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How Will Iraq Strike Back?
Rather than making the world more safe, an
attack on Saddam could put Americans here at home in harm’s way.
By Richard K. Betts
President Bush seems confident that his war against Iraq will be
easier than his father’s, or at least that we can be sure to fight it on
our own terms. But why should Saddam Hussein do us that favor? The hour is
late for confronting strategic confusion, but better late than never. The
United States has painted itself as well as Iraq into a corner. The case
for preventive war rests on two crucial errors: understating the risk that
an assault on Iraq will trigger a counterattack on American civilians,
and, when that risk is admitted, conflating it with the threat of
unprovoked attack by Iraq in the future.
Most Americans take for granted that if
the war proves bloodier than the optimists expect, the price will be paid
by the military or people in the region. If an invasion succeeds, however,
Saddam Hussein will have no reason to withhold his best parting
shot—which could be the release of weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
inside the United States. Such a counterattack against civilians could
make the death toll of Sept. 11 look small. Washington has done little to
prepare the country for this possibility.
When administration spokesmen do admit
this danger, they misread it as reinforcing their case, as if it simply
demonstrates the same threat they believe requires preventive war. There
is a world of difference, however, between the odds that Iraq will fight
back if we strike first and the odds that Iraq will strike without
provocation in the future. The administration does not admit that if our
attack triggers Iraqi retaliation, we will have brought the disaster on
ourselves. It is not quite too late to ponder the Prussian statesman Otto
von Bismarck’s characterization of preventive war: “suicide from fear
of death.”
An invasion to get rid of Saddam
Hussein aims to do what no government has ever done before: destroy a
regime that possesses WMD. Twice before countries with WMD fought each
other but only in skirmishes—China and the Soviet Union on the Ussuri
River in 1969 and India and Pakistan over Kargil in 2000. In those limited
clashes neither side’s leadership faced its own demise. The difference
this time has not been digested by pro-war strategists.
All the way through the passage of
congressional authorization for war, the greatest danger a preventive
assault might pose to Americans went almost unmentioned. Attention focused
instead on less immediate, less likely, and less dangerous threats. The
hawks’ argument for war focused on the future danger that Iraq will get
nuclear weapons. But the biological weapons Iraq almost certainly has
already are bad enough. The worst estimates of U.S. vulnerability may be
grossly exaggerated, but vulnerability is high in any case. A 1993 Office
of Technology Assessment study saw the possibility of one to three million
fatalities from anthrax delivered by aerosol from a single plane over the
Washington, D.C. area. Even if medical readiness makes a realistic figure
only one percent of that figure, casualties would be more than triple
those of Sept. 11. Iraq could also have bio-engineered pathogens for which
no defense is available. Chemical weapons would be less destructive than
biological, but they too could exact a devastating toll.
Is Iraqi counterattack really
plausible? Hawks worry that Saddam will use WMD or give them to terrorists
in the future, even if we threaten him with devastating retaliation. If he
would cut his own throat when not provoked, he will certainly lash out
with anything he has when we go for his jugular and his back is against
the wall—and Washington wants him to go to the wall. Saddam will not go
gently if he has nothing left to lose.
The risk that has absorbed
commentators, however, is the vulnerability of U.S. invasion forces, or
local supporters like Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait, as if the danger
is only that Iraq would set off WMD within the region. But if the military
assault to overthrow the Iraqi regime succeeds, there is no reason to
doubt Saddam’s intention to use biological weapons where they would hurt
Americans the most. Then the only question is whether he will have the
capability to carry out the intent.
Maybe not. Maybe Saddam is not crafty
enough to figure out how to strike the American homeland. Maybe Iraqi
intelligence is too incompetent to smuggle biological weapons in and set
them off. Maybe underlings would disobey orders to do so. Maybe terrorists
to whom they might subcontract the job would bungle it. Maybe American
forces could find and neutralize all of Iraq’s WMD before they could be
detonated. But it is reckless to bank on maybes. We have given Saddam more
than enough time to concoct retaliation, since he has been on notice for
months that we are coming. The Bush administration has made this war the
most telegraphed punch in military history.
Is it alarmist to emphasize the danger
of Iraqi counterattack? The odds may be low—perhaps as low as the odds
were on Sept. 10, 2001 that 19 Arab civilians would level the World Trade
Center and tear a chunk out of the Pentagon. If the odds are as high as
one out of six, they make the risk in overthrowing Saddam the same as
Russian Roulette. It is one thing to hope that we can wage war to the end
without triggering effective retaliation. It is altogether different to
assume it, which is “best case” planning that should shame any
self-respecting hawk.
Taking the current threat to heart
means two big things:
First, the government has not done
enough to get ducks in a row on the home front. The day President Bush
kicks off the war is past time for moving decisively beyond the
drawing-board phase of homeland defense, the studies and plans under
development to prepare for future biological or chemical attack, and into
thorough implementation. The public deserves immediate, loud, clear, and
detailed instructions about how to know, what to do, where to go, and how
to cope if they encounter anthrax, ricin, smallpox, VX, or other pathogens
or chemicals the day after American tanks overrun Baghdad. It is too late
now to do what should have been done much earlier—cut through the
production problems and other complications in making vaccination against
anthrax available for civilians who want it (much of the military has
already been vaccinated). Putting in place and exercising the mechanisms
for detecting anthrax attacks and responding quickly enough to dispense
antibiotics on a massive scale are the least that a crash program should
assure before we invite retaliation. Smallpox is a less likely threat, and
much planning has been done for mass vaccination in an emergency, but at
the least a large majority of health-care workers should receive
vaccinations in advance. Until all this is done, the United States cannot
be ready to start a war.
Second, late as it is, the risk of Iraqi retaliation underlines the case
for reconsidering the alternative to provoking it. Why is reliance on
containment and deterrence—the strategy that got us through four decades
of Cold War—more dangerous than poking the snake right now?
For American deterrence to fail, Saddam
would have to choose deliberately to bring on his own demise when he could
otherwise continue to survive, scheme, and hope for something to turn up.
Saddam’s record is so filled with rash mistakes that preventive warriors
believe he must be considered undeterrable. But there is no good evidence
to prove the point. Reckless as he has been, he has never yet done
something we told him would be suicidal.
Saddam’s worst mistake was invading
Kuwait, but that happened precisely because Bush the Elder did not try to
deter him. Indeed, U.S. communications before the 1990 invasion gave him a
green light. During the war, in contrast, American leaders did issue a
deterrent threat, warning Saddam against using biological or chemical
weapons. That deterrent worked.
Bush the Younger quite aptly compared
Saddam to Stalin but drew the wrong lesson. Like Saddam, Stalin
miscalculated in approving the invasion of South Korea in 1950 because
Truman (like Bush in 1990) did not try to deter. Secretary of State
Acheson had indicated publicly that South Korea was excluded from the U.S.
defense perimeter. Stalin did not invade Western Europe, however, where
the NATO deterrent was clear.
Is the proper analogy instead to
terrorists? If the Iraqi regime is of a piece with al-Qaeda (a conflation
of threats that official rhetoric has encouraged) deterrence would be
impractical. But Saddam and the Ba’athists are not religious fanatics
bent on martyrdom. They are secularist thugs focused on their fortunes in
this world. Nor can they hide like al-Qaeda. The crucial difference
between a rogue state and a terrorist group is that the state has a return
address.
What makes hawks sure that long-term
deterrence is more dangerous than immediate provocation? Saddam could be a
greater threat in five years, but he could also be dead. He is sixty-five
now, and though adept so far at foiling coups or assassination, we could
get lucky. His stocks of WMD will grow more potent, but at what point will
Saddam decide that they afford him options he lacks now, and at what point
will he decide he is ready to bring down a decisive American assault on
himself and all his works?
Previous briefs for preventive war have
proved terribly wrong. Truman did not buy arguments for attacking the
Soviet Union. Yet as Paul Schroeder pointed out recently in this magazine,
“Stalin had nuclear weapons, was a worse sociopath than Hussein ... and
his record of atrocities against his own people was far worse than
Hussein’s.” Within a few years of preventive war recommendations by
Navy Secretary Francis Matthews, Senator John McClellan, and others,
Stalin was dead. There were numerous studies and proposals of preventive
war against China in the 1960s, and it is easy today to forget that at
that time Mao was considered as fanatically aggressive and crazy as Saddam
is today. But by the 1970s Washington and Beijing had become tacit allies.
President Bush should think about how history could have turned out if
preventive war arguments had sold in those cases.
Relying on deterrence indefinitely is not foolproof. Unfortunately,
high-stakes international politics is full of problems for which the only
choices are between risky options and worse ones. Americans often forget
this in the era of primacy, mistakenly believing that the only problems we
cannot solve are those about which we are inattentive or irresolute.
Overconfident in U.S. capacity to eliminate Saddam without disastrous side
effects, leaders in Washington are curiously fatalistic about the option
of deterrence and containment, which sustained U.S. strategy through forty
years of Cold War against far more formidable adversaries. Why have they
lost that faith?
One explanation is psychological and
moral. Many people think of deterrence as something the good guys do to
the bad, not the reverse. To see the danger of Iraqi retaliation as a
reason not to attack seems dishonorable, taking counsel of our fears, a
wimpy submission to blackmail. It seems presumptuous of a country like
Iraq to aspire to paralyze American power. It is a matter of American
honor not to be deterred from suppressing evil. The cold logic of
deterrence, however, has nothing to do with which side is good or evil. It
is about the hard facts of capability, which should constrain the good as
well as the bad.
Some also become indignant at the
suggestion that an Iraqi counterattack could be blamed on American
initiative, as if this is blaming the victim. This again confuses moral
and material interests. If a snake strikes back when you poke him you may
blame the snake rather than yourself for being bitten, but you will still
wish that you had not poked him.
Saddam has invited disrespect for his
deterrent by not declaring it—as he cannot, as long as he pretends not
to possess the prohibited weapons. Iraq’s bugs in the basement should
work like Israel’s bomb in the basement—an undeclared deterrent, yet
known to those who need to know. But Iraq’s deterrent has not worked
like Israel’s; despite potentially comparable killing power, biological
weapons do not instill the same fear as nuclear.
Is it too late to step back from war?
It should not be, given the ludicrously amusing Orwellian doublethink
exhibited by administration spokesmen over the threats posed by North
Korea and Iraq. We are told that it is not necessary to attack North Korea
even though its nuclear capabilities are far more advanced than Iraq’s,
it moves to expel UN inspectors just after Iraq accepts them, and its
history of wild and crazy behavior outclasses Baghdad’s.
Nevertheless, having gone so far out on
the limb with Iraq, it would be an embarrassing retreat to back away. The
only thing worse, however, would be to go ahead with a mistaken strategy
that risks retaliation against American civilians, bloody urban combat,
and counterproductive effects for the war against terrorism by mobilizing
more alienated Muslims against the U.S. There are no good alternatives at
this point, but there are ones that are less bad:
First, squeeze the box in which Saddam
is currently contained. Selectively tighten sanctions—not those that
allegedly harm civilians, but the prohibitions on imports of military
materials and illicit export of oil. The way to overcome allied opposition
to tightening sanctions is to offer that course as the alternative to war.
Second, continue efforts to foment
internal overthrow of the regime. Saddam seems immune to covert action,
but even long-shot possibilities sometimes pan out.
Third, consider quasi-war. U.S. forces
might occupy the Kurdish area of northern Iraq (where Saddam has not
exercised control for years) and build up the wherewithal to move quickly
at some unspecified future date—to enforce inspections, to protect Iraqi
garrisons that revolt against Saddam, or ultimately to invest Baghdad.
Fourth, as the noose tightens, offer
Saddam safe haven if he and his henchmen step down. This would mean
thumbing our nose at the International Criminal Court, but the Bush
administration likes to do that anyway. There would be much clucking of
tongues as a heinous criminal gets off, but better to leave open an
alternative that, however bad, remains better than war.
In pondering Bismarck’s line about
“suicide from fear of death,” it helps to recall the consequences of
his replacement by leaders who saw more logic and necessity in the course
he derided. Statesmen in 1914 thought they had no alternative but to
confront threats with preventive war and believed the war would be short.
As often in war, expectations were rudely confounded. Instead of
preventing disaster, Bismarck’s successors precipitated it.
Applying Bismarck’s definition of
preventive war to the current case is, admittedly, hyperbole. Iraqi
retaliation would not destroy the United States, and it might not even
occur. But even a modest risk of tens of thousands of American civilian
casualties is too high compared to the exaggerated risk that Iraq will
court its own suicide by using or transferring WMD without provocation and
will do so before Saddam’s regime passes from the scene from other
causes. Before President Bush takes the last step he should realize that
consequences even a minute fraction of those of 1914 would thoroughly
discredit his decision to start the war.
_____________________________________
Richard K. Betts is Director of the
Institute of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University and was a member
of the National Commission on Terrorism
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