Surge to Nowhere
Don't buy the hawks' hype.
The war may be off the front pages,
but Iraq is broken beyond repair, and we still own it.
Dr. Andrew J. Bacevich
Sunday, January 20, 2008
The Washington Post - Page B01
As the fifth anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom nears, the
fabulists are again trying to weave their own version of the war. The
latest myth is that the "surge" is working.
In President Bush's pithy formulation, the United States is now "kicking ass" in Iraq. The gallant Gen. David Petraeus, having been given the right tools, has performed miracles, redeeming a situation that once appeared hopeless. Sen. John McCain
has gone so far as to declare that "we are winning in Iraq." While few
others express themselves quite so categorically, McCain's remark
captures the essence of the emerging story line: Events have (yet
again) reached a turning point. There, at the far end of the tunnel,
light flickers. Despite the hand-wringing of the defeatists and
naysayers, victory beckons.
From the hallowed halls of the American Enterprise Institute
waft facile assurances that all will come out well. AEI's Reuel Marc
Gerecht assures us that the moment to acknowledge "democracy's success
in Iraq" has arrived. To his colleague Michael Ledeen, the explanation
for the turnaround couldn't be clearer: "We were the stronger horse,
and the Iraqis recognized it." In an essay entitled "Mission
Accomplished" that is being touted by the AEI crowd, Bartle Bull, the
foreign editor of the British magazine Prospect, instructs us that
"Iraq's biggest questions have been resolved." Violence there "has
ceased being political." As a result, whatever mayhem still lingers is
"no longer nearly as important as it was." Meanwhile, Frederick W.
Kagan, an AEI resident scholar and the arch-advocate of the surge,
announces that the "credibility of the prophets of doom" has reached "a
low ebb."
Presumably Kagan and his comrades would have us believe that recent
events vindicate the prophets who in 2002-03 were promoting preventive
war as a key instrument of U.S. policy. By shifting the conversation to
tactics, they seek to divert attention from flagrant failures of basic
strategy. Yet what exactly has the surge wrought? In substantive terms,
the answer is: not much.
As the violence in Baghdad and Anbar province
abates, the political and economic dysfunction enveloping Iraq has
become all the more apparent. The recent agreement to rehabilitate some
former Baathists
notwithstand ing, signs of lasting Sunni-Shiite reconciliation are
scant. The United States has acquired a ramshackle, ungovernable and
unresponsive dependency that is incapable of securing its own borders
or managing its own affairs. More than three years after then-national
security adviser Condoleezza Rice handed President Bush a note announcing that "Iraq is sovereign," that sovereignty remains a fiction.
A nation-building project launched in the confident expectation that
the United States would repeat in Iraq the successes it had achieved in
Germany and Japan
after 1945 instead compares unfavorably with the U.S. response to
Hurricane Katrina. Even today, Iraqi electrical generation meets barely
half the daily national requirements. Baghdad households now receive
power an average of 12 hours each day -- six hours fewer than when Saddam Hussein
ruled. Oil production still has not returned to pre-invasion levels.
Reports of widespread fraud, waste and sheer ineptitude in the
administration of U.S. aid have become so commonplace that they barely
last a news cycle. (Recall, for example, the 110,000 AK-47s, 80,000
pistols, 135,000 items of body armor and 115,000 helmets intended for
Iraqi security forces that, according to the Government Accountability Office, the Pentagon
cannot account for.) U.S. officials repeatedly complain, to little
avail, about the paralyzing squabbling inside the Iraqi parliament and
the rampant corruption within Iraqi ministries. If a primary function
of government is to provide services, then the government of Iraq can
hardly be said to exist.
Moreover, recent evidence suggests that the United States is tacitly
abandoning its efforts to create a truly functional government in
Baghdad. By offering arms and bribes to Sunni insurgents -- an
initiative that has been far more important to the temporary reduction
in the level of violence than the influx of additional American troops
-- U.S. forces have affirmed the fundamental irrelevance of the
political apparatus bunkered inside the Green Zone.
Rather than fostering political reconciliation, accommodating Sunni
tribal leaders ratifies the ethnic cleansing that resulted from the
civil war touched off by the February 2006 bombing of the Golden Mosque
in Samarra,
a Shiite shrine. That conflict has shredded the fragile connective
tissue linking the various elements of Iraqi society; the deals being
cut with insurgent factions serve only to ratify that dismal outcome.
First Sgt. Richard Meiers of the Army's 3rd Infantry Division got it exactly right: "We're paying them not to blow us up. It looks good right now, but what happens when the money stops?"
In short, the surge has done nothing to overturn former secretary of state Colin Powell's now-famous "Pottery Barn"
rule: Iraq is irretrievably broken, and we own it. To say that any
amount of "kicking ass" will make Iraq whole once again is pure
fantasy. The U.S. dilemma remains unchanged: continue to pour lives and
money into Iraq with no end in sight, or cut our losses and deal with
the consequences of failure.
In only one respect has the surge achieved undeniable success: It
has ensured that U.S. troops won't be coming home anytime soon. This
was one of the main points of the exercise in the first place. As AEI
military analyst Thomas Donnelly has acknowledged with admirable
candor, "part of the purpose of the surge was to redefine the
Washington narrative," thereby deflecting calls for a complete
withdrawal of U.S. combat forces. Hawks who had pooh-poohed the risks
of invasion now portrayed the risks of withdrawal as too awful to
contemplate. But a prerequisite to perpetuating the war -- and leaving
it to the next president -- was to get Iraq off the front pages and out
of the nightly news. At least in this context, the surge qualifies as a
masterstroke. From his new perch as a New York Times columnist, William Kristol has worried that feckless politicians just might "snatch defeat out of
the jaws of victory." Not to worry: The "victory" gained in recent
months all but guarantees that the United States will remain caught in
the jaws of Iraq for the foreseeable future.
Such success comes at a cost. U.S. casualties in Iraq have recently
declined. Yet since Petraeus famously testified before Congress last
September, Iraqi insurgents have still managed to kill more than 100
Americans. Meanwhile, to fund the war, the Pentagon is burning through
somewhere between $2 billion and $3 billion per week. Given that
further changes in U.S. policy are unlikely between now and the time
that the next administration can take office and get its bearings, the
lavish expenditure of American lives and treasure is almost certain to
continue indefinitely.
But how exactly do these sacrifices serve the national interest?
What has the loss of nearly 4,000 U.S. troops and the commitment of
about $1 trillion -- with more to come -- actually gained the United
States?
Bush had once counted on the U.S. invasion of Iraq to pay massive
dividends. Iraq was central to his administration's game plan for
eliminating jihadist terrorism. It would demonstrate how U.S. power and
beneficence could transform the Muslim world. Just months after the
fall of Baghdad, the president declared, "The establishment of a free
Iraq at the heart of the Middle East
will be a watershed event in the global democratic revolution."
Democracy's triumph in Baghdad, he announced, "will send forth the
news, from Damascus to Tehran
-- that freedom can be the future of every nation." In short, the
administration saw Baghdad not as a final destination but as a way
station en route to even greater successes.
In reality, the war's effects are precisely the inverse of those
that Bush and his lieutenants expected. Baghdad has become a strategic
cul-de-sac. Only the truly blinkered will imagine at this late date
that Iraq has shown the United States to be the "stronger horse." In
fact, the war has revealed the very real limits
of U.S. power. And for good measure, it has boosted anti-Americanism to
record levels, recruited untold numbers of new jihadists, enhanced the
standing of adversaries such as Iran and diverted resources and attention from Afghanistan, a theater of war far more directly relevant to the threat posed by al-Qaeda. Instead of draining the jihadist swamp, the Iraq war is continuously replenishing it.
Look beyond the spin, the wishful thinking, the intellectual bullying
and the myth-making. The real legacy of the surge is that it will
enable Bush to bequeath the Iraq war to his successor -- no doubt cause
for celebration at AEI, although perhaps less so for the families of
U.S. troops. Yet the stubborn insistence that the war must continue
also ensures that Bush's successor will, upon taking office, discover
that the post-9/11 United States is strategically adrift. Washington no
longer has a coherent approach to dealing with Islamic radicalism.
Certainly, the next president will not find in Iraq a useful template
to be applied in Iran or Syria or Pakistan.
According to the war's most fervent proponents, Bush's critics have
become so "invested in defeat" that they cannot see the progress being
made on the ground. Yet something similar might be said of those who
remain so passionately invested in a futile war's perpetuation. They
are unable to see that, surge or no surge, the Iraq war remains an
egregious strategic blunder that persistence will only compound.
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Andrew
J. Bacevich is a professor of history and international
relations at Boston University. He is a graduate of the U.S. Military
Academy and former military officer. His recent book, "The New
American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War" came out in
2005; his new book, "The Limits of Power,"
will be published later this year.
Dr.
Bacevich was a featured speaker at Mass Peace Action's Annual Meeting
in 2007. An outspoken and highly respected critic of President
Bush's foreign policy, he tragically lost his son, Andrew Bacevich Jr.,
who was killed in Iraq last May.