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Cut and Run? You Bet

 
 
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 08:58 am
Quote:
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/images/logo.gif

Why America must get out of Iraq now.

By Lt. Gen. William E. Odom

Withdraw immediately or stay the present course? That is the key question about the war in Iraq today. American public opinion is now decidedly against the war. From liberal New England, where citizens pass town-hall resolutions calling for withdrawal, to the conservative South and West, where more than half of “red state” citizens oppose the war, Americans want out. That sentiment is understandable.

The prewar dream of a liberal Iraqi democracy friendly to the United States is no longer credible. No Iraqi leader with enough power and legitimacy to control the country will be pro-American. Still, U.S. President George W. Bush says the United States must stay the course. Why? Let’s consider his administration’s most popular arguments for not leaving Iraq.

If we leave, there will be a civil war. In reality, a civil war in Iraq began just weeks after U.S. forces toppled Saddam. Any close observer could see that then; today, only the blind deny it. Even President Bush, who is normally impervious to uncomfortable facts, recently admitted that Iraq has peered into the abyss of civil war. He ought to look a little closer. Iraqis are fighting Iraqis. Insurgents have killed far more Iraqis than Americans. That’s civil war.

Withdrawal will encourage the terrorists. True, but that is the price we are doomed to pay. Our continued occupation of Iraq also encourages the killers—precisely because our invasion made Iraq safe for them. Our occupation also left the surviving Baathists with one choice: Surrender, or ally with al Qaeda. They chose the latter. Staying the course will not change this fact. Pulling out will most likely result in Sunni groups’ turning against al Qaeda and its sympathizers, driving them out of Iraq entirely.

Before U.S. forces stand down, Iraqi security forces must stand up. The problem in Iraq is not military competency; it is political consolidation. Iraq has a large officer corps with plenty of combat experience from the Iran-Iraq war. Moktada al-Sadr’s Shiite militia fights well today without U.S. advisors, as do Kurdish pesh merga units. The problem is loyalty. To whom can officers and troops afford to give their loyalty? The political camps in Iraq are still shifting. So every Iraqi soldier and officer today risks choosing the wrong side. As a result, most choose to retain as much latitude as possible to switch allegiances. All the U.S. military trainers in the world cannot remove that reality. But political consolidation will. It should by now be clear that political power can only be established via Iraqi guns and civil war, not through elections or U.S. colonialism by ventriloquism.

Setting a withdrawal deadline will damage the morale of U.S. troops. Hiding behind the argument of troop morale shows no willingness to accept the responsibilities of command. The truth is, most wars would stop early if soldiers had the choice of whether or not to continue. This is certainly true in Iraq, where a withdrawal is likely to raise morale among U.S. forces. A recent Zogby poll suggests that most U.S. troops would welcome an early withdrawal deadline. But the strategic question of how to extract the United States from the Iraq disaster is not a matter to be decided by soldiers. Carl von Clausewitz spoke of two kinds of courage: first, bravery in the face of mortal danger; second, the willingness to accept personal responsibility for command decisions. The former is expected of the troops. The latter must be demanded of high-level commanders, including the president.

Withdrawal would undermine U.S. credibility in the world. Were the United States a middling power, this case might hold some water. But for the world’s only superpower, it’s patently phony. A rapid reversal of our present course in Iraq would improve U.S. credibility around the world. The same argument was made against withdrawal from Vietnam. It was proved wrong then and it would be proved wrong today. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the world’s opinion of the United States has plummeted, with the largest short-term drop in American history. The United States now garners as much international esteem as Russia. Withdrawing and admitting our mistake would reverse this trend. Very few countries have that kind of corrective capacity. I served as a military attaché in the U.S. Embassy in Moscow during Richard Nixon’s Watergate crisis. When Nixon resigned, several Soviet officials who had previously expressed disdain for the United States told me they were astonished. One diplomat said, “Only your country is powerful enough to do this. It would destroy my country.”

Two facts, however painful, must be recognized, or we will remain perilously confused in Iraq. First, invading Iraq was not in the interests of the United States. It was in the interests of Iran and al Qaeda. For Iran, it avenged a grudge against Saddam for his invasion of the country in 1980. For al Qaeda, it made it easier to kill Americans. Second, the war has paralyzed the United States in the world diplomatically and strategically. Although relations with Europe show signs of marginal improvement, the trans-Atlantic alliance still may not survive the war. Only with a rapid withdrawal from Iraq will Washington regain diplomatic and military mobility. Tied down like Gulliver in the sands of Mesopotamia, we simply cannot attract the diplomatic and military cooperation necessary to win the real battle against terror. Getting out of Iraq is the precondition for any improvement.

In fact, getting out now may be our only chance to set things right in Iraq. For starters, if we withdraw, European politicians would be more likely to cooperate with us in a strategy for stabilizing the greater Middle East. Following a withdrawal, all the countries bordering Iraq would likely respond favorably to an offer to help stabilize the situation. The most important of these would be Iran. It dislikes al Qaeda as much as we do. It wants regional stability as much as we do. It wants to produce more oil and gas and sell it. If its leaders really want nuclear weapons, we cannot stop them. But we can engage them.

None of these prospects is possible unless we stop moving deeper into the “big sandy” of Iraq. America must withdraw now.


Lt. Gen. William E. Odom (Ret.) is senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and professor at Yale University. He was director of the National Security Agency from 1985 to 1988.

foreignpolicy


There is an unpleasant aspect to Iraq we need to face up to.

The Iraq war cannot be won. Ever.

And this has nothing to do with US military prowess. The US cannot win the war in Iraq because none of the stated reasons for the war were true. The US cannot force Iraq to surrender their weapons of mass destruction because they did not have them. The US cannot punish Iraq for 9-11 because Iraq had nothing to do with 9-11. The US cannot punish Iraq for supporting Al Qaeda because Iraq was NOT supporting Al Qaeda.

None of the stated objectives were true. Therefore they cannot be achieved. Ever. The war cannot be won. It can only be lost.

And it is being lost now.
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Seeker
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 09:33 am
Yes, it's a fools mission, and we really should have noticed that before we went to war. But since we went ahead with the war, how can we justify saying, "Oops sorry guys this was a mistake," and leaving the Iraqis to it?
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 09:57 am
Seeker

Quote:
how can we justify saying, "Oops sorry guys this was a mistake," and leaving the Iraqis to it?


Maybe because they want us out ?

Quote:
The top US military commander admitted Sunday that Iraqis wanted US and other foreign troops to leave the country "as soon as possible,"

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=78921
0 Replies
 
blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 10:17 am
Seeker wrote:
Yes, it's a fools mission, and we really should have noticed that before we went to war. But since we went ahead with the war, how can we justify saying, "Oops sorry guys this was a mistake," and leaving the Iraqis to it?


And how do we justify sending more guys to die for that selfsame mistake? Being too woodenheaded or too prideful to admit failure seems like a pisspoor reason to send even more folks into harm's way.
0 Replies
 
paull
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 11:40 am
f4f, the single quote you posted from NineMSM makes your point. The rest of the article doesn't.


Try harder.
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 May, 2006 11:52 am
Quote:
f4f, the single quote you posted from NineMSM makes your point. The rest of the article doesn't.


"They don't want us to leave tomorrow, but they do want us to leave as soon as possible."

Monday, December 26, 2005

We're still waiting for 'tomorrow' Rolling Eyes

----------

Maybe this might end 'tomorrow'

Quote:
John Pilger detects the Salvador Option

The real news, which is not reported in the CNN "mainstream", is that the Salvador Option has been invoked in Iraq. This is the campaign of terror by death squads armed and trained by the US, which attack Sunnis and Shias alike. The goal is the incitement of a real civil war and the break-up of Iraq, the original war aim of Bush's administration.


"I love the smell of Iraq 'democracy' in the morning!"-official White House Souse.

------

Quote:
Poll: Iraqis out of patience

By Cesar G. Soriano and Steven Komarow,USA TODAY

BAGHDAD, Only a third of the Iraqi people now believe that the American-led occupation of their country is doing more good than harm, and a solid majority support an immediate military pullout even though they fear that could put them in greater danger, according to a new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2004-04-28-poll-cover_x.htm
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