and west (Iraq) within two years would achieve a precious strategic success: a pliant Tehran.
    It has not exactly worked out like that…

The Bushists have certainly raised tensions with Iran to a new high over recent weeks,. They have also made many preparations at the levels of both military logistics and propganda/rhetoric for an even greater confrontation with Teheran that may lead– whether by intention or through some “accident” (planned or unplanned)– to an outbreak of actual military conflict.
As I wrote here last September, the two sides urgently need a hot-line arrangement, whether at the level of military-to-military, or leader-to-leader, in order to avert mishaps or miscommunications that might lead to disaster. The inauguration of such a deconfliction mechanism could also be the first step towards building further confidence and establishing further means of averting conflicts.
But meanwhile, what we have from Washington instead is an eery repeat of the kind of propaganda preparations, now directed against Iran, that we saw four years ago directed against Iraq. MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann has pulled together some old Bush tapes from 2002 to show the keen degree of overlap there. You can view them here. (Hat-tip to D. Froomkin.)
I do note, too, that much of the US MSM– which in 2002 were still nearly all drinking the Bushists’ Koolaid– seem to be much more skeptical and wary of what’s happening this time round.
I’m planning a column for the CSM this week that implores the President not to take us once again down the path of a completely voluntary and quite predictably harmful war. Back in 2002, I was one of that majority of experienced American analysts of the current Middle East who warned loudly that an invasion of Iraq would lead to such harmful consequences as: the incubation of stiff, anti-US resistance by Iraqis, the strengthening of the Shiite Islamist trends, and extremely complex conflicts over Kirkuk and the whole of northern Iraq. The Bushists chose not to listen to us, preferring instead the counsels of Bernard Lewis (a scholar of medieval Islam) and of others– primarily, pro-Israeli ideologues– who assured them that an invasion of Iraq would be “a cakewalk”, whose success at bringing about a pro-US transformation there was virtually guaranteed..
I take no pleasure whatsoever in saying that I and the colleagues who agreed with me then were right. Lewis, Cheney, Adelman, Wolfowitz, Feith, Perle, Woolsey, and all that sad group of pro-war propagandists of that day were wrong.
They have never been held to any account. I think this should be a matter of keen concern to all Americans, as well as all Iraqis (whose sufferings since March 2003 have been a hundred times worse.)
But it completely beggars belief that the counsels of war coming yet again from some of these very same people are once again being listened to by the President.
Just one small footnote from me here: Some friends have suggested that in what I wrote here about the late-January incident at PJCC Karbala I was helping to provide ammunition for the anti-Iranian propaganda campaign in the US. That was certainly not my intention. As I wrote there, I did think that it was “possible” that some Iranian government-backed formation had undertaken the attack on US forces there. But I also noted explicitly that, “I’m in no position to put a probability figure on that scenario.”
Beyond that, I want to note that even if there was an Iranian government hand of some kind in the Karbala attack, I don’t think this would in any way qualify as a “casus belli” for a US attack on Iran.
Finally, since I’m in a hurry here, I just want to put in Paul Rogers’ assessment of the kinds of damage that cane be predicted from a US attack on Iran:

    It is clear that a full-scale US air attack on Iranian nuclear facilities and related infrastructure could do substantial damage, as well as causing hundreds and probably thousands of casualties. Even a more limited Israeli raid would have a major effect.
    Equally clear is the wide range of options open to Iran in responding to such an attack – especially as its principal immediate effect would be a fundamental unifying of opinion in favour of the government (no matter how unpopular it might be in other respects).
    The possibilities include:
    * immediate withdrawal from the non-proliferation treaty and a wholehearted effort to develop nuclear weapons as quickly as possible – leading to further action by the United States and Israel, and a long war
    * action against US forces in Iraq, through Shi’a militia intermediaries on a far larger scale than at present
    * direct involvement of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards in Iraq
    * closure of the Straits of Hormuz, causing a steep increase in world oil prices
    * aid and encouragement to Hizbollah in southern Lebanon (especially if Israel was involved in the attacks)
    * paramilitary attacks on oil facilities in western Gulf states.
    Furthermore, an attack on Iran would be seen by Shi’a groups in many other countries as an attack on them; this would create potential for severe disturbance, not least in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain…

I agree with just about all of that. I would add, however, that any large-scale US or Israeli attack on Iran could very well trigger storms of outrage from a much broader spectrum of Muslim groups than Rogers lists… Yes, including many Sunni Arabs.
It is to try to forestall that possibility, of course, that the US and its allies in the region are now engaged in such a frenzy of anti-Iranian propagandizing. But I am not sure at all that they will succeed.

Is the Iraq war all about George W. Bush?

Several people have already commented on the disconnect between the glowing account Pres. Bush gave, in this radio interview Monday, of the performance of the US-trained “Iraqi” forces in recent days and the accounts that reporters in Iraq have been giving of the Iraqi forces’ performance in the battle near Najaf, or the ones raging along Baghdad’s Haifa Street…
For example, in this piece in today’s NYT, Marc Santora, Qais Mizher, and another unnamed Iraqi reporter wrote of the Najaf battle,

    Iraqi forces were surprised and nearly overwhelmed by the ferocity of an obscure renegade militia in a weekend battle… and needed far more help from American forces than previously disclosed, American and Iraqi officials said Monday.
    They said American ground troops — and not just air support as reported Sunday — were mobilized to help the Iraqi soldiers, who appeared to have dangerously underestimated the strength of the militia…
    American Apache attack helicopters and F-16s, as well as British fighter jets, flew low over the farms where the enemy had set up its encampments and attacked, dropping 500-pound bombs on the encampments. The Iraqi forces were still unable to advance, and they called in support from both an elite Iraqi unit known as the Scorpion Brigade, which is based to the north in Hilla, and from American ground troops.
    Around noon, elements of the American Fourth Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division were dispatched from near Baghdad…

Bush truly does seem to live in some bubble-like cloud-cuckoo land when he talks about the capacities of the “Iraqi” forces. This is what he told NPR’s Juan Williams yesterday:

    the Iraqis are beginning to take the lead, whether it be this fight that you’ve just reported on where the Iraqis went in with American help to do in some extremists that were trying to stop the advance of their democracy, or the report that there’s militant Shia had been captured or killed. In other words, one of the things that I expect to see is the Iraqis take the lead and show the American people that they’re willing to the hard work necessary to secure their democracy, and our job is to help them.
    So my first reaction on this report from the battlefield is that the Iraqis are beginning to show me something…

Seemingly obivious to the facts, yes. But I noticed something else there, too: A clear indication that Bush, emperor-like, now thinks that the war in Iraq is all about him… and that the job of the Iraqi forces who have been trained by the Americans is to show him personally how well they can perform.
Maybe the rest of us need to find a better way to break through his bubble of solipsism and self-referentiality.
No, George Bush, this war is not all about you. It’s about the desire for self-rule and national independence of 28 million Iraqis… It’s about the anxious families of the 140,000 US service members whom you have recklessly deployed into harm’s way… And it’s about when and how the US citizenry can find a way out of the quagmire of unilateralism, self-referentiality, and threat into which your ill-informed warmongering has led us.
So please, please don’t carry on acting as though it’s all about you. It’s about all of us, the citizens of all the world’s countries, and how we can build a new set of much more secure relationships among us based on human equality and mutual respect.
One hint: this is probably not best achieved with attack helicopters, F-16s, and 500-pound bombs…

Counterinsurgency in modern times

I’ve been thinking more about the challenges faced by Gen. Petraeus or any other commander who tries, in the 21st century, to organize a successful counterinsurgency campaign under the circumstances that:

    (1) this commander works within the military of a democratic country,
    (2) the counterinsurgency in question is being waged in another country, (known in COIN parlance as the ‘Host Nation’), and
    (3) the society within which the COIN campaign is being waged has a relatively advanced information/education infrastructure.

Waging a “successful”, military-based (i.e. coercive) counterinsurgency campaign under such circumstances is, I think, impossible.
For a foreign power to use forceful means to affect the political outcome within any given country/society causes a direct clash with the principles of democracy, of sovereignty, and of a respect for basic human rights. (This is even more clearly so when the forceful means in question include means that are directly and permissively lethal, as is spelled out at several points in Gen. Petraeus’s recently published COIN “manual”. See my analysis here.)
Democracy: It is a basic underpinning of the theory of democracy that differences can and must be solved through nonviolent means, including negotiation, bargaining, and the forging of agreement over decision rules. When a powerful foreign power intervenes within the polity of any given nation this sends a powerful message to natinals of that country through the demonstration effect. And it also– under all the theories of counterinsurgency since the dawn of time– results in the arming of one part of the host-nation citizenry against the other, making a mockery of any commitment to “democracy” within the host nation and sowing further grievances and demands for vengeance for, quite possibly, several generations to come.
Sovereignty: People in the human-rights movement in rich western countries often see “sovereignty”– especially the sovereignty of countries in the impoverished, formerly colonized world– as an impediment to the enjoyment of human rights. But the sovereign independence of nations is also an expression of the democracy among peoples; and indeed, there is no possibility for any society to enjoy democratic self-governance so long as vital, national-level decision-making is done or is constrained in any way by foreigners. And while human rights are, certainly, often abused by sovereign governments in many places around the world, there is literally no possibility at all for peoples who are ruled by foreigners to have any assurance that their rights will be respected. When a foreign power conducts and controls the conducting of a COIN campaign within a completely different nation, that is a complete violation of the principle of sovereign independence.
Human rights: Any COIN campaign will almost certainly, by definition, involve infringements on basic human freedoms including the freedoms of assembly, of movement, of political organizing, etc. That’s the case even when they’re conducted “within” nations, e.g. in recent times Northern Ireland, or Nepal. Very frequently the rights abuses involved will be considerably more serious… And this is probably much more likely to be the case where the people doing the COIN don’t identify culturally in any way at all with those against whom they are fighting.
… And thus, we see these dilemmas for a guy like Petraeus who tries to be very smart, very articulate, and very “sensitive”, and who tries to mount a successful COIN campaign on behalf of the US– a country whose people like to think of them- (our-)selves as committed to democracy and human rights. I explored some of those dilemmas a little further in that Jan. 10 blog post I linked to earlier…
I imagine sometimes Petraeus must really envy his counterparts in, say, Russia, who can organize almost whatever they want to in a place like Chechnya without having to worry too much about the effects that revelations from Chechnya will have on their standing back home.
Another thing, too. The Russian commanders in Chechnya don’t have to worry about very much news ever seeping out of Chechnya… Certainly, not as much as Petraeus has to worry about news getting out of Iraq, or the Israelis need to worry about news getting out of Lebanon (last summer), or out of Palestine, today. The development of means of recording like small videocams, small audio recorders, digital cameras, and laoptop computers, and the development of means of disseminating reports and recordings across large distances, mean that fighting a COIN battle in Iraq or Palestine today is a very different matter from, for example, what the British were able to do against the Mau Mau in the 1950s, or the French did against national-liberation “insurgents” in Algeria, or in Vietnam.
(Or, what the British did against the Palestinians in the 1930s, or against the Iraqis in the 1920s… Those campaigns both provide strong and worrying precedents that live on in the folk-memories of their peoples.)
The US forces in Iraq (and perhaps even more so in the more under-reported reaches of Afghanistan) may have tried to undertake some of the very abusive types of action that those earlier imperial commanders did… As their US predecessors also did in numerous wars from the wars against the Native Americans right here “at home”, on through several bloody “small wars” abroad, including in Vietnam and repeatedly, over and over again, in Central America…
But here’s the thing. At some point in history, such wars became politically unwinnable. The British may have “won” on the battlefield in Kenya; and indeed, they ground the Kikuyu insurgents in the north right into the dust as they did so… But still, they had to get out of the country and leave it to become independent. The same with the French in Algeria. As Clausewitz knew, and warned everyone so long ago, the point of military operations is not to win the battle, it’s to win the war. And at some point in the 1950s or so, at the political-strategic level all those “counter-insurgency” campaigns fought around the world by democratic powers were lost.
I was reading this little article, from the January-February 2006 Military Review, that Petraeus submitted to the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday, in connection with his confirmation hearings there. It’s titled Learning Counterinsurgency: Observations from Soldiering in Iraq. He sums up his findings there in the following lessons:

    Observations from Soldiering in Iraq:
    1.“Do not try to do too much with your own hands.”
    2. Act quickly, because every Army of liberation [Yes, that’s honestly what he calls the US army in Iraq! ~HC] has a half-life.
    3. Money is ammunition.
    4. Increasing the number of stakeholders is critical to success.
    5. Analyze “costs and benefits” before each operation.
    6. Intelligence is the key to success.
    7. Everyone must do nation-building.
    8. Help build institutions, not just units.
    9. Cultural awareness is a force multiplier.
    10. Success in a counterinsurgency requires more than just military operations.
    11. Ultimate success depends on local leaders.
    12. Remember the strategic corporals and strategic lieutenants.
    13. There is no substitute for flexible, adaptable leaders.
    14. A leader’s most important task is to set the right tone.

The whole article there doesn’t get much more profound than that. (In his explanation of #2, he writes, ” in a situation like Iraq, the liberating force must act quickly, because every Army of liberation has a half-life beyond which it turns into an Army of occupation. The length of this half-life is tied to the perceptions of the populace about the impact of the liberating force’s activities… ” I don’t think that at the hearing yesterday anyone asked him specifically if he didn’t think that had already happened… )
I’ve also been reading the answers Petraeus had prepared to questions that the Senate Armed Services Committee’s members had given him prior to yesterday’s hearing. There are some interesting things there– a singal that he’s not necessarily going to go straight against the sadrists in Sadr City, for example… and an admission that the Army is already “stretched and straining”…
But I am really, really disappointed that no-one on the committee had submitted any questions about the grave human-rights implications of the types of “Rules of Engagement” Petraeus was writing about in his manual.
It seems the august senators either don’t “get” the extreme political and moral relevance of that issue, or they prefer not to think about this issue, but instead seek to leave such thinking to the military’s “professionals”. Either way, it seems like a serious abdication of their duty.

Grave implications of the Karbala raid

It seems the US authorities were not eager for the US public (or anyone else) to know the details of the lethally effective raid mounted against US occupation forces in Karbala last Saturday.
These details clearly indicate the size and creativity of the unit that undertook the attack, as well as the existence of significant collaboration between the anti-US attackers and members of the “Iraqi security forces” who were co-deployed with the targeted Americans at the “Provincial Joint Coordination Center” (PJCC) in Karbala.
There are a number of significant layers to this story. One is, it seems, the ineffectiveness of the attempt the US forces have been making to establish “information dominance” over the whole of the Iraqi area of operations…
But first, let’s go to what today’s WaPo story reported about the raid:

    The armored sport-utility vehicles whisked into a government compound in the city of Karbala with speed and urgency, the way most Americans and foreign dignitaries travel along Iraq’s treacherous roads these days.
    Iraqi guards at checkpoints waved them through Saturday afternoon because the men wore what appeared to be legitimate U.S. military uniforms and badges, and drove cars commonly used by foreigners, the provincial governor said…
    After arriving at the Provincial Joint Coordination Center in Karbala, 60 miles southwest of Baghdad, the attackers detonated sound bombs, Iraqi officials said. “They wanted to create a panic situation,” said an aide to Karbala Gov. Akeel al-Khazaali, who described the events with the governor’s permission but on condition of anonymity because he fears reprisals.
    The men then stormed into a room where Americans and Iraqis were making plans to ensure the safety of thousands of people expected to visit the holy city for an upcoming holiday.
    “They didn’t target anyone but the American soldiers,” the governor’s aide said.
    After the attack, the assailants returned to their vehicles and drove away. It was unclear how many people participated, and the men’s identities and motive remained unclear, but the attack was particularly striking because of the resources and sophistication involved, Iraqi officials said.
    The men drove off toward the city of Babil, north of Karbala, where they shot at guards at a checkpoint, said Capt. Muthana Ahmad, a police spokesman. Vehicles later recovered contained three bodies and one injured individual. The U.S. military took possession of the vehicles, the spokesman said…
    Saturday’s attack appeared to present a new danger to authorities in Iraq: assailants who disguise themselves as officials and travel in convoys.
    “The way it happened and the new style, the province has not seen before,” said Abdul al-Yasri, head of the provincial council in Karbala.

I don’t know how long that PJCC had been operating in Karbala… Or indeed, if it is still operating today? But very evidently, what happened there Saturday was a massive breach of security… And the fact the assailants were able to drive their multiple vehicles out of the compound after the attack without incident indicates– perhaps even more strongly than the fact that they were able to get into it so easily– that they most likely had a number of confederates among the Iraqi security personnel working there.
Which presumably was a major reason why the US authorities in Baghdad did not want to divulge the details of the attack too widely.
The US military’s press release about the attack, issued yesterday, said only this:

    The Provincial Joint Coordination Center (PJCC) in Karbala was attacked with grenades, small arms and indirect fires by an illegally armed militia group Jan 20. Five U.S. Soldiers were killed and three wounded while repelling the attack.
    Initial reporting by some media outlets indicated falsely that the attack was conducted by Coalition forces…
    “The attack on the Karbala Provincial Joint Coordination Center was aimed at Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces working together toward a better future for the citizens of Karbala,” said Lt. Col. Scott R. Bleichwehl, Spokesperson for Multi-National Division-Baghdad.
    The location has been secured by Coalition and Iraqi security forces…

Today’s waPo account says this:

    U.S. military officials said Sunday that they could not discuss the attack in Karbala in detail because it remained under investigation. But they said the version of events provided by the governor’s office was consistent with their preliminary findings.

This a serious admission. It is an admission, in effect, that Bleichwehl and his fellow officers– who are, of course, extremely strongly concerned about the wellbeing of all the US soldiers in the field in Iraq– are unable to hide the fact that some members of an Iraqi unit co-deployed with those Americans were most likely complicit in the anti-US action, while the others were either unwilling or unable to intervene to foil the attack.
Bush’s new “surge” plan for Greater Baghdad– and the whole of the US counterinsurgency effort in Iraq– depends crucially on effecting a large increase in mthe numbers of US soldiers co-deployed with members of the “Iraqi security forces.”
But the news from Karbala– which is only the latest, though perhaps the most serious, incident in which Iraqis co-deployed with Americans have apparently given aid to anti-US attackers– is likely to make the US commanders in Baghdad, Qatar, and Washington more wary than ever about such co-deployments. “Force protection”, that is, the protection of the lives and wellbeing of their own soldiers, has been the overwhelming mission of the US deployment in Iraq all along, and has been pursued even at the cost of risking the lives of much greater numbers of Iraqi soldiers or civilians.
Given the US public’s strong concern about US casualties, this emphasis on force protection is, perhaps, politically understandable. In announcing the most recent “surge”, Bush has tried to signal that the US public might need to accept that there could be some increased US casualties during its early phases– but he “promised” us, as well, that these would not last for long…
But all in all, for the Bushites, it’s an extremely inopportune time for detailed news about an attack like the one in Karbala to get out and be disseminated to a wide US readership.
And yet, they proved unable to suppress the news. This, primarily because the Karbala provincial governor was apparently unwilling to participate in their cover-up…
Which is an indication of the Bushites’ large and continuing political problems in Iraq, as well.
Update, Mon. 4:45 p.m.:
IraqSlogger had these additional details, from Az-Zaman:

    According to Az-Zaman, the armed men who executed the operation wore the uniforms of the American Army, and rode in ten GMC jeeps. After the operation, the American forces prevented the governor and the municipal board members from entering the hall, but the governor held a press conference in his home, where he described the attack and said that the armed men came from “a neighboring province”. Az-Zaman interviewed a guard in the Police building who said that the attackers “came in an official visit”, but when they were intercepted, the attackers “took the weapons and phones” of the guards and asked them to lie on the ground. The guard added that the attackers executed the operation and left in a short period of time, destroying an American Hummer before they departed. The Americans were in yard of the building when the attack occurred, and no casualties were reported among the attackers, the newspaper added.

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!