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A
Military 'Surge' to the Political Nowhere
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
DIGG THIS
It was the
renowned Prussian military thinker Carl von Clausewitz who had proposed
in the early 19th century that "war is merely a continuation
of politics" – an assertion that should continue to serve a
cautionary note to statesmen and generals who fail to take into
consideration the political context in which their military strategy
is being pursued.
War should
not be likened to a wrestling match whose outcome depends almost
entirely on the effective deployment of brute force. A military
strategy has to be a means to achieve a political strategy with
the player having to overcome both military and political obstacles
on his way to victory.
From that "Clausewitzian"
perspective, US President George W. Bush's "new" Iraq
policy – his decision to add 21,500 American troops to secure Baghdad
and Anbar province as a way of reversing Iraq's slide into civil
war – is an example of a military plan divorced from a sensible
political approach.
That explains
perhaps why leading political and military figures in Washington
and Baghdad ranging from the Iraq Study Group's (ISG) Wise Men to
the US generals who have managed the military operations on the
ground (not to mention the Iraqi leaders themselves) have reacted
to Bush's latest plan for Iraq with so much skepticism, if not hostility.
In a way, much
of what Bush said last week seemed to be based on the premise that
the errors that the US has made in Iraq involved a failure to dispatch
the right number of US troops to halt the descent of Baghdad and
other parts of Iraq into chaos. A related error, according to Bush,
had to do with the excessive restrictions that were imposed on the
military operations of the US troops.
In fact, these
arguments reflect the notion advanced by many neoconservative analysts
that the political thinking underlying the decision to oust Saddam
Hussein, centered on the goal of establishing a unified and democratic
Iraq, made a lot of sense – but that the military implementation
of that strategy was flawed. That is, if only the US had a larger
number of brigades in Mesopotamia that were allowed "to do
the job," Iraq would have been by now on the road of becoming
a functioning democracy in the Middle East.
So, based on
this argument which continues to dominate the thinking in such neoconservative
bastions as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where the outlines
for the latest plan were drawn, Bush announced that he would be
sending five additional brigades to Baghdad, consisting of 16,000
combat troops. This would double the number of troops in the Iraqi
capital, who together with Iraqi forces would have the capability
and the authority to clear and secure neighborhoods controlled by
both Sunnis and Shiites.
Bush also said
that the US would be dispatching 4,000 more troops to Anbar province,
where most of the anti-American insurgency is led by Sunni-controlled
forces (which, according to Bush, have links to al-Qaeda).
In addition,
Bush announced plans to double the number of provincial reconstruction
teams and to give commanders more flexibility in spending on local
improvements. That plan in turn assumes the military strategy that
the president outlines will succeed and create the political conditions
for pursuing the economic reconstruction of Iraq.
Some neoconservative
critics have suggested that the proposed surge is too small and
that 30,000 to 35,000 troops would be needed to achieve the goals
that Bush stated in his address. But even if the overstretched US
military could come up a larger number of troops, that would still
make it unlikely that the Americans would be able to overcome the
political obstacles that confront them in Baghdad and in Washington.
First, much
of the neoconservative grand designs for Iraq were based on the
idea that Iraq was a cohesive nation-state and that through open
and free elections, its citizens would elect a legitimate and effective
central government. But political reality in Iraq proved to be very
different than that envisioned by the architects of the war, with
three ethnic and religious communities – an Arab-Shiite majority,
and Arab-Sunni and Kurdish minorities – vying for power.
The elections
brought to power Shiite political parties whose main goal is to
protect and advance the interests of their community, including
by repressing the Arab-Sunnis, while coexisting with the Kurds in
a loose confederation. A Sunni-based insurgency has degenerated
into a low-level sectarian civil war with violent Sunni and Shiite
extremists challenging a weakening political center as each community
continues to advance its respective narrow interests.
Much of the
success of the military surge proposed by Bush is based on the expectations
that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his government have
the political will and power to reverse this process by standing
up to the Shiite militias led by the cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and
by taking action to integrate the Sunnis into the political process.
Indeed, the
ability of the Iraqi troops to lead the pacification of Baghdad
assumes that such an entity as a legitimate and effective "Iraqi
military" is evolving. In reality, in addition to their inability
to fight, many Iraqi military troops as well as police units have
been infiltrated by the Shiite militias that they were supposed
to control.
At the same
time, Maliki and his political allies are dependent on the support
of Sadr and other leaders of Shiite militias and it is very doubtful
that they would be willing to support the Americans in taking a
tough stand against the Shiite radicals. And that is very rational
behavior, since Maliki knows that Sadr and his militias will remain
in Iraq long after Bush and the American troops leave the country.
That even a
larger number of American troops are bound to find themselves in
the middle of the war between Shiites and Sunnis isn't going to
help Bush deal with the other political hurdle that his costly military
strategy is facing: the continuing erosion in the support at home
among the political elites and the general public for his Iraq policy.
With the exception
of the members of his narrow Republican base, most opinion polls
suggest that Bush has lost the backing of almost every demographic
group for the conduct of the war and that Americans want to see
the start of the withdrawal of the 132,000 US troops that are now
deployed in Iraq. But it looks as though Bush has decided to disregard
this public opposition as well as the recommendations of the ISG
and the military commanders and Iraq, and move to expand the level
of US military presence in the country.
Moreover, by
pledging last Thursday to "interrupt the flow of support from
Iran and Syria" to Iraq and ordering an additional carrier
strike group to the Persian Gulf, Bush has suggested that his administration
is preparing for the possibility of the widening of the war to Iran
and Syria.
The indications
that Bush is going to escalate the war has strengthened the hands
of the leaders of the Democratic majority that control Capitol Hill
now and that is led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senator Harry
Reid. What should be even more troubling to Bush and his aides is
that several leading Republican lawmakers, including Senators Gordon
Smith (Oregon), Susan Collins (Maine), and Sam Brownback (Kansas)
and others have indicated that they would oppose Bush's surge plan.
One
of the ideas being discussed is the passage of non-binding resolutions
in the House of Representatives and the Senate in opposition to
Bush's strategy. In the long run, Congress could even try to use
its "power of the purse" to reject the White House's demands
for funding of the war.
Hence the military
conflict in Iraq could result in a political war in Washington –
demonstrating that politics could also be the continuation of war.
January
17, 2007
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2007 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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