|
A Permanent Basis for
Withdrawal?
Can You Say "Permanent Bases"?
The American Press Can'tBy Tom Engelhardt
02/14/06 "Tom
Dispatch" -- -- We're in a new period in the war in Iraq --
one that brings to mind the Nixonian era of
"Vietnamization": A President presiding over an
increasingly unpopular war that won't end; an
election bearing down; the need to placate a
restive American public; and an army under so
much strain that it seems to be running off the
rails. So it's not surprising that the media is
now reporting on administration plans for, or
"speculation" about, or "signs of," or
"hints" of
"major draw-downs" or withdrawals of
American troops. The figure regularly cited
these days is less than 100,000 troops in Iraq
by the end of 2006. With about 136,000 American
troops there now, that figure would represent
just over one-quarter of all in-country U.S.
forces, which means, of course, that the term
"major" certainly rests in the eye of the
beholder.
In addition, these withdrawals are -- we know
this thanks to a Seymour Hersh piece,
Up in the Air, in the December 5th New
Yorker -- to be accompanied, as
in South Vietnam in the Nixon era, by an
unleashing of the U.S. Air Force. The added air
power is meant to compensate for any lost punch
on the ground (and will undoubtedly
lead to more "collateral damage" -- that is,
Iraqi deaths).
It is important to note that all promises of
drawdowns or withdrawals are invariably linked
to the dubious proposition that the Bush
administration can "stand up" an effective Iraqi
army and police force (think "Vietnamization"
again), capable of circumscribing the Sunni
insurgency and so allowing American troops to
pull back to bases outside major urban areas, as
well as to Kuwait and points as far west as the
United States. Further, all administration or
military withdrawal promises prove to be well
hedged with caveats and obvious loopholes,
phrases like "if
all goes according to plan and security
improves..." or "it also depends on the ability
of the Iraqis to..."
Since guerrilla attacks have actually been
on the rise and the delivery of the basic
amenities of modern civilization (electrical
power, potable water, gas for cars, functional
sewage systems, working traffic lights, and so
on)
on the decline, since the very establishment
of a government inside the heavily fortified
Green Zone has
proved immensely difficult, and since U.S.
reconstruction funds (those that haven't
already disappeared down one clogged drain
or another) are drying up, such partial
withdrawals may prove more complicated to pull
off than imagined. It's clear, nonetheless, that
"withdrawal" is on the propaganda agenda of an
administration heading into mid-term elections
with an increasingly skittish Republican Party
in tow and congressional candidates worried
about defending the President's
mission-unaccomplished war of choice. Under the
circumstances, we can expect more hints of,
followed by promises of, followed by
announcements of "major" withdrawals, possibly
including news in the fall election season of
even more "massive" withdrawals slated for the
end of 2006 or early 2007, all hedged with
conditional clauses and "only ifs" -- withdrawal
promises that, once the election is over, this
administration would undoubtedly feel under no
particular obligation to fulfill.
Assuming, then, a near year to come of
withdrawal buzz, speculation, and even a media
blitz of withdrawal announcements, the question
is: How can anybody tell if the Bush
administration is actually withdrawing from Iraq
or not? Sometimes, when trying to cut through a
veritable fog of misinformation and
disinformation, it helps to focus on something
concrete. In the case of Iraq, nothing could be
more concrete -- though less generally discussed
in our media -- than the set of enormous bases
the Pentagon has long been building in that
country. Quite literally multi-billions of
dollars have gone into them. In a prestigious
engineering magazine in late 2003, Lt. Col.
David Holt, the Army engineer "tasked with
facilities development" in Iraq, was already
speaking proudly of
several billion dollars being sunk into base
construction ("the numbers are staggering").
Since then, the base-building has been massive
and ongoing.
In a country in such startling disarray,
these bases, with some of the most expensive and
advanced communications systems on the planet,
are like vast spaceships that have landed from
another solar system. Representing a staggering
investment of resources, effort, and
geostrategic dreaming, they are the unlikeliest
places for the Bush administration to hand over
willingly to even the friendliest of Iraqi
governments.
If, as just about every expert agrees,
Bush-style reconstruction has failed dismally in
Iraq, thanks to thievery, knavery, and sheer
incompetence, and is now
essentially ending, it has been a raging
success in Iraq's "Little America." For the
first time, we have actual descriptions of a
couple of the "super-bases" built in Iraq in the
last two and a half years and, despite being
written by reporters under Pentagon information
restrictions, they are sobering. Thomas Ricks of
the Washington Post paid a visit to Balad
Air Base, the largest American base in the
country, 68 kilometers north of Baghdad and
"smack in the middle of the most hostile part of
Iraq." In a piece entitled
Biggest Base in Iraq Has Small-Town Feel,
Ricks paints a striking portrait:
The base is sizeable enough to have its own
"neighborhoods" including "KBR-land" (in honor
of the Halliburton subsidiary that has done most
of the base-construction work in Iraq); "CJSOTF"
("home to a special operations unit," the
Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force,
surrounded by "especially high walls," and so
secretive that even the base Army public affairs
chief has never been inside); and a junkyard for
bombed out Army Humvees. There is as well a
Subway, a Pizza Hut, a Popeye's, "an ersatz
Starbucks," a 24-hour Burger King, two post
exchanges where TVs, iPods, and the like can be
purchased, four mess halls, a hospital, a
strictly enforced on-base speed limit of 10 MPH,
a huge airstrip, 250 aircraft (helicopters and
predator drones included), air-traffic pile-ups
of a sort you would see over Chicago's O'Hare
airport, and "a miniature golf course, which
mimics a battlefield with its baby sandbags,
little Jersey barriers, strands of concertina
wire and, down at the end of the course, what
appears to be a tiny detainee cage."
Ricks reports that the 20,000 troops
stationed at Balad live in "air-conditioned
containers" which will, in the future -- and
yes, for those building these bases, there still
is a future -- be wired "to bring the troops
Internet, cable television and overseas
telephone access." He points out as well that,
of the troops at Balad, "only several hundred
have jobs that take them off base. Most
Americans posted here never interact with an
Iraqi."
Recently, Oliver Poole, a British reporter,
visited another of the American "super-bases,"
the still-under-construction al-Asad Airbase (Football
and pizza point to US staying for long haul).
He observes, of "the biggest Marine camp in
western Anbar province," that "this stretch of
desert increasingly resembles a slice of US
suburbia." In addition to the requisite Subway
and pizza outlets, there is a football field, a
Hertz rent-a-car office, a swimming pool, and a
movie theater showing the latest flicks. Al-Asad
is so large -- such bases may cover 15-20 square
miles -- that it has two bus routes and, if not
traffic lights, at least red stop signs at all
intersections.
There are at least four such "super-bases" in
Iraq, none of which have anything to do with
"withdrawal" from that country. Quite the
contrary, these bases are being constructed as
little American islands of eternal order in an
anarchic sea. Whatever top administration
officials and military commanders say -- and
they always deny that we seek "permanent" bases
in Iraq -– facts-on-the-ground speak with
another voice entirely. These bases practically
scream "permanency."
Unfortunately, there's a problem here.
American reporters adhere to a simple rule: The
words "permanent," "bases," and "Iraq" should
never be placed in the same sentence, not even
in the same paragraph; in fact, not even in the
same news report. While a LexisNexis search of
the last 90 days of press coverage of Iraq
produced a number of examples of the use of
those three words in the British press, the only
U.S. examples that could be found occurred when
80% of Iraqis (obviously somewhat unhinged by
their difficult lives)
insisted in a poll that the United States
might indeed desire to establish bases and
remain permanently in their country; or when
"no" or "not" was added to the mix via any
American official denial. (It's strange, isn't
it, that such bases, imposing as they are,
generally only exist in our papers in the
negative.) Three examples will do:
The Secretary of Defense: ""During
a visit with U.S. troops in Fallujah on
Christmas Day, Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld said ‘at the moment there are no plans
for permanent bases' in Iraq. ‘It is a subject
that has not even been discussed with the Iraqi
government.'"
Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmett, the Central
Command deputy commander for planning and
strategy in Iraq: "We
already have handed over significant chunks
of territory to the Iraqis. Those are not simply
plans to do so; they are being executed right
now. It is not only our plan but our policy that
we do not intend to have any permanent bases in
Iraq."
Karen Hughes on the Charlie Rose Show:
"CHARLIE ROSE: …they think we are still there
for the oil, or they think the United States
wants permanent bases. Does the United States
want permanent bases in Iraq? KAREN HUGHES: We
want nothing more than to bring our men and
women in uniform home. As soon as possible, but
not before they finish the job. CHARLIE ROSE:
And do not want to keep bases there? KAREN
HUGHES: No, we want to bring our people home as
soon as possible."
Still, for a period, the Pentagon practiced
something closer to truth in advertising than
did our major papers. At least, they called the
big bases in Iraq "enduring camps," a label
which had a certain charm and reeked of
permanency. (Later, they were later relabeled,
far less romantically, "contingency operating
bases.")
One of the enduring mysteries of this war is
that reporting on our bases in Iraq has been
almost nonexistent these last years, especially
given an administration so weighted toward
military solutions to global problems;
especially given the heft of some of the bases;
especially given the fact that the Pentagon was
mothballing our bases in Saudi Arabia and saw
these as long-term substitutes; especially given
the fact that the neocons and other top
administration officials were so focused on
controlling the so-called arc of instability
(basically, the energy heartlands of the planet)
at whose center was Iraq; and especially given
the fact that Pentagon pre-war planning for such
"enduring camps" was, briefly, a front-page
story in a major newspaper.
A little history may be in order here:
On April 19, 2003, soon after Baghdad fell to
American troops, reporters Thom Shanker and Eric
Schmitt wrote a front-page piece
for the New York Times indicating that the
Pentagon was planning to "maintain" four bases
in Iraq for the long haul, though "there will
probably never be an announcement of permanent
stationing of troops." Rather than speak of
"permanent bases," the military preferred then
to speak coyly of "permanent access" to Iraq.
The bases, however, fit snugly with other
Pentagon plans, already on the drawing boards.
For instance, Saddam's 400,000 man military was
to be replaced by only a 40,000 man, lightly
armed military without significant armor or an
air force. (In an otherwise heavily armed
region, this insured that any Iraqi government
would be almost totally reliant on the American
military and that the U.S. Air Force would, by
default, be the Iraqi Air Force for years to
come.) While much space in our papers has, of
late, been devoted to the administration's lack
of postwar planning, next to no interest has
been shown in the planning that did take place.
At a press conference a few days after the
Shanker and Schmitt piece appeared,
Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld insisted that
the U.S. was "unlikely to seek any permanent or
‘long-term' bases in Iraq" -- and that was that.
The Times' piece was essentially sent
down the memory hole. While scads of bases were
being built -- including four huge ones whose
geographic placement correlated fairly
strikingly with the four mentioned in the
Times article -- reports about U.S. bases in
Iraq, or any Pentagon planning in relation to
them, largely disappeared from the American
media. (With rare exceptions, you could only
find discussions of "permanent bases" in these
last years at Internet sites
like Tomdispatch or
Global
Security.org.)
In May 2005, however, Bradley Graham of
the Washington Post reported that we had 106
bases, ranging from mega to micro in Iraq. Most
of these were to be given back to the Iraqi
military, now being "stood up" as a far larger
force than originally imagined by Pentagon
planners, leaving the U.S. with, Graham
reported, just the number of bases -- 4 -- that
the Times first mentioned over two years
earlier, including Balad Air Base and the base
Poole visited in western Anbar Province. This
reduction was presented not as a fulfillment of
original Pentagon thinking, but as a "withdrawal
plan." (A modest number of these bases have
since been turned over to the Iraqis, including
one in Tikrit transferred to Iraqi military
units which, according to Poole, promptly
stripped it to the bone.)
The future of a fifth base -- the enormous
Camp Victory at Baghdad International
Airport -- remains, as far as we know,
"unresolved"; and there is a sixth possible
"permanent super-base" being built in that
country, though never presented as such. The
Bush administration is sinking between $600
million and $1 billion in construction funds
into a new U.S. embassy. It is to arise in
Baghdad's Green Zone on a plot of land along the
Tigris River that is reportedly
two-thirds the area of the National Mall in
Washington, DC. The plans for this "embassy" are
almost mythic in nature. A high-tech complex, it
is to have "15ft blast walls and ground-to-air
missiles" for protection as well as bunkers to
guard against air attacks. It will, according to
Chris Hughes, security correspondent
for the British Daily Mirror, include "as
many as 300 houses for consular and military
officials" and a "large-scale barracks" for
Marines. The "compound" will be a cluster of at
least 21 buildings, assumedly nearly
self-sufficient, including "a gym, swimming
pool, barber and beauty shops, a food court and
a commissary. Water, electricity and sewage
treatment plants will all be independent from
Baghdad's city utilities." It is being billed as
"more secure than the Pentagon" (not, perhaps,
the most reassuring tagline in the post-9/11
world). If not quite a city-state, on completion
it will resemble an embassy-state. In essence,
inside Baghdad's Green Zone, we will be building
another more heavily fortified little Green
Zone.
Even Tony Blair's Brits, part of our
unraveling, ever-shrinking "coalition of the
willing" in Iraq, are reported by Brian Brady of
the Scotsman (Revealed:
secret plan to keep UK troops permanently in
Iraq) to be bargaining for a tiny permanent
base -- sorry a base "for years to come" -- near
Basra in southern Iraq, thus mimicking American
"withdrawal" strategy on the micro-scale that
befits a junior partner.
As Juan Cole has pointed out at his
Informed Comment blog, the Pentagon can plan
for "endurance" in Iraq forever and a day, while
top Bush officials and neocons, some now in
exile, can continue to dream of a permanent set
of bases in the deserts of Iraq that would
control the energy heartlands of the planet.
None of that will, however, make such bases any
more "permanent" than their enormous Vietnam-era
predecessors at places like Danang and Cam Rahn
Bay proved to be -- not certainly if the Shiites
decide they want us gone or Ayatollah Sistani
(as Cole points out) were to issue a fatwa
against such bases.
Nonetheless, the thought of permanency
matters. Since the invasion of Saddam's Iraq,
those bases -- call them what you will -- have
been at the heart of the Bush administration's
"reconstruction" of the country. To this day,
those Little Americas, with their KBR-lands,
their Pizza Huts, their stop signs, and their
miniature golf courses remain at the secret
heart of Bush administration "reconstruction"
policy. As long as KBR keeps building them,
making their facilities ever more enduring (and
ever more valuable), there can be no genuine
"withdrawal" from Iraq, nor even an intention of
doing so. Right now, despite the recent visits
of a couple of reporters, those super-bases
remain enswathed in a kind of policy silence.
The Bush administration does not discuss them
(other than to deny their permanency from time
to time). No presidential speeches deal with
them. No plans for them are debated in Congress.
The opposition Democrats generally ignore them
and the press -- with the exception of the odd
columnist -- won't even put the words "base,"
"permanent," and "Iraq" in the same paragraph.
It may be hard to do, given the skimpy
coverage, but keep your eyes directed at our
"super-bases." Until the administration blinks
on them, there will be no withdrawal from Iraq.
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation
Institute's Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote
to the mainstream media"), is the co-founder of
the American Empire Project and the author
of
The End of Victory Culture, a history of
American triumphalism in the Cold War. His
novel,
The Last Days of Publishing, has recently
come out in paperback.
Copyright 2006 Tom Engelhardt
Translate
this page
(In accordance with Title 17
U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.
Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the
originator of this article nor is Information Clearing House
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.) |