Letting in the Draft?
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Schwartz
by Tom Engelhardt and
Michael Schwartz
An
overstretched military? You bet. Things going terribly in Iraq?
No kidding. Why only yesterday, Jill
Carroll and Dan Murphy of the Christian Science Monitor
reminded us that, with 140,000 troops (and untold numbers of mercenaries)
in Iraq, the Americans can't defend a crucial six-mile stretch of
highway between the two lodestars of the American occupation
Baghdad International Airport, a vast, fortified military encampment,
and the Green Zone in the heart of the capital, another vast, fortified
encampment. Carroll and Murphy write:
"The
danger of the airport road also speaks to the wider problem of
securing a country in the face of a dispersed and committed insurgency
blended within the civilian population. Millions of cars traverse
Baghdad's roads every day, and just a handful of them are carrying
suicide bombers. For the Iraqi government and US forces, it's
a needle-in-the-haystack problem with few practical solutions.
There is limited US military manpower for adding checkpoints,
but even if it was logistically possible, stopping every car on
Baghdad's roads would bring the city to a grinding halt and make
the airport journey even longer than it is now… The airport road
is a direct link to the US headquarters in the secured Green Zone.
But rather than risk the road, US diplomats fly by helicopter
from the airport to the Green Zone."
As Patrick
Cockburn of the British Independent commented last week,
the inability to stop attacks along this stretch of highway has
"become a symbol of the failure of the US in Iraq. Heavily armoured
US patrols, prone to open fire unpredictably, are regarded as being
as dangerous as the insurgents." On this highway, in the last week,
five foreign "contractors" and the young aid worker Marla Ruzicka
all died and others were wounded. The Americans undoubtedly dream
of bringing in Iraqi troops, sooner rather than later, to help with
the security task. Unfortunately, these highly touted, newly trained
troops have evidently been deserting their posts in significant
numbers in embattled parts of the country. "On the Syrian border,
US troops in the Sunni city of Husaybah report mass desertions,"
writes Oliver
Poole of the British Telegraph.
"An
Iraqi unit that had once grown to 400 troops now numbers a few
dozen who are 'holed up' inside a local phosphate plant. Major
John Reed, of the 2nd Marine Regiment, said: 'They will claim
that they are ready to come back and fight but there are no more
than 30 of them on duty on any given day and they are completely
ineffective.'"
In the last months, the Americans (as happened in the latter part
of the Vietnam War) have also hunkered down in their bases, attempting
to reduce casualties, among other things. In response, the insurgents
have recently been launching more sophisticated operations, including,
for the first time, serious attacks on isolated bases.
In the meantime, Baghdad continues to be an occupied city
even at the level of symbolism. A
report, translated from the Arabic and appearing at Watching
America, an interesting new site featuring pieces about the
U.S. from around the world, states:
"Iraq's
new president has said he will not reside in the Presidential
Palace, which for many Iraqis is a symbol of the country's sovereignty.
Jalal Talabani said that the interim government has agreed to
rent the palace to the Americans for two years. The presidential
complex on the banks of the Tigris River is a maze of palaces,
green lawns and orchards… President Talabani said that the Americans
'might' evacuate the palace when the lease expires."
Sovereignty anyone? In order to gain legitimacy, the Iraqis who
were elected on January 30th would need to put some real distance
between themselves and the American occupiers. However, as Middle
Eastern expert Robert Dreyfuss comments in a canny piece at
Tompaine.com, "doing so… is impossible, since the newly elected
regime wouldn't last a week without the protection of U.S. forces."
In any case, the new government, such as it is, will be a familiar
one. "[V]irtually all of its leading actors," Dreyfuss comments,
"are retreads from the IGC, which was appointed by L. Paul Bremer,
and from Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress, the exile-dominated
coalition that included Chalabi, Talabani, Abdel Aziz Hakim of the
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, and other officials
and members of the just-elected National Assembly."
To the frustration of the Bush administration, the Iraqis have proved
incapable for almost two months of forming a government, in part
because of the nature of Article 38 of the "interim constitution"
that Bush officials so cleverly imposed upon them, as
Justin Raimondo, columnist for Antiwar.com pointed out recently.
And, of course, they too must meet inside the Green Zone where,
Rory
Carroll of the Guardian observes, "the 10,000 Iraqis
who also live in the zone need passes to enter and must negotiate
several checkpoints, as if they are in quarantine." Even the legislators
are not immune from the indignities of occupation. As Carroll reports:
"Last
week an assembly member named Fattah al-Sheikh said he was roughed
up and humiliated by US troops on his way in. One allegedly grabbed
him by the throat, another handcuffed him, and a third kicked
his car. 'I was dragged to the ground,' he told parliament, weeping.
'What happened to me represents an insult to the whole national
assembly that was elected by the Iraqi people. This shows that
the democracy we are enjoying is fake.'"
Juan
Cole offered the following on this incident: "[It] will seem
minor to most Americans and few will see this Reuters photograph
[of the legislator wiping away his tears] reprinted from al-Hayat…
But such an incident is a serious affront to national honor, and
Iraqi male politicians don't often weep." Naturally, Brigadier General
Karl Horst of the 3rd infantry division "expressed regret" and promised
"a thorough investigation"; but we've just seen, in
the case of kidnapped Italian journalist Guiliana Sgrena and
Nicola Calipari, the agent who died on the Baghdad Airport road
after rescuing her, how such investigations generally turn out
even when those who have suffered at American hands are citizens
of the administration's second closest ally, Italy, with its government
in desperate shape and its deployment in Iraq at stake.
This seems to be more or less the state of things impunity
and quiet desperation as the Bush administration tries to
keep the world it dreamed of dominating under some kind of control;
and yet, as Michael Schwartz makes clear in his latest Tomdispatch
commentary, it faces a daunting task simply keeping boots on the
ground in Iraq. By the way, General Eric Shinseki's prewar comments
which more or less got him laughed out of Washington by the
neocons that we
would need "several hundred thousand troops" to succeed in a
post-war, occupied Iraq have often been quoted by critics, who invariably
point out how right he was. I've never, however, seen anyone explain
where exactly those 200,000300,000 extra troops were going
to come from. What we can now see is that, before the invasion of
Iraq ever began, the Pentagon had already traded in those boots-on-the-ground
for its high-tech army. (This is why, as
the Boston Globe reported recently, ill-prepared Air
Force and Navy personnel find themselves assigned to duties like
"protecting supply convoys traveling along Iraq's violent roadways"
and dying.)
It wasn't simply that Rumsfeld was wrong in his decision. After
all, to do otherwise than he did, he would have had to strip the
empire of troops. I suspect, given the numbers, that he had little
choice of course, he and his cronies also believed in those
strewn flowers and that "cakewalk" and that Shinseki's "several
hundred thousand" statement was his way of saying exactly what they
didn't want to hear: Don't do it, guys! So much for retrospect.
As for the future, Schwartz ponders what a Bush administration,
backed into a military corner, is likely to think about a future
draft. ~ Tom
The
Draft: Between Iraq and a Hard Place
By
Michael Schwartz
After two years of intensive fighting in Iraq, the Pentagon is feeling
the strain in every military muscle and has been looking for relief
in just about every direction but one the draft. All across
the United States today, young people are wondering whether, sooner
or later, in its increasingly airless military universe, the Bush
administration will open the window a crack and let the draft in.
A key reason for the ever-more-evident strain on military resources
is that more than 40% of the 150,000 soldiers in Iraq are Army Reserves
and National Guards. As Army Historian Renee Hylton told Salon
reporter Jeff Horowitz, use of these forces creates pressure
to "win and get out…there's a definite limit to people's service."
When they are called to active duty, these troops risk their jobs
as well as their lives; so, when their mandatory two-year terms
expire, a significant proportion of them, under the best of circumstances,
are likely to refuse further service. And service in Iraq has already
proved something less than the best of circumstances. Little wonder
then that, just past the two-year anniversary of our invasion, the
military is under increasing pressure to replenish this crucial
element in the recruitment mix without much of an idea of
how to do so.
In addition, in order to maintain troop strength in Iraq at anything
like present levels, large numbers of active-duty soldiers must
return there for more than one nine-month tour of duty, and this
redeployment too generates distrust and distaste. Sooner or later,
sizeable numbers of these angry soldiers must nevertheless be convinced
to re-enlist, or else the pressure for new enlistees will escalate
out of control and beyond the bounds of the present system to satisfy.
Add to this a constantly increasing casualty toll, now well
beyond 30,000, which, in a variety of ways, places yet
more pressure on recruitment. Finally, as embittered double-deployment
veterans and angry Reserves, along with wounded and mentally stressed
dischargees, return home, they only stiffen the resistance to enlistment
among the young in their neighborhoods.
None of this was anticipated at the start of the Iraq war by Bush
administration officials; they were confident that the American
military could topple Saddam Hussein's government and pacify any
left-over "dead end" loyalists of the old regime in about three
months. Defense Department figures, reported by the Washington
Post on March 19, projected reductions in American troop strength
in Iraq and Afghanistan from just over 200,000 at the time of the
invasion to about 125,000 by September 2003; to 50,000 six months
later; and not counting troops left to garrison the permanent
bases to zero by the end of 2004.
They were wrong, of course. Troop levels, after declining according
to plan during the summer of 2003, began climbing again as the resistance
grew in response to a deepening economic and infrastructural
disaster, and to the brutal nature of the American military occupation.
With some fluctuations, since the beginning of 2004 the numbers
of boots on the ground in Iraq have remained at about the 150,000
level (not counting expensive private "security contractors" hired
by the Pentagon and private firms) almost double the number
that the U.S. could hope to sustain in the long run, given the force
levels of the present volunteer military.
Several recent reports have documented the depth of the impending
crisis, including a detailed analysis of troop strengths by Ann
Tyson in the Washington Post. So far, over one million
U.S. military personnel have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, with
some 341,000 already doing the dreaded double-deployments (and many
now entering triple-deployment territory). The military has moved
troops into Iraq from all over the world, including previously untouchable
Cold War detachments in Korea, Germany, and Alaska, and it's still
"scrambling" to keep 17 battalions regularly in Iraq, many severely
undermanned. These shortages have led to an increasing dependence
on expensive private security contractors, who themselves add to
the Pentagon's recruitment problems by hiring away otherwise re-upable
military personnel for four times the wages paid in the Army.
To make matters worse, the Defense Department (to protect against
a crisis elsewhere) has decided, with Congressional authorization,
to increase the overall size of active-duty forces by 30,000, which
can only amplify the retention/recruitment crunch.
Recruitment:
Entering Freefall
Last fall the military embarked on a Herculean set of efforts to
meet these daunting demands. It manufactured a 40% increase in the
pool of candidates available
for the Guard and Reserve by relaxing entry standards and raising
the enlistment age to 40 years. It added thousands of new recruiters
(1400 for the National Guard alone) and equipped them with an array
of new inducements, including
signing bonuses as high as $20,000 (for those with previous
experience) and up to $70,000 in college credits for new enlistees.
Re-enlistment bonuses, depending on specialty, can now reach $100,000.
The Defense Department also launched a new $180 million recruitment
campaign that includes "sponsorship of a rodeo cowboy, ads on ESPN,
and a 24 hour Web site that allows users to chat with recruiters…24
hours a day." In a special effort to help the most stressed service,
the military is offering six million dollars of recruitment money
in exchange for the
right to name the home of the new Washington Nationals baseball
team National Guard Stadium.
The most dramatic of the new measures were aimed at inducing (or
coercing) personnel to remain in the military beyond their enlistment
contracts. Tom
Reeves, author of The
End of the Draft and longtime observer of draft policy,
reports that 40,000 soldiers have already been retained by using
the notorious "stop-loss" system, which allows the Army unilaterally
to keep soldiers for up to 18 months beyond the date their enlistment
is scheduled to terminate. This is essentially a more bureaucratic
and politer form of the old British method of "impressment," also
known as Shanghaiing. There is now a
Congressional investigation into persistent reports that short-timers
those with less then a year or so left on their enlistment
contracts are being told that re-enlistment will guarantee
a non-combat assignment, while refusal to re-enlist will lead to
an Iraqi deployment during the remainder of their service. While
the Defense Department denies that such blackmail-style practices
are taking place, they do admit that station "stabilization"
a pre-agreed upon duty station away from Iraq has become
a major incentive for re-enlistment.
Such military efforts were augmented by what may be the ultimate
sign of military desperation: the call-up of 5,500 members of the
"Individual Ready Reserves." As Reeves notes, these are "older men
and women whose regular reserve duty has ended including
grandmothers and grandfathers edging toward retirement…who have
no idea they would be recalled to duty." It is hardly surprising
that nearly one-third of these superannuated reserves have refused
to report. Nor is it surprising that modest signs of rebellion are
appearing inside what was, until recently, a volunteer military.
The Los
Angeles Times, for instance, has documented cases of National
Guard soldiers protesting inadequate equipment and 60
Minutes, among other places, has reported at least 5500 desertions
among the troops, largely to avoid deployment or redeployment to
Iraq.
Worse yet, from the Pentagon's point of view, even its most far-reaching
and draconian efforts seem to be failing. Re-enlistment levels in
both the Army and the Guard have now slipped below quota, and Reuters
reports that this shortfall can be expected to get dramatically
worse once larger numbers of soldiers reach that 18-month stop-loss
limit. New recruitment appears to be entering freefall, with the
most drastic declines among
African Americans, who traditionally make up 25% of the volunteer
army. January and February recorded the first Marine recruitment
shortfalls in a decade; while the army is running 6% below targets
for the year. Hardest hit have been the Reserves, with a 10% decline,
and the Army National Guard at 26%. These units are in full crisis,
with the Guard already announcing it will not reach full strength
in 2005, and Reserve
Commander General James Helmly stating that "overuse" is making
his units into "a broken force." Reeves reports that even the military
academies have suffered 15% to 25% declines in applications for
admission. To make matters worse, as
USA Today has reported, the anti-war movement has begun (with
at least some success) targeting the recruitment process. (A meticulous
account by activist Peter Charaek of one successful protest in Oregon
can be found on
the Jeff Rense website.)
Major General Michael D. Rochelle, the man in charge of army recruiting,
told New
York Times reporter Damien Cave that the recruitment crisis
constituted the "toughest challenge to the all-volunteer army" since
its inception in 1973.
The
Iraqi Armed Forces: Replacement Killers?
Optimistic reports that our local military allies will soon begin
to replace American troops follow a familiar pattern of miraculous
overstatement (first established in Vietnam decades ago), as
reporter Timothy Phelps documented in a March 21 article in
Newsday that reviewed the history of American attempts to
build Iraqi military forces. In the spring of 2004, official (and
unofficial) Bush administration reports claimed the existence of
206,000 fully trained Iraqi troops. To the surprise of those who
had accepted these claims, none of them fought successfully in the
major battles that April (in Falluja, Najaf, or Sadr City). Most
deserted beforehand, refused to fight, or fled under fire. A measurable
minority, however, did fight ferociously for the resistance,
using American-supplied weapons and equipment.
By fall 2004, though the U.S. was publicly claiming 135,000 "combat
ready" Iraqi troops, one military official told New York Times
reporter John Burns that as few as 1,500 Iraqi troops were actually
fully trained. This was vividly demonstrated in the second battle
of Falluja, when only Kurdish militia units imported from the north
fought successfully alongside the Americans. The official Iraqi
Army units resisted, either through mutiny or desertion, or by defecting
to the other side. Kalev Sepp, a counterinsurgency expert at the
Naval Postgraduate School told Newsday's Phelps that the
second battle of Falluja was largely fought against Iraqis who had
been "trained and equipped by Americans."
Then came Rear Admiral William Sullivan's report to Congress in
Spring 2005 which spoke of 145,000 "combat capable," "new" Iraqi
armed forces. This claim was disputed by of all people
Sabah Hadhum, a spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior.
He told the
British Telegraph reporter Anton La Guardia, "We are paying
about 135,000 (members of the security services) but that does not
necessarily mean that 135,000 are actually working." As many as
50,000 of these may actually be what he termed "ghost soldiers"
men not on duty but whose paychecks were being pocketed either
by their officers or themselves.
Newsday's
investigative report confirms Hadhum's negative assertion. Just
under 40,000 of the reported 145,000 armed forces turn out to be
holdovers from the old Iraqi National Guard. According to Army experts,
they had received the same "haphazard training," as their predecessors
(who refused to fight) and could be relied upon to do nothing except
receive their paychecks.
Another 55,000 were Iraqi police whose unwillingness to confront
the guerrillas has become legendary. The Deputy Governor of Nineveh
province where the Iraqi "northern capital," Mosul, is located
accused the 14,000 police there of being "in league" with
the resistance. He assured reporter
Patrick Cockburn of the British Independent that his
bodyguards "don't tell them our movements," since he suspects them
of trying to assassinate him. Military expert Kalev Sepp told Newsday
the U.S. military had concluded that "70 percent of the police in
Anwar province are insurgents or sympathizers," with substantial
infiltration elsewhere as well. (According to Sepp, even "one infiltrator
with access to intelligence" could give the enemy "forewarning,"
so imagine what a 20%70% infiltration rate might do.)
According to Rear Admiral Sullivan, only a meager 14,000 troops
were fully trained units in the "new Iraqi army," the first beneficiaries
of what Burns of the
Times called a "$5 billion American-financed effort."
These troops had not, however, yet endured a major battle, and some
of the American troops who worked with them evidently considered
them worthless. As one trooper told London
Times reporter Anthony Loyd, "I'm more scared of going out
with these guys than clashing with the insurgents." According to
Los
Angeles Times reporter David Zuccino, even the 205th Iraqi
Army Brigade, "considered the country's best unit by many U.S. trainers,"
had been infiltrated by insurgents. And Army Staff Sergeant Craig
Patrick, one of the advisers in charge of training the Iraqis told
Washington
Post reporter Steve Fainaru, "It's all about perception,
to convince the American public that everything is going as planned
and we're right on schedule to be out of here. I mean, they can
[mislead] the American people, but they can't [mislead] us. These
guys are not ready."
Nevertheless, in mid-February, Burns reported that two brigades
of this new force "became the first home grown unit to take operational
responsibility for any combat zone in Iraq," the restive Haifa neighborhood
in Baghdad.
The remaining 30,000 troops in Sullivan's count were vaguely defined
military personnel commanded by the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior.
In the long run, U.S. military leadership hopes that these will
become the Iraqi equivalent of the U.S. Special Forces, and will
constitute a new secret police or other sinister entities. In the
meantime, they are, it seems, largely incapable of confronting the
resistance. In their first solo effort, reported in the
New York Times, between 500 and 700 members of the First
Police Commando Battalion, with air support from the American military,
could not capture a training camp containing under 100 guerrillas.
Eventually, U.S. ground forces were needed, and even then, the
guerrillas might have escaped.
In a recent report to the
Carnegie Endowment, military expert Jeffrey Miller concluded
that the "gap" between the forces needed to handle the security
situation in Iraq and the actual strength of the Iraqi military
had doubled in the past year, raising "grave doubts about the…hope
for success" of the strategy of transferring responsibility to the
Iraqi military. Certainly, no such transfer can succeed in time
to allow for a comfortable transition before the onset of the recruitment
crisis now facing the American military.
Does
Anyone Feel a Draft Coming In?
As the strain on the U.S. military continues to build, so does the
pressure on policy. The only option that does not imply the sacrifice
of many more American lives and magnitudes more Iraqi lives may
be the withdrawal of American troops, but this option is "unthinkable"
to the Bush administration and to its loyal Democratic opposition,
not to speak of the bulk of the mainstream media. Only the American
people (according to the
most recent Marist Poll) and the rest of the world
consider it "thinkable."
According to former
National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, avoiding this
unthinkable option would require "500,000 troops, $500 billion and
the resumption of the military draft." The need for a draft has
been seconded by a wide range of military experts, including then-presidential
candidate General Wesley Clark, who, in 2004, said the U.S.
needed to start "thinking about the draft"; frequent
Pentagon advisor Colonel David Hackworth, who called the draft
a "no-brainer in '05 and '06"; and Charles
Moskos, adviser to four presidents on military manpower, who
declared that "we cannot achieve the number of troops we need in
Iraq without a draft." Washington Monthly editor Paul Glastris
and national security analyst Philip Carter articulated what might
be the most comprehensive argument, calling for what a "21st Century
draft," that would "create a cascading series of benefits," including
turning the tide in Iraq.
Despite this crescendo of advocacy by friends and foes of administration
policy, government insiders continue to tread very lightly on the
issue. The Project for a New American Century, the policy-planning
group that developed significant aspects of current foreign policy,
has
called for several years of 25,000 troop increments to the military,
but they have not indicated how this could be done. Secretary
of the Army, Francis J. Harvey, after "bursting into laughter"
when asked about the draft, stated, "The D-word is the farthest
thing from my thoughts." And President Bush has repeatedly re-asserted
his commitment to keeping the volunteer army.
The deal-breaker for the administration may be exactly what they
have repeatedly said since talk of the draft burst onto the scene
during the 2004 election campaign the experience of Vietnam
gave a conscripted army a bad name. The current volunteer army (even
if its recruitment involves large elements of coercion and manipulation)
is better suited for the sorts of wars the U.S. is fighting, they
believe, and any move toward the draft would severely undermine
commitment to such wars, both inside and outside the army. Even
such partisan advocates as Glastris and Carter concede this problem,
though they offer what they feel are viable ways of getting around
it.
But if the draft advocates eventually persuade the administration
that a conscripted army is viable, I believe they would still have
to overcome a second layer of reluctance among decision-makers in
charge of military policy: a fear that the draft will specifically
alienate those who currently endorse the war in Iraq. Pro-war partisans
rest much of their support of administration foreign policy on the
expectation that the January 30 election was a turning point, that
the battle of Falluja disabled the resistance, that Iraqi troops
will be ready to handle the guerrillas in the not-too-distant future
and that American troops will soon be brought home at least
reasonably victorious. The reinstitution of a draft would constitute
an admission that these beliefs are so many illusions. In all likelihood,
therefore, any relaxation of the unequivocal opposition to the draft
in the administration would indeed precipitate a sharp erosion of
the war's already eroding base. Opposition might then reach the
critical mass needed to make withdrawal "thinkable."
But this reluctance to embrace the draft leaves the Bush Administration
in a knot of a dilemma. Without rejuvenating the armed forces, the
situation in Iraq is likely to remain at best undecided, and even
a stalemated situation would constitute a mighty blow against the
administration's larger foreign policy goals. The goal of unilateral
American dominance in global politics and in global markets depends
on the image and reality of American military invincibility, so
that with each passing day the lack of victory in
Iraq undermines the credibility of Washington's threats to force
regime change wherever "rogue states" resist its diplomatic will.
As Carter and Glastris wrote in their Washington Monthly
article, "America has a choice. It can be the world's superpower,
or it can maintain the current all-volunteer military, but it probably
can't do both."
For many Americans, the de-escalation of American imperial ambition
is an attractive alternative to further war and a conscripted army.
But for the Bush Administration, this alternative is just as unthinkable
as the draft. They are stuck, therefore, between Iraq and a hard
place.
The solution thus far has involved a contradictory and unstable
set of pronouncements and policies. Rhetorically, the administration
has continued to reaffirm its commitment to a no-draft military
and its promise to pursue "preventive wars" of all sorts. At the
same time, its officials have taken specific steps meant to give
them added flexibility. As Reeves has documented, they have been
quietly erecting the Selective Service System (SSS) needed for a
future draft. In March, the SSS
issued a report assuring the president that "it would be ready
to implement a draft within 75 days" after Congressional authorization.
Richard Flahavan, a spokesman for the Selective Service System,
told reporter Eric
Rosenberg of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer that the
SSS already has in place "a special system to register and draft
health care personnel" and that they were undertaking active planning
for "a special skills draft" aimed at computer programmers and language
specialists. These programs would be ready for implementation any
time the need arose.
News of this high level of preparedness has added to already widespread
rumors of a renewed draft, and has fed speculation that the government
was perhaps waiting for a dramatic event which would justify the
draft without jeopardizing support for the war perhaps an
internal terrorist attack, or an authentic (or U.S. precipitated)
crisis elsewhere.
Fitted together with this posture of waiting is a shift in military
tactics in Iraq. General Richard Cody, the Army's second-ranking
general, told New York Times reporter Eric Schmitt that "a
shift from combat operations" to American "leadership" over Iraqi
troops has been underway since the January 30 election. Babakr Badarkhan
Ziabri, the Iraqi commanding general, told the
Arabic language paper Al-Zaman that American troops would
withdraw into bases within six months, emerging only when Iraqi
troops needed support, but avoiding offensive operations.
While
this military strategy could slow or halt the disintegration of
the forces stationed there (and lessen the wear and tear on their
dangerously fraying equipment), it has already proven quite detrimental
for the "pacification" effort. In early April, for example, the
Washington Post quoted U.S. officials conceding that
"many attacks have gone unchallenged by Iraqi forces in large areas
of the country dominated by insurgents." At the same time, the
Shia resistance, led by young cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's forces,
has re-emerged as a major force in many cities of the South.
These
new strategies, therefore, are likely in the long run to further
erode the U.S. military position and strengthen the resistance,
and so may lead as Nixon's Vietnamization program did decades
ago to the increased use of American air power against resistance
strongholds. Such a strategy would promise an intolerable rate of
civilian casualties, as well as the devastation of homes and neighborhoods
wherever the resistance is strong. This, in turn, would, of course,
only heighten support for the guerrillas and increase pressure on
American forces.
The Bush administration is likely to find itself increasingly trapped
between Iraq and a hard place, wound in an ever-tightening knot
of failing policy and falling support, at the heart of which lies
a decision about reconstituting a draft. How this will resolve itself
will be one of the complex dramas of our time.
April
28, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Michael Schwartz [send
him mail], Professor of Sociology at the State University of
New York at Stony Brook, has written extensively on popular protest
and insurgency, and on American business and government dynamics.
His work on Iraq has appeared on the Internet at numerous sites
including TomDispatch, Asia Times, MotherJones, and ZNet;
and in print at Contexts and Z magazine. His books include Radical
Politics and Social Structure, The
Power Structure of American Business (with Beth Mintz), and
Social
Policy and the Conservative Agenda (edited, with Clarence
Lo).
Copyright
© 2005 Michael Schwartz
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Engelhardt Archives
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