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Strategic Reset

25 Jun 2007 01:07 pm

I've had the chance to review the Center for American Progress' excellent new report on Iraq, Strategic Reset: Reclaiming Control of U.S. Security in the Middle East. It's a very serious report, though probably one the Very Serious People of the world won't be too pleased with. By the same token, however, when the Center's original Strategic Redeployment plan was released in Fall 2005 it was rejected as unserious, only to look prophetic within months. Had their advice been taken back then, or back in spring 2006 when they released Strategic Redeployment 2.0, it might be possible to view less drastic measures as viable today. But mistakes have consequences. For all the joking about Friedman Units, it's actually true that the U.S. has faced a succession of windows of opportunity in Iraq, and now most of those windows have shut. Realism about the nature of the situation and about American interests requires us, as they argue, to prioritize limiting the regional -- and global -- damage of the wreckage of the war rather than engage in further fantasies that a clever plan and a renewed emphasis on training can save Iraq.

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To say that we have to leave Iraq expeditiously isn't to deny that bad things may results, but merely to acknowledge that "many events that some fear would result if U.S. troops left Iraq are unfolding now just as the U.S. troops presence is getting larger." The fundamental dynamic is unfolding according to its own logic, and while the course could change it's clear that we don't have any methods at hand to change it. In terms of our moral and humanitarian obligations to Iraqis, CAP suggests we do what we can to address these directly -- increasing the number of Iraqi refugees we accept, pressuring regional allies to do the same, and dispersing US personnel and assistance in Iraq away from the central government to promising local actors, if any -- rather than trying to fulfill these obligations through a doomed effort to micromanage Iraqi political developments. Similarly, they suggest that the regional fallout from our failure in Iraq be dealt with directly -- at the regional level, by returning our military forces to locations where they're more welcome and easier to sustain, and through diplomacy guided by the reality that none of the major regional players want to see a spreading arc of chaos.

At any rate, read the report for yourself if you're interested. It's very good stuff, and something the presidential candidates should embrace instead of these vague formulas about a residual training presence plus force protection to guard the trainers plus god knows what else to make that work. The most important thing, as they note, is that this business of arming and training Iraqi security forces in the absence of a political solution is not just a waste of time and money, but directly counterproductive. Our weapons and funding are fueling civil conflict in the face of deep political fragmentation and there are absolutely no guarantees as to who these arms will be turned against next year or the year after that. "The medicine of more weapons and training for Iraq’s security force may actually end up killing the patient—and will certainly end up killing more Americans, too." The training concept has become, in my view, a kind of psychological crutch for US elites who don't want to face their own basic inability to improve things. The idea that you could help resolve an ongoing multifaceted conflict by introducing greater quantities of lethal weaponry and better-trained fighters is absurd on its face. At best, we're in the position of arming several sides in a multi-pronged civil war in the vague hope that whoever prevails won't notice we were also arming their adversaries and be loyal to us down the road, which seems like a really, really, really stupid bet.

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Comments (32)

More recycled Baker-Hamilton pap. Maybe if the basic tenets hadn't already been tried by Israel in Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza in 2005 and failed spectacularly there...

Wait, practicality doesn't matter to Harvard-educated dimbulb Matt Yglesias. What does is that a hard-left think tank has put out yet another worthless report that he can give some props to.

I agree about training as a psychological crutch. I think it was in the aftermath of Katrina that the White House announced that it would send certain key staffpeople for ethics training (or was it after Abramoff? Or Abu Ghraib?). For CEO and management types, "more training" is often the half-assed response for when you don't really know what to do about a problem.

The same Center for American Progress whose great action plan for making liberals relevant on talk radio is trampling the First Amendment, I might add. A fine bunch.

"many events that some fear would result if U.S. troops left Iraq are unfolding now just as the U.S. troops presence is getting larger."

There are really no good options now. Just a series of worse options. I think this quote will come back to haunt many people. While suicide bombings killing 70 people are horrific, I wonder how we will repond to hundreds or even thousands of people being slaughtered in a single day.

The real seems to be whether or not once can score political points not whether a terrible situation will turn into a nightmare on the scope of Darfur or Rawanda. But hey, there are no political points to score with those conflicts.

"Maybe if the basic tenets hadn't already been tried by Israel in Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza in 2005 and failed spectacularly there...

Maybe if the Bush Doctrine weren't failing so spectacularly in Iraq in 2007, there might be a larger audience for your claims that Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and Gaza "failed spectacularly."

If you support our staying, GTF over there. Earth to Dave...Earth to Dave... your courage is required to back your convictions.

The fact was the al Sadr lived in multiethnic neighborhoods but he was seen as someone not ready to concede the dollars in oil to American business. Instead of making the person best fit to stabilize the land a part of the plan we demonized him and set death squads into motion.

See how well that practice has panned out?

The odds of Iraq stabilizing are no greater if we stay, saying we leave would see things get worse is trying to disprove a negative also.

Until you can produce consistent results from the first premise of your policy, we cannot take what you say as criticism for withdrawal plans seriously.

We're rushing U.S. soldiers to Iraq and not giving them desert training in the California facility designed for this purpose, and it's apparently empty, so why don't we transport Iraqi trainees to this army base to be trained instead of sending our trainers to Iraq to be shot at and bombed?

To me, this is so obvious and logical that I keep waiting for it to happen or at least be proposed. What's the flaw in my thinking?

Joy,

That requires having brown people enter the US. Conservatives won't stand for it.

Dave,

Right, and then all the nations in the region will fall like dominoes...

Wasn't there a Star Trek episode like this? Where Kirk teaches the peaceful ignorant people about guns because the Klingons are teaching the other guys how to be ruthless.

I think everything worked out fine once everyone started killing each other. We have nothing to worry about vis a vis Iraq.

"If you support our staying, GTF over there. Earth to Dave...Earth to Dave... your courage is required to back your convictions."

I assume you support the job the 9 fire fighters did in putting out the blaze that killed them the other day. And I assume that despire these deaths you continue to support people putting their liveson the line to put out fires.

http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070620/REPOSITORY/706200353/1013/NEWS03

Based on your logic, I assume you are also going to quit your job and become a fire fighter then.

I assume you support the job the 9 fire fighters did in putting out the blaze that killed them the other day. And I assume that despire these deaths you continue to support people putting their liveson the line to put out fires.

That you can't see the flaw in that analogy makes me sad.

No analogy is perfect otherwise it wouldn't be an analogy.

The logic of the original poster was that if I believe that others should do a job where their lives are at risk then I should do that job as well.

If you agree with that logic, then you should look at every job where people put their lives on the line that you support (police, fire fighter, etc..) and ask if you support what they are doing. If you do, then you need to quit your job and do that one. Otherwise, you are a hypocrite.

Auguste, I think the appropriate emotion for chickenhawks who drag out the fireman analogy is contempt, not sadness.

Certainly w/r/t the invasion and occupation of Iraq, chickenhawk is to soldier as arsonist is to fireman.

Dave, that bizarre analogy was first used by Hitchens. God knows what it is supposed to mean. There has never been an episode in which a nation drafted people for firefighting or policework because fighting fires and arresting criminals is different in kind then war - war is declared by a whole nation, and supposedly involves the resources of a whole nation. In situations where the draft isn't in effect, still, support for a war has generally meant volunteering to fight in the war. The urge to volunteer should become more pressing, for supporters, if the war seems to be going badly, and especially if the war seems to be going badly because of a lack of soldiers to fight it.

This doesn't mean I would urge you to volunteer. Having opposed the war from the beginning, I am rather happy that most of the pro-war contingent have taken the Cheney option, and decided they had other priorities than fighting in Iraq. But it is important to note that this attitude has an important consequence: it demoralizes the pro-war side. It undermines the idea that there is any urgency to the war, and so undermines the willingness of Americans to either pay for it or desire its continuance. In fact, the massive indignation of the pro-war side whenever it is pressed about actually volunteering has been a great advertisement for the anti-war side, and has surely contributed a lot to making this war, relatively quickly, the most unpopular America has ever fought.
For which, I thank you and people like you. Keep up the good work. Do not volunteer. Do not go to Iraq. And continue to support the war loudly - without people like you, the hypocrisy of the war and its real justification - as an extension of white house vanity - would be harder to argue for. God bless the chicken hawks, every one.

So paperwight, does that make you a chickenfirefighter...hawk, one who sends firefighters off to die while you sit comfortably at home? Maybe they shouldn't be used to fight fires.

roger: "It undermines the idea that there is any urgency to the war, and so undermines the willingness of Americans to either pay for it or desire its continuance."

Just as there is no urgency to darfur. Why don't the people so concerned about that go and fight there? No to suggest that something be done is to be a warmonger/chickenhawk. Meanwhile thousands of innocents die.

One of the reasons we can't do anything about Darfur is that you idiots got our military completely knotted up in Iraq.

Roger,

I appreciate your thoughful response, but continue to respectfully disagree. If my city has a serious crime problem and I live in that city, is it not a citywide problem, just as the Iraq war is a nationwide problem? I live in Washington, DC. The city with the highest murder rate in the country. Explain, why I shouldn't quit my job and join the police to fight this epidemic of violence? Am I demoralizing the police and the anticrime side by not volunterring? Shouldn't my urge to volunteer to be a policeman be great. Am I a crime-chickenhawk? Are all non-policeman in DC?

"One of the reasons we can't do anything about Darfur is that you idiots got our military completely knotted up in Iraq."

So how do you explain pre-Iraqwar Rawanda? If we weren't in Iraq, would you be in favor of invading Darfur?

Agreed, The "American Progress" plan contains some good elements and would be better than the current slaughter.
On closer inspection and taken as a whole however it is at once disingenuous and disastrous. Much of it is formulated on the false premises which it states. It would result in the deaths of 100s of thousands of more civilians and the continued infliction of suffering on many millions more (Similar to the Reagan campaign of low intensity conflict, i.e. terrorism, throughout Central America in the 1980s). Their plan seems to be not much more than a political calculation to reduce resistance by the American public by the mirages of minimizing US casualties and moving to higher moral ground, while at the same time satisfying big money (the massive War Profiteering sector, predatory Energy corps, and the big banking, globalization, corporatcracy crowd).
1. I agree that the (intentional) escalation of the (US manufactured) civil war through arming both sides and conducting “False flag” attacks and other "black ops" should stop. Bush et. al. manufactured a civil war in Iraq which would not have occurred otherwise. They did this through the tried and true PsyOps techniques of "False flag” attacks (blowing up mosques, markets, schools etc), and other black ops. The current very real civil war took over three years of unrelenting atrocities to create. Now Sunnis are warring with Shia. However, before the invasion, as documented by many experts, historians and Iraqi bloggers like "Riverbend", most citizens of Baghdad did not know if their neighbors were Shia or Sunni, intermarriage was very common and almost unnoticed, and hostility between sects was limited (as in this country) to the tiny few. Rapid complete withdrawal would result in the most rapid de-escalation of this. The argument (pretense) for staying to prevent blood bath has been used in several wars such as Viet Nam and as always is false. The US is the blood bath and the war criminals that have infiltrated the US government have willfully exacerbated it as ongoing pretense for permanent bases and permanent occupation.

2. The plan prefaces with the assertion that Iran is our greatest rival in the region. This is willfully misleading. (a) That the US is Iran’s greatest enemy is clear to everyone, but Iran claims to want peace with all countries including both Israel and the US. Iran’s claim is far more credible. They have not attacked another country in over two centuries (the US has invaded over 100 in one century, not including WWII). (b) As even general Pace admitted, there is no clear evidence that Iran is doing anything to arm or directly aid those attacking US forces. (c) Ahmadinejad never said that he wanted to wipe Israel off the map or anything similar to that. The audio of his speech is still available and virtually all of the experts translating it say the meaning being foisted on us by the complicit media is a clear fabrication. Also, he never mentioned the words: Israel, map or wipe. (d) As even the IAEA notes, there is no clear evidence that Iran is now or has ever had a nuclear weapons program or desired to have one.

3. The plan redeploys US forces within the region ...freeing them for other “critical missions” within the area”. This would also be in violation of international law and strongly hints at attacking Iran.

4. Diplomacy is essential and is included in the plan as you point out, but the plan is for this to be done while the listed countries have a gun at their head, being completely surrounded with US massive fire power posing an existential and imminent threat. It is not possible to have good faith diplomacy or negotiation in that setting, just as it is not possible to have freedom, democracy, or sovereignty while under brutal military occupation. The plan continues the mafia style extortion and protection racket that the republicans have championed for 40 years.

5. The part about taking an active role in solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (the tyranny and near genocidal military occupation of the Palestinians) and the associated bloodshed is right on target. We should begin good faith efforts for the first time. To show good faith we should begin by stopping the arming of the sides, stop the “False flag” attacks and the other black ops aimed at sabotaging the governments and all genuine attempts at peace. It should be simple to accomplish the peace because all of the Arab countries and the Palestinian leaders years ago proposed and have not withdrawn exactly what Israeli leaders have claimed to want, a two state solution (as already mandated by international law) including nonaggression towards and recognition of the legitimacy of Israel in exchange for Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories (to 1967 borders) and the recognition of Palestinian sovereignty.

The only moral course and the one that would be in the best interests of the United States (and the American people) and the Iraqi people is immediate and total withdrawal from the region. This is an obvious and critical prerequisite for any chance of success in the formation of good faith international coalition to establish peace and security in the region.
There is a mountain of additional evidence and pertinent history to support these points should anyone ask.
Sincerely, from one who loves their country and believes in the principles of humanity and simple decency (the second being a pre-requisite for the first). JK

At this point, I am weary of any "plans" for Iraq. Everything comes with a huge element of "moral hazard" (if that term, borrowed from the economics of insurance, is the right term for it), i.e., that there is a great temptation to want to continue to station troops in Iraq and maintain permanent bases just because it is possible to do so and it projects some kind of power in the region. Because of this, potential negative consequences of any strategy of trying to influence events in Iraq in any manner whatsoever will be underrated.

Much better to get completely out of Iraq and let the chips fall where they may. Then, if we want to construct a new middle east policy, we will at least be able to do it from a position that does not allow us to straightforwardly establish an empire.

I assume you support the job the 9 fire fighters did in putting out the blaze that killed them the other day. And I assume that despire these deaths you continue to support people putting their liveson the line to put out fires.

This has got to be the most harebrained analogy I've ever seen, even by its own blinkered logic.

#1 - The leadership of this country is not claiming that the fire the other day endangers the whole country, or that putting out the fire is supposed to be, in Condi's words, "a generational commitment."

#2 - There are enough firefighters. By contrast, there are not enough soldiers. Therefore, if you support this war and support Bush's view that this is the most important conflict of our time and that the future of America is at stake, then yes, you are morally required, assuming you are of age and physically fit, to get your ass to the recruting office - you know, like they did during WWII, a war that was actually justified that the country believed in.

Remove the U.S. military from Iraq, and the claim of U.S. oil majors to any claim on profits from the sale of Iraqi crude goes to zero.

This is not the only potential consequence to withdrawl. The world tolerates the fantastic U.S. trade and budget deficits because they need U.S. dollars to buy oil, and the perceived power of the American military is a big part of the reason why oil is priced in dollars. Change that, and the fact that the U.S. manufacturing base is now located in China will have very real and very serious social consequences.

The U.S. cannot just leave Iraq and let the chips fall where they may. Just because politicians lie about the reasons for war doesn't mean that there are no genuine issues of power or wealth at stake.

They did this through the tried and true PsyOps techniques of "False flag” attacks (blowing up mosques, markets, schools etc), and other black ops.

Lebanon saw the exact same interaction start to immediately develop after the Israeli invasion. "They" didn't need false flag anything. Before the Iraq War people would talk about Vietnam, and I'd say "Hell no, it's gonna look just like Lebanon". Matter of fact, I dusted off "Pity the Nation" off not that long ago, and the whole situation, down to the shifting rationales, goals, and allies just follows the Lebanese narrative closer and closer.

If my city has a serious crime problem and I live in that city, is it not a citywide problem, just as the Iraq war is a nationwide problem? I live in Washington, DC. The city with the highest murder rate in the country. Explain, why I shouldn't quit my job and join the police to fight this epidemic of violence? Am I demoralizing the police and the anticrime side by not volunterring? Shouldn't my urge to volunteer to be a policeman be great. Am I a crime-chickenhawk? Are all non-policeman in DC?

The analogy is flawed. If all the police or firemen in DC resigned tomorrow, we'd set up volunteer brigades just like the British did in WWII or New Yorkers did on 9/11. Regardless of how you or I feel about the war, I believe every one of us would quit our jobs if required to volunteer and save our town. That's our strength as Americans.

IMO, blowing up foreigners is beneath us.

Based on your logic, I assume you are also going to quit your job and become a fire fighter then.
Posted by Dave


I can manage my own property quite well thanks.

Iraq, on the other hand, was never threat to me.

For the comparison to remain the same, I'd have to set fire to house that was not on fire already and demand the Fire Dep't put it out, as Iraq had nothing to do with 9-11 or Afghanistan...

Again straw man, when are you signing up?

Dave, trivializing war as a sort of crime wave or fire goes against reason, law and history. So I strongly disagree with your analogies.

On the other hand, the analogies do accurately reflect the Bush strategy that got us into the Iraq war. That strategy was seemingly contradictory: on the one hand, Bush promoted a war with no sacrifice, thus allowing him to continue his domestic policy of rewarding the wealthiest, on the other hand, creating a politically advantageous moral panic in the rush to a war that was compared to World War IV. These antitheses were only in apparent conflict. The one dimension of the strategy condoned extraordinary executive power, while the other was a method for dulling our sense of what that power was used for. To trivialize war is to normalize war. And normalizing war, so that the executive could use the military as a mercenary force without any strings attached or any responsibility to the public, was the grand plan of the Cheney-Rumsfeld axis. It picked up on episodes during the cold war, and it flowed into the monarchical executive role advocated by Cheney. The war’s supporters glommed onto this early, although I don’t think they ever thought it out explicitly. They were quite happy, on the one hand, to be entertained by the war – they love the toughness of the soldier, they love, say, the way the U.S. committed the war crime of razing Falluja in 2004, they love to give vent to comments about turning Iran or parts of Iraq into glass; but at the same time they don’t want to be bothered with the war. They love to make absurdly minimizing comparisons of the U.S. casualty counts with crime in Detroit. And they are pretty happy with their news sources – the Bill O’reilly shows, the fox news – who show little of the war and comment on it only to slam liberals. In essence, they have bought into the vision of the executive having total control over a mercenary force for which his base makes no sacrifice, gains maximum entertainment value, and accrues occasional political advantage when it comes time to manufacture a moral panic. That’s what this war is about. It has failed because even the dullest clod realizes that the rhetoric about the war in the beginning and the daily grind of the war now are so far apart that they show something went badly wrong. The diminishing of the war couldn't cover the fact that the war wasn't, in reality, diminishing. The moral panic couldn't cover the fact that the Bush administration was really fighting the supposed war on terror with maximum incompetence.

seems to me we have enough to worry about here at home..........we should and should have been playing in our own back yard.But Dumya wants to make sure all of his cronies get rich...thats what this war is all about.They are the ones who are in control of the agenda. I believe that the "incompetence" is partly by design. The sacrifice of Americans in this effort only gets lip service from Washington and is not sincere. Watch and see the mess that is left for the next administration....it is going to get worse. Expect troops in Iran shortly after the 2008 presidential election.

For RLaing,
I'm glad you used the phrase "genuine issues" as opposet to "legitimate" issues or "morally justifiable" issues. Implying that there is any moral justification for the slaughter of many hundreds of thousands of civilians, the infliction of permanent disability on millions and the infliction of horrific suffering on more than twenty million would by itself be profoundly immoral (and anti-American. I think thats what you did. You should be ashamed. JK

Whats wrong with you people. Bush is a genius. Look at the Middle East they are fighting all over the place. If they fight each other there they won't fight us here.

MIKE CROTCH
Republican BS Representative.

To think in 2007 we would still be paying for the sins of Ronald Reagan is scary.

Now imagine how long we will be paying for the sins of George Bush.

Maybe if the basic tenets hadn't already been tried by Israel in Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza in 2005 and failed spectacularly there

I wouldn't mind that sort of failure at all. It'd be a fairly impressive home-made al-Qassam rocket that could reach me from Iraq. Unlike Israel, we are not RIGHT NEXT DOOR, you see.

Dave, the fireman analogy fails because firefighting techniques are well-established and carried out by people knowledgeable about fires. Crime fighting techniques are not as perfected, but still pretty serviceable.

In Iraq, on the other hand, the experts such as General Senseki were ignored. They recommended the best techniques the military knew for the situation (of themselves not nearly so perfected as fire-fighting and crime fighting), and were roundly ignored. Instead, a plan was implemented that required a great number of lucky coincidences (the sarcastic term "magical pony plan" is not that far off in reality - several near-magical, unlikely events were required for the Bush plan to work).

I think the chickenhawk argument is valid in this case, because even now you are operating under the "we must be able to do something" American exceptionalism delusion. Sometimes things cannot be fixed under any realistic scenario. If you want to talk about drafting a million people, then we can start talking about reality, but that is not about to happen - people don't buy the cost/benefit analysis of a huge military effort, and anything less is throwing good money (and lives) after bad.

So, if you think that the current plan, which has been contrary to the professional techniques from the outset, is workable, then yes, *you* need to support that idea and enlist. It is not fair to ask professional soldiers to endure an impossible mission based on ideas inconsistent with professional soldiering.


Comments closed July 09, 2007.

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