Exit Strategy
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
One day late
in the Vietnam war, a Senator called his defense staffer into his
office. Like too many Senators (though neither of the two I worked
for), the distinguished legislator depended entirely upon his staff
but treated them like peons. Although the end of the day had come
and gone, the Senator snarled at his hapless staffer, "I want
to give a speech on the Floor tomorrow morning on the Vietnam war.
You can stay here tonight and write it."
The next
morning, the Senator found the text of his speech on his desk, neatly
typed and bound. Without bothering to look it over, he took it to
the Floor of the Senate where, with the voice if not the mind of
Cicero, he shared it with the world. About half way through, he
read a page that concluded with the words, "I will now offer
my five-point plan for ending the Vietnam war." Turning the
page, he found an unexpected message from his despised staffer:
"You’re on your own now, you SOB. I quit."
Like the
Senator, I think it is time I offered my own exit strategy for Iraq.
Everyone in Washington except those in the Bushbunker knows we need
an exit strategy; few have offered one. While I have had a bit more
time to consider my proposal than did the Senator in the story (which
was current during my early days on Senate staff), I am sure my
proposal will have holes in it. Nonetheless, it may help move the
discussion along, from whether to get out of Iraq to how to get
out.
Please
note that I am not talking about how to win the Iraq war. The war
was lost from before the first bomb fell, because the strategic
objectives were never attainable no matter what we did. Further
blunders, from de-Baathification and sending the Iraqi Army home
through mistreating the civilian population, have moved us from
mere failure to incipient disaster. The question, rather, is how
we might get out without our defeat being so obvious as to be undeniable.
So here
is my proposal:
First,
announce that we will leave Iraq soon, and completely. Not one American
base or soldier will remain on Iraqi soil. The spin should be, "We
came only to remove Saddam from power, and we have accomplished
that mission. Iraq now has a constitution and an elected government;
we have no reason to remain."
Second,
open negotiations to set a date by which we will be gone. The formal
negotiations will be with the Iraqi government. Behind the scenes,
we will have to set a deadline for achieving an agreement, failing
which we will announce a withdrawal unilaterally. Governments established
by foreign powers may be reluctant to see foreign troops leave.
The critical
(and secret) negotiations, however, will not be with Iraq’s puppet
government, but with the Sunnis. Here, what we need is what is sometimes
called a "diplomatic revolution." Instead of siding with
the Kurds and Shiites against the Sunnis, we need to offer the Sunnis
an alliance. The terms would be roughly these:
- We will
set and adhere to a date for complete withdrawal;
- We will
cease all attacks on the Sunni resistance, as part of a mutual
cease-fire; and
- We will
use such political influence as we retain with Iraq’s Shiite-Kurdish
condominium to protect and advance the Sunnis’ interests.
In return,
the Sunnis will:
- Enforce
a cease-fire in the Sunni provinces, and
- Clean up
al Qaeda in Iraq. If they need and want our help to do that, we
will help. I doubt they will need any assistance from us, beyond
stopping our attacks in Sunni areas, and I doubt even more they
will want it, since it would de-legitimize them.
Third,
while we will cease our useless "sweeps" and other clearly
offensive actions, we will also quietly institute the "ink-blot
strategy" in some mixed Sunni-Shiite-Kurdish areas. While the
ink-blot strategy (like the CAP program in Vietnam) represents a
strategic offensive, which allows us to keep pressure on the Sunnis
to make a deal, it requires de-escalation on the tactical level,
so as not to alienate the local population. That should help reduce
both Sunni and American casualties while negotiations proceed.
As I have
noted in previous columns, a problem in Fourth Generation conflicts
is finding someone with whom to negotiate, someone who can deliver
once a deal is made. Here, events in Iraq may have given us an opportunity.
According to the October 27 Christian Science Monitor, Iraq’s
key Sunni political parties have formed a new coalition. That coalition
is, to quote the Monitor, "Islamist, vehemently anti-American,
opposed to foreign troops, and discreetly pro-insurgency."
I think it is safe to add that it is closely tied to the Baathist
elements of the insurgency, which are both a large part of the resistance
and strongly opposed to al Qaeda.
All those
characteristics make it a credible negotiating partner. Negotiations
with Sunni Quislings serve no purpose, because the Quislings can’t
deliver what we need, a quieting down of the fighting while we get
out. There is good reason to think the new Sunni coalition could
deliver that. In turn, we could deliver what they need, which is
political support vis-à-vis the Shiites and Kurds.
Could it
work? Maybe; in such business, there are no guarantees. Would the
new Sunni coalition talk with us about a deal along these lines?
It’s worth a try. Would the Bush administration make such an attempt?
Aye, there’s the rub. The Bushbunker may be so detached from reality
that it still thinks we can win this war militarily.
If that
is the case, then it is time for America’s senior military leaders,
the Chief and Members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to have a little
talk with the President. Another Vietnam war story, a true one,
is how the JCS failed to give President Johnson the advice he needed
though did not want, namely that the military had done all that
it could and it was time to seek a political solution.
So that’s
my exit strategy. If someone else comes up with a better one, I
will be happy to defer to it. But the time is past for arguing whether
we need an exit strategy; the discussion should be about what that
strategy might be. "Staying the course" in a lost war
is not a strategy at all; it is merely a recipe for disaster.
November
5, 2005
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2005 William S. Lind
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