President Bush, characteristically, is not leveling with the
public about the risks he is taking with his plan to "surge" more
U.S. forces into Iraq. Jack Keane, a retired Army vice chief of
staff and a leading proponent of the strategy, is more frank. Here
is what he told Charlie Rose earlier this month:
"If we have to go into Sadr City" -- a Shiite stronghold in
Baghdad -- "what will happen will be rather dramatic. The Badr
Corps and the Jaish al-Mahdi [two major Shiite militias], which are
not aligned, will align. And they'll also be able to align the
vigilante groups, which are essentially protecting the
neighborhoods and causing some mischief and havoc. They'll all get
aligned, and we'll have to contend with about 70,000 people under
arms in one of the heavily and most densely populated areas of
Baghdad."
Read that again. Then repeat after me: Uh-oh.
Painfully aware that the Iraq war has given commentators a lesson
in humility, I offer the following assessment with no certainty at
all but with the hope of at least contributing to clarity: The Bush
Surge is unlikely to work, but Congress should not try to stop
it.
The surge appears really to be a bundle of four policies. The
military surge itself would introduce about 21,500 additional U.S.
troops into the theater. By itself, that seems too little, too
late. Hope for success hinges on a second element, a tactical
change that is meant to improve the troops' military effectiveness:
Instead of clearing areas of insurgents and militias and then
handing them over to (unreliable) Iraqi forces, the Army and
Marines -- along with Iraqis -- will stay put and hold the
territory they clear. The idea is to make the population feel safe
enough to reject militia protection and support the government.
Then, in theory, the government will establish its authority and
will have a fighting chance.
This theory is plausible, but it works only if security is provided
sustainably, not temporarily. No one will defy the warlords and
death squads if they are still lurking around the corner. And
everyone knows that the Americans are not going to police the
streets of Baghdad for long. If Iraqi security forces do not step
in soon and provide nonsectarian law and order, the surge buys
nothing more than a lull, if that.
The third element is a new commitment to jobs and economic
reconstruction. Here the idea is to provide productive work for the
young men whom military action will drive from the streets. Again,
the theory is plausible. But economic development is a slow-acting
medicine. It is necessary but not sufficient.
That leaves the fourth element of the strategy, by a long shot the
most difficult and important: Induce the Iraqi government to get
off the fence and decisively confront Shiite militias and
ethnic-cleansers. This is crucial. Unless the government shows that
it can and will pacify sectarian Shiite militants whose death
squads radicalize Sunnis and intimidate moderate Shiites, the
downward spiral of sectarian war seems guaranteed to
continue.
The problem, of course, is that the Iraqi government is a sectarian
Shiite coalition, and its parliamentary stability depends on a bloc
controlled by Moktada al-Sadr, the most volatile and powerful of
the country's Shiite warlords. In other words, the government
cannot confront the Shiite warlords without, in effect, confronting
itself -- and possibly splitting and disintegrating.
Think of the Bush plan, then, not primarily as a military
escalation, a change in tactics, or a reconstruction effort, but
first and foremost as a gun to the head of Prime Minister Nuri
Kamal al-Maliki's Iraqi government. "You talk like a unity
government," the U.S. is telling Maliki, "but now we are putting
21,500 men on the ground to see that you act like one."
In the past, the Iraqi government has blocked American forces from
confronting Shiite militants. This time, according to U.S. military
planners, there will be no such constraints. Americans will treat
Shiite militants as toughly as they do the Sunnis -- and, more to
the point, the U.S. will expect Iraq's Shiite-dominated police and
army to cooperate.
And if they don't? Well, the plan has some fairly obvious flaws.
One is that the gun at Maliki's temple targets the United States,
too. America's sole leverage is the implicit threat to leave if the
Iraqi government does not make good on its commitments. For U.S.
forces to leave is, of course, exactly what Shiite militants and
their Iranian allies want. They hope to send the United States
packing and then get on with the business of ethnically cleansing
Baghdad and setting up a Shiastan in southern Iraq. That could set
off a full-blown civil war, but it is one that the Shiite
militants, with their numerical majority and support from Tehran,
think they could win.
And so they are well positioned to wait out what they can
reasonably expect will be America's last attempt at military
pacification. They are also well positioned to undermine and
exhaust it. With tentacles reaching deep into Iraq's security
agencies and government, they can work both sides of the street,
"helping" the Americans by day and terrorizing Iraqis by night. If
I were an Iraqi Shiite militant, that is surely what I would
do.
Can the Maliki government stop them? Does it even want to? Here
Brown's Law (named for Sid Brown, a late Senate staffer) comes into
play: If you tell politicians to do something they can't do, they
will always find a way not to do it. By asking the Maliki
government to suppress and, if necessary, defeat the strongest and
fiercest part of its own coalition, the United States is asking the
government to commit political, and perhaps also personal, suicide
-- all for the sake of making a deal with Sunnis who look, to the
Shiites, eminently untrustworthy. If you were Maliki, would you do
that?
It's understandable, therefore, that Baghdad has responded to the
surge plan with a sour ambivalence that is almost palpable.
Confronted with an impossible choice between the Sadrists and the
Americans, Maliki will find a way not to choose. Then it will be
the United States that faces an impossible choice. Either the
Pentagon draws back from confronting Shiite militants and
effectively abets their low-grade civil war with the Sunnis (the
current situation, more or less), or it confronts the Sadrists and
other Shiite militants pretty much on its own.
Going to war against the Shiites would be a nightmare, and everyone
knows it. American forces could soon find themselves in firefights
not only with tens of thousands of armed and angry Shiite militants
but also with Iraqi police and army units, in or out of uniform.
The Pentagon could win such a conflict militarily, Keane told Rose,
"but in my judgment we should avoid it at all costs, and try to
resolve it politically."
In effect, Keane appears to be saying that the plan works at an
acceptable cost only if the United States can pacify the Shiite
militants without forcibly confronting them. To me, and possibly
also to the Sadrists, this looks like what gamblers call a
bluff.
So why shouldn't the Democratic Congress block such an unpromising
strategy? Three reasons point, I think, independently in the same
direction.
First, the Constitution. It provides for one commander-in-chief,
not 536. A determined president can evade all but the tightest
congressional attempts to override his military decisions, and any
sufficiently tight congressional strictures are likely to
emasculate the presidency and fracture the Congress.
Second, politics. Blocking the president's last-resort plan would
divide the country for years to come. Many Republicans would
believe that the war was winnable and that Democrats lost it. If
the United States is going to leave Iraq, it should do so when even
Republicans agree that there is little reason to stay -- which they
will, if Bush's Hail Mary pass fails.
Third, morality. America has not quite discharged its debt to Iraq.
Apart from evacuating as many as possible of those Iraqis who
personally aided the American effort, the United States can do
nothing for moderate and peace-loving Iraqis if the Baghdad
government is determined to press or abet a sectarian agenda. A
tragedy will unfold. But if there is any chance that the Iraqi
government might yet be salvageable, then the United States owes it
to the Iraqis to find out.
Once the surge takes place, Americans are likely to know in a
matter of months whether the Maliki government is serious about
pacifying Shiite militants, coming to terms with Sunnis, and
cleaning up the ministries and security forces. If not, Washington
can begin withdrawing forces and shift into damage-control mode --
not without guilt, but at least with certainty.
© Copyright 2007 National Journal
Jonathan Rauch is a senior writer and columnist for National
Journal and a frequent contributor to Reason. The article was
originally published by National Journal.
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