From the Los Angeles Times, May 5, 2007:
GEN. DAVID PETRAEUS, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, has promised to return to Washington in September to report on the outcome of his surge strategy. I hope he will say that sectarian killings, bombings and U.S. casualties are all down. But even if he does, I doubt he can offer a clear, plausible date by which the Iraqi army and police will be able to stand on their own without massive U.S. support. So regardless of what he concludes, we seem destined to enter the presidential election season with no credible date for a U.S. exit from Iraq.
In more than four years of war, there have been countless turning points at which we were led to expect decisive political progress in Iraq: the capture of Saddam Hussein (December 2003); the turnover of sovereignty (June 2004); elections for the constituent assembly (January 2005); elections to ratify the constitution (August 2005); and elections for the Iraqi parliament (December 2005).
The surge was the last military card we had to play, and now our bluff will soon be called.
In my view, there is only one condition under which we can withdraw from Iraq with our core interests fully protected and with a reasonable claim that our mission was accomplished, and that is when strong Iraqi military and police forces emerge that can operate independently of U.S. forces and prevent a takeover of the country by either Al Qaeda in Iraq, resurgent Baathists or Muqtada Sadr’s Shiite militia.
Let’s not kid ourselves. The situation today is in some ways much worse than the one faced by President Nixon in Vietnam 35 years ago. At that time, South Vietnam had an army with a paper strength of 1 million men that, despite its problems, was able hold on for three years after the U.S. withdrew its ground forces. The South Vietnamese army provided Henry Kissinger with his “decent interval” between the U.S. withdrawal and South Vietnam’s collapse. (Indeed, Kissinger argues with some plausibility that the South Vietnamese military could have hung on indefinitely if Congress hadn’t cut off funds for U.S. air support.)
Nothing like that exists or will exist in Iraq for the politically meaningful future. As of November, the Pentagon claimed it had trained 322,000 Iraqi military and police, but it admitted that the actual number on hand was much lower because of desertions and attrition. Iraqi forces continue to suffer huge shortfalls in armor, weaponry, logistics and communications, and it is unclear how they would fare without American hand-holding.
Serious training of Iraqi forces started late and never received adequate funding or top-level attention, despite the fact that Petraeus was at the helm of the training effort in recent years. The South Vietnamese army may have been nothing to write home about in 1972, but we are extremely unlikely to have an Iraqi equivalent by the end of 2007.
What all this means is that even if the surge, by September, is reducing violence in Iraq to some degree, it will not guarantee a “safe” exit strategy for U.S. forces.
But here’s the problem: Do we have any other choice than to withdraw? We could stick it out, and I suspect that we could avoid losing in Iraq for another five, 10 or 15 years, as long as we’re willing to maintain high troop levels, continue to spend large amounts of money and suffer more casualties. But even the most conservative Republican candidates are unlikely to campaign on a platform of staying in Iraq indefinitely when the primary season starts next winter and the war enters its sixth year.
This means that we will have to engage in a very different debate from the one we have been having up to now, a debate not about surging and not about withdrawing with our goals accomplished but about how to draw down our forces in a way that minimizes the costs that will inevitably accompany our loss of control.
This is a difficult situation, but it is necessary. The questions we need to address include: How do we reconfigure our forces to provide advice, training and support, rather than engaging in combat? How we can withdraw safely without a serious Iraqi army to cover our retreat? How will we dismantle enormous bases like Camp Liberty or Camp Victory and protect the diminishing numbers of U.S. troops in the country? Do we trust the Iraqi military and police sufficiently to turn over our equipment to them? How do we protect the lives of those who collaborated with us? The images of South Vietnamese allies hanging to the skid pads of U.S. helicopters departing Saigon should be burned into our memories.
And what if the weak Iraqi government we leave behind falls or other political crises occur when we have fewer U.S. troops to respond? Can we work with proxies, resources or arms supplies to shape outcomes?
As we draw down, the civil war is likely to intensify, and the focus of our efforts will have to shift to containing it within Iraq’s borders. Preventing intervention by outside forces will become an even more urgent priority.
On the other hand, it is not necessarily the case that the situation will spiral out of control. Although the situation is graver in some ways than Vietnam, in others it is better. Although we have no equivalent to a South Vietnamese army, the enemy has no equivalent of the North Vietnamese army. It is hard to see any of the small factions struggling for power in different parts of the country emerging as a dominant force throughout Iraq.
The presence of U.S. forces has itself been a spur to terrorist recruitment, but as it becomes clear that we are on our way out, it will be easier for Iraqi nationalists to turn against the foreign jihadists (as they have already begun to do in Al Anbar province).
An intensifying civil war will be a tragedy for Iraq, but it is not the worst outcome from a U.S. standpoint to have a number of bitterly anti-American groups duking it out among themselves.
Civil wars eventually come to an end when one side wins (unlikely, in this case) or when the parties exhaust themselves and drop their maximalist aims.
The war is not lost, despite the assertions to that effect by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). But victory is not around the corner either. We need to start figuring out how to leave this zombie-like zone now.
6 Comments »
The two operant words in Dr. Fukuyama’s dissembling overview on the situation in Mesopotamia are “Iraq” and “Vietnam”. In the long sweep of world history these aren’t the two countries which would jump off the pages of history books when one was researching world superpowers.The fact that our last two solo major mud wrestling matches have been against Division III schools says more about our scheduling practices than our military might.
Behind all the conjecturing and theorizing about the situation in Iraq is the false premise that we can control events there. The major difference between Iraq and Vietnam, from an American perspective, lay not in the relative virtues of those respective peoples but in the inherent moral nature of our society. In Vietnam middle and upper class Anericans were at least sent a draft notice and asked to participate in that ill-fated expedition. Irrespective of how one feels about the military draft, the ramifications were significant. The draft was the catalyzing force behind the growth and scope of the war protests. It signalled the beginning of the neoconservative movement in america. Many of the leaders of that movement formed the New Left of the 1960’s. Senator Norm Coleman protested the Vietnam War. Wolfowitz, Perle, Cheney et al avoided the war. Decades later they would usher in a new era of military aggression no more successful than the one they watched from the Ivory Towers. If Academe truly mirrored America Leo Strauss would go down in history with Jackie Collins and Sidney Sheldon. Unfortunately, his audience was a bit thinner.
We have no military draft now and the elites just send Justiin and Bittany to those mediocre isntitutions of “higher learning” which riddle the American landscape. When it comes to producing diplomas, not even the Chinese rival us.Presidents Johnson and Nixon faced massive protests. I would argue that in the virtual absence of war protests, President Bush face something far worse – apathy and indifference to a war that 98% of Americans have little interest or no stake in.
Dave Pilliod
Swanton, Ohio
Comment by Dave Pilliod – May 7, 2007 @ 9:39 am
Avoiding very negative consequences depends on the viability of a national Iraqi Army, as you point out. However, data and good information on the army, much of it being classified, is frustratingly hard to come by. Filling this information gap is the single most important thing a journalist or academic could do to inform the public about the worth of continuing America’s presence in Iraq. Perhaps you, or someone like you, could mount serious research on the subject of forming a national army in multi-ethnic society.
Second, if a multi-ethnic military isn’t likely to work in Iraq, is the second-best option of a mostly Shiite-Kurdish national military that bad of a solution? Often called the 80-% solution, this option might be brutal and morally questionable, but it might be the best hope for medium term stability in Iraq. It seems to be very possible to achieve and couldn’t it dramatically reduce violence (after an initial period of much more severe violence). Could not a strong Shiite army essentially quash the sunni insurgents, thus ending a civil war?
Comment by Nathan – May 8, 2007 @ 4:31 pm
I think that he is right. But I think too that we can succeed, the new estrategy is brilliant, but it will be too much expensive and, at the best, dissapointing.
From my point of view there is no civil war, just a bloody struggle between political factions. The common people everywhere don’t buy radical ideas.
Comment by Jordi Costa – May 10, 2007 @ 5:43 am
In my view from the beginning it was clear that the USA could not leave in power a cruel, sworn ennemy of the USA, with the potential of building up a threatening military power, and active in providing subsidies to families of palestinian terrorists after suicide attacks on Israel.
Now the USA should concentrate on controlling possible military power buildups in the islamic world and should let the establishment of law and order to the inhabitants of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Comment by J.F.Besseling – May 11, 2007 @ 10:08 am
[...] political scientist and futurist Francis Fukuyama starkly outlines the challenge: The questions we need to address include: How do we reconfigure our forces to provide advice, [...]
Pingback by Creating “Plan B” | The Moderate Voice – May 14, 2007 @ 5:06 pm
Well Francis; YOU wanted It,You got It. Now get YOUR Ass in Uniform and Go Fix It.
‘Those who have Never Been, Will Never Know’
RVN ‘70/1 and currently hangimg out in Sai gon on my 6th return to the RVN.
Comment by C. M. Davis – August 3, 2007 @ 1:28 am
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