Recently
fired Army Secretary Thomas White said last week that senior defense
officials “are unwilling to come to grips” with the scale of the
postwar US obligation in Iraq. Similarly, in February, Army chief
of staff General Eric Shinseki brought the same message to Congress:
occupation of Iraq would take “several hundred thousand” troops.
Both men have been publicly admonished.
But as our
commitment in Iraq continues to expand, how far off are these
statements?
A recent
Washington Post editorial suggests that, "The reality
is that tens of thousands of U.S. troops will likely be in Iraq
for years to come, and (that) country will not recover without
extensive investment by the United States and other international
donors." Of course, what this means is that American taxpayers
are to be squeezed in every direction to pay to “fix” Iraq. And
it is becoming increasingly obvious that the open-ended American
military presence in Iraq is not welcome: in the past two weeks
eight American soldiers have, tragically, been killed in Iraq.
This is not
what the attack on Iraq was supposed to be about. It wasn’t supposed
to be about nation-building. It wasn’t supposed to be about an
indefinite US military occupation. “Regime change” was supposed
to mean that once Saddam Hussein was overthrown the Iraqi people
would run their own affairs. “Liberation” was supposed to mean
that the Iraqi people would be free to form their own government
and rebuild their own economy.
Yet the United
States is spending tens of billions of dollars and more rebuilding
Iraq. The US Army’s 3rd Infantry Division, scheduled
to return home after its success in Iraq, will remain “indefinitely”
because securing Iraq is proving more difficult than defense planners
envisioned. The US civilian authority controlling Iraq has cancelled
plans to allow the Iraqis to form their own provisional government.
American bureaucrats are even running the Iraqi media.
What are
we getting ourselves into?
I see the
real possibility of our government getting into an expensive,
long-term entanglement in Iraq at exactly the time we are beginning
to see financial troubles on the horizon. As our nation slinks
further into debt and back into deficit, we are making decisions
that will literally put our children and grandchildren on the
line to pay interest payments for our current policy toward Iraq.
This policy
threatens the long-term health not just of our economy but domestic
spending on items like education and social security. While some
of us in Congress raised these concerns prior to the beginning
of the war with Iraq, our questions went unanswered. Instead of
focusing on how this commitment would almost certainly drain our
resources for years to come, the policy debate wrongly focused
almost exclusively on whether we would have the “moral support”
of our “allies” and international organizations such as NATO and
the UN.
When
American policymakers consider the wisdom of foreign entanglements
it would be best that they first understand the long-term implications
for the people we are elected to represent. We failed to do that
with Iraq and the length, difficulty, and seriousness of the long-term
commitment is only now coming to be realized by those who advocated
this entanglement. Unfortunately, once a project such as this
has begun it becomes extremely difficult to set the ship aright
and change the course of policy to better reflect the interests
of our nation and its citizens. One thing is clear: winning the
military battle against Saddam Hussein may well prove the easiest
and perhaps least costly part.
June
10, 2003