Washington in Wonderland
Down the Iraqi Rabbit Hole (Again)
By Andrew J. Bacevich
June 18, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "TomDispatch"
- There is a peculiar form of insanity in
which a veneer of rationality distracts attention from the madness
lurking just beneath the surface. When Alice dove down her rabbit
hole to enter a place where smirking cats offered directions,
ill-mannered caterpillars dispensed advice, and Mock Turtles
constituted the principal ingredient in Mock Turtle soup, she
experienced something of the sort.Yet, as
the old adage goes, truth can be even stranger than fiction. For a
real-life illustration of this phenomenon, one need look no further
than Washington and its approach to national security policy. Viewed
up close, it all seems to hang together. Peer out of the rabbit hole
and the sheer lunacy quickly becomes apparent.
Consider this
recent headline: “U.S. to Ship 2,000 Anti-Tank Missiles To Iraq
To Help Fight ISIS.” The accompanying article describes a Pentagon
initiative to reinforce Iraq’s battered army with a rush order of
AT-4s. A souped-up version of the old bazooka, the AT-4 is designed
to punch holes through armored vehicles.
Taken on its own terms, the decision makes
considerable sense. Iraqi forces need something to counter a
fearsome new tactic of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria
(ISIS): suicide bombers mounted in heavily armored wheeled vehicles.
Improved antitank capabilities certainly could help Iraqi troops
take out such bombers before they reach their intended targets. The
logic is airtight. The sooner these weapons get into the hands of
Iraqi personnel, the better for them -- and so the better for us.
As it turns out, however, the vehicle of choice
for ISIS suicide bombers these days is the
up-armored Humvee. In
June 2014, when the Iraqi Army abandoned the country’s second
largest city, Mosul, ISIS acquired
2,300 made-in-the-U.S.A. Humvees. Since then, it’s captured even
more of them.
As U.S. forces were themselves withdrawing from
Iraq in 2011, they bequeathed a huge fleet of Humvees to the “new”
Iraqi army it had built to the tune of
$25 billion. Again, the logic of doing so was impeccable: Iraqi
troops needed equipment; shipping used Humvees back to the U.S. was
going to cost more than they were worth. Better to give them to
those who could put them to good use. Who could quarrel with that?
Before they handed over the used equipment, U.S.
troops had spent years trying to pacify Iraq, where order had pretty
much collapsed after the invasion of 2003. American troops in Iraq
had plenty of tanks and other heavy equipment, but once the country
fell into insurgency and civil war, patrolling Iraqi cities required
something akin to a hopped-up cop car. The readily available Humvee
filled the bill. When it turned out that troops driving around in
what was essentially an oversized jeep were vulnerable to sniper
fire and roadside bombs, “hardening” those vehicles to protect the
occupants became a no-brainer -- as even Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld
eventually recognized.
At each step along the way, the decisions made
possessed a certain obvious logic. It’s only when you get to the
end -- giving Iraqis American-made weapons to destroy specially
hardened American-made military vehicles previously provided to
those same Iraqis -- that the strangely circular and seriously
cuckoo Alice-in-Wonderland nature of the entire enterprise becomes
apparent.
AT-4s blowing up those Humvees -- with fingers
crossed that the anti-tank weapons don’t also fall into the hands of
ISIS militants -- illustrates in microcosm the larger madness of
Washington’s policies concealed by the superficial logic of each
immediate situation.
The Promotion of Policies That Have
Manifestly Failed
Let me provide a firsthand illustration. A week
ago, I appeared on a
network television news program to discuss American policy in
Iraq and in particular the challenges posed by ISIS. The other
guests were former Secretary of Defense and CIA Director Leon
Panetta, former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy and current CEO
of a Washington think tank Michelle Flournoy, and retired four-star
general Anthony Zinni who had once headed up United States Central
Command.
Washington is a city in which whatever happens
within the current news cycle trumps all other considerations,
whether in the immediate or distant past. So the moderator launched
the discussion by asking the panelists to comment on President
Obama’s decision,
announced earlier that very day, to plus-up the 3,000-strong
train-and-equip mission to Iraq with an additional 450 American
soldiers, the latest ratcheting up of ongoing U.S. efforts to deal
with ISIS.
Panetta spoke first and professed wholehearted
approval of the initiative. “Well, there’s no question that I think
the president’s taken the right step in adding these trainers and
advisers.” More such steps -- funneling arms to Iraqi Kurds and
Sunnis and deploying U.S. Special Operations Forces to hunt down
terrorists -- were “going to be necessary in order to be able to
achieve the mission that we have embarked on.” That mission was of
critical importance. Unless defeated, ISIS would convert Iraq into
“a base [for] attacking our country and attacking our homeland.”
Flournoy expressed a similar opinion. She called
the decision to send additional trainers “a good move and a smart
move,” although she, too, hoped that it was only the “first step in
a broader series” of escalatory actions. If anything, her view of
ISIS was more dire than that of her former Pentagon boss. She
called it “the new jihad -- violent jihadist vanguard in the Middle
East and globally.” Unless stopped, ISIS was likely to become “a
global network” with “transnational objectives,” while its
“thousands of foreign fighters” from the West and Gulf states were
eventually going to “return and be looking to carry out jihad in
their home countries.”
General Zinni begged to differ -- not on the
nature of the danger confronting Washington, but on what to do about
it. He described the present policy as “almost déjà vu,” a
throwback “to Vietnam before we committed the ground forces. We
dribble in more and more advisers and support.”
“We’re not fully committed to this fight,” the
general complained. “We use terms like destroy. I can tell you,
you could put ground forces on the ground now and we can destroy
ISIS.” Zinni proposed doing just that. No more shilly-shallying.
The template for action was readily at hand. “The last victory,
clear victory that we had was in the first Gulf War,” he said. And
what were the keys to success then? “We used overwhelming force.
We ended it quickly. We went to the U.N. and got a resolution. We
built a coalition. And that ought to be a model we ought to look
at.” In short, go big, go hard, go home.
Panetta disagreed. He had a different template in
mind. The Iraq War of 2003-2011 had clearly shown that “we know how
to do this, and we know how to win at doing this.” The real key was
to allow America’s generals a free hand to do what needed to be
done. “[A]ll we really do need to do is to be able to give our
military commanders the flexibility to design not only the strategy
to degrade ISIS, but the larger strategy we need in order to defeat
ISIS.” Unleashing the likes of Delta Force or SEAL Team 6 with some
missile-firing drones thrown in for good measure was likely to
suffice.
For her part, Flournoy thought the real problem
was “making sure that there is Iraqi capacity to hold the territory,
secure it long-term, so that ISIS doesn’t come back again. And that
involves the larger political compromises” -- the ones the Iraqis
themselves needed to make. At the end of the day, the solution was
an Iraqi army willing and able to fight and an Iraqi government
willing and able to govern effectively. On that score, there was
much work to be done.
Panetta then pointed out that none of this was in
the cards unless the United States stepped up to meet the
challenge. “[I]f the United States doesn’t provide leadership in
these crises, nobody else will.” That much was patently obvious.
Other countries and the Iraqis themselves might pitch in, “but we
have to provide that leadership. We can’t just stand on the
sidelines wringing our hands. I mean... ask the people of Paris
what happened there with ISIS. Ask the people in Brussels what
happened there with ISIS. What happened in Toronto? What’s happened
in this country as a result of the threat from ISIS?”
Ultimately, everything turned on the willingness
of America to bring order and stability out of chaos and confusion.
Only the United States possessed the necessary combination of
wisdom, competence, and strength. Here was a proposition to which
Flournoy and Zinni readily assented.
With Alice in Washington
To participate in an exchange with these pillars
of the Washington establishment was immensely instructive. Only
nominally did their comments qualify as a debate. Despite
superficial differences, the discussion was actually an exercise in
affirming the theology of American national security -- those
essential matters of faith that define continuities of policy in
Washington, whatever administration is in power.
In that regard, apparent disagreement on specifics
masked a deeper consensus consisting of three elements:
* That ISIS represents something akin to an
existential threat to the United States, the latest in a long line
going back to the totalitarian ideologies of the last century;
fascism and communism may be gone, but danger is ever present.
* That if the United States doesn’t claim
ownership of the problem of Iraq, the prospects of “solving” it are
nil; action or inaction by Washington alone, that is, determines the
fate of the planet.
* That the exercise of leadership implies, and
indeed requires, employing armed might; without a willingness to
loose military power, global leadership is inconceivable.
In a fundamental respect, the purpose of the
national security establishment, including the establishment media,
is to shield that tripartite consensus from critical examination.
This requires narrowing the aperture of analysis so as to exclude
anything apart from the here-and-now. The discussion in which I
participated provided a vehicle for doing just that. It was an
exercise aimed at fostering collective amnesia.
So what the former secretary of defense, think
tank CEO, and retired general chose not to say in fretting
about ISIS is as revealing as what they did say. Here are some of
the things they chose to overlook:
* ISIS would not exist were it not for the folly
of the United States in invading -- and breaking -- Iraq in the
first place; we created the vacuum that ISIS is now attempting to
fill.
* U.S. military efforts to pacify occupied Iraq
from 2003 to 2011 succeeded only in creating a decent interval for
the United States to withdraw without having to admit to outright
defeat; in no sense did “our” Iraq War end in anything remotely
approximating victory, despite the already forgotten loss of
thousands of American lives and the expenditure of
trillions of dollars.
* For more than a decade and at very
considerable expense, the United States has been attempting to
create an Iraqi government that governs and an Iraqi army that
fights; the results of those efforts speak for themselves: they have
failed abysmally.
Now, these are facts. Acknowledging them might
suggest a further conclusion: that anyone proposing ways for
Washington to put things right in Iraq ought to display a certain
sense of humility. The implications of those facts -- behind which
lies a policy failure of epic proportions -- might even provide the
basis for an interesting discussion on national television. But
that would assume a willingness to engage in serious
self-reflection. This, the culture of Washington does not
encourage, especially on matters related to basic national security
policy.
My own contribution to the televised debate was
modest and ineffectual. Toward the end, the moderator offered me a
chance to redeem myself. What, she asked, did I think about
Panetta’s tribute to the indispensability of American leadership?
A fat pitch that I should have hit it out of the
park. Instead, I fouled it off. What I should have said was this:
leadership ought to mean something other than simply repeating and
compounding past mistakes. It should require more than clinging to
policies that have manifestly failed. To remain willfully blind to
those failures is not leadership, it’s madness.
Not that it would have mattered if I had. When it
comes to Iraq, we’re already halfway back down Alice’s rabbit hole.
Andrew J. Bacevich, a
TomDispatch regular, is writing a military history of
America’s War for the Greater Middle East. His most recent book is
Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their
Country.
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Copyright 2015 Andrew J. Bacevich