I read carefully the two accounts in the NYT of the hearing the Senate Armed Services Committee held yesterday into the administration’s Iraq policy. Michael Gordon and Mark Mazzetti wrote a fairly standard, ‘news’-type account under the title: General Warns of Risks in Iraq if G.I.’s Are Cut. The general in question being the head of Centcom, Gen. John Abizaid.
However, Abizaid was also apparently warning of “risks” if the US troop level were increased, though that didn’t quite make it to the headline. Here’s what Gordon and Mazzetti wrote:
Gen. John P. Abizaid, made it clear that he did not endorse the phased troop withdrawals being proposed by Democratic lawmakers. Instead, he said the number of troops in Iraq might be increased by a small amount as part of new plans by American commanders to improve the training of the Iraqi Army.
General Abizaid did not rule out a larger troop increase, but he said the American military was stretched too thin to make such a step possible over the long term. And he said such an expansion might dissuade the Iraqis from making more of an effort to provide for their own security.
“We can put in 20,000 more Americans tomorrow and achieve a temporary effect,” he said. “But when you look at the overall American force pool that’s available out there, the ability to sustain that commitment is simply not something that we have right now with the size of the Army and the Marine Corps.”
Right next to the Gordon/Mazzetti piece was another account of the same hearing, written by Kate Zernike, who was apparently much more focused on tracking the “party-political” aspects of the hearing. She wrote about the body language the various senators used, how the Republicans arrived late and left early, apparently in pique at having lost the recent election, etc etc.
But she also had this description of Abizaid’s position:
Senator John McCain of Arizona, pressed his argument that more troops were needed in Iraq. When General Abizaid disagreed, Mr. McCain called attention to the remarks of retired military officers who characterized Congressional proposals for phased withdrawal as “terribly naïve.” Mr. McCain’s protégé, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, backed him up; when the general insisted that more troops were not the solution, Mr. Graham cut him off, saying, “Do we need less?” forcing General Abizaid to say that no, that was not the solution, either.
So what message was Abizaid trying to convey here, I ask?
Principally, I would say he was trying to undertake the classic strategy known in the Pentagon as “CYA”, refrring to the need to provide cover to a posterior body part. Boiled down, his message read: “More troops won’t work; nor will less troops.” The only thing the senators failed to ascertain is whether the present troop levels are “working”… But I guess they didn’t need to, since we see the negative answer to that question every day on the nightly news.
(More evidence that Abizaid’s main mission at the hearing was CYA was that he made a point of reminding senators that the US military’s troubles in Iraq go back to Rumsfeld having notably failed to take Gen. Shinseki’s advice on the need for much higher troop levels at the get-go, ways back in late 2002.)
I don’t want to be harsh on Gen. Abizaid, who must be agonizing over the continuing rate of US troops deaths and the understanding he seems to clearly have that there is no military way out of this problem. I just wish he had said that, explicitly and straight out: “Senators, my conclusion is that there is no purely military way out of this problem. We have always done what we were asked to do by the political leadership in this country; and now it is up to that leadership to change the politics opf their intervention in Iraq.”
JWN readers will recall that I sketched out my own main ideas on how this should be done, in this post, which I wrote last Friday. In it I wrote that the new US policy, to have any chance of success, should seek the active engagement in helping solve the Iraq problem of these three parties: Iran, the UN, and Iraq’s other neighbors.
Also speaking at yesterday’s hearing was David Satterfield, the State Department’s policy coordinator for Iraq.
According to Gordon and Mazzetti, Satterfield
told the Senate committee that the United States was prepared “in principle” to discuss the situation in Iraq with Iran, but the timing was uncertain.
“We are prepared in principle to discuss Iranian activities in Iraq,” Mr. Satterfield said. “The timing of such a direct dialogue is one that we still have under review.”
“The timing is uncertain”???? What a load of irresponsible nonsense! The situation in Iraq, for Iraqis, continues to get worse, month by month, and the political pronlems of sectarianism, fear, violence, killing and ethnic cleansing get worse by the month, too. So when is the “right” time for Washington to reach out to Iran and other neighbors (and, crucially, the UN) in order to engage their help??? It is today– or better still, yesterday.
Two other articles of note regarding this question of timing:
(1) This article by Robin Wright in today’s WaPo, under the title: As Pressure for Talks Grows, Iran and Syria Gain Leverage. (Duh!) and…
(2) This great and truly tragic collection of on-the-ground reports from Iraq by Nir Rosen, spanning from before the US invasion to just last April, which clearly shows how much worse the situation has gotten over the past three years.
If you don’t have the time (or perhaps, the stomach) to read Nir’s whole article, scroll down to near the end where he gives his bottom-line:
America did this to Iraq. We divided Iraqis. We set them at war with each other. The least we can do is stop killing them and leave Iraq.
Longtime JWN readers will recall that in this summer 2005 forum on Iraq in The Nation, Nir and I both strongly advocated the speediest possible withdrawal of US troops (and Juan Cole didn’t.)
Imagine if the US, back then, had started implementing the kinds of policies I have been advocating all along: for a US withdrawal from Iraq that is (orderly), speedy, total, and generous… How much better of a situation both countries (and the whole Middle East) would most likely be in today….
Ah well. The US decision-making elite seems, however slowly, to be coming around to my viewpoint. It is just that now, extricating the US troops from Iraq is going to be a whole lot harder (and actually, the strategic/political cost exacted from Washington by the rest of the world a lot higher) than it would have been if the process had started 15 or 30 months ago.
That’s one of the reasons why everyone involved really needs to look long and hard at this point at the “Namibia approach”– that is, to have the US occupation forces work hand-in-hand with the UN in fashioning both the political and the operational modalities of how to withdraw the occupation force and support the emergence of a capable and politically legitimate indigenous successor power there. In its time, Namibia looked extremely politically complex and intracatable, too… But the transition worked.