At War

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jmf

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If you have been wondering why strong leadership in our government seems to have dried up, the following, from the Wall Street Opinion Journal, has it nailed. This is something that those of us at retirement age, "knew," but couldn't express quite as well as the author below. I copied and pasted this essay without adding or subtracting anything.

AT WAR

White Guilt and the Western Past

Why is America so delicate with the enemy?

BY STEELE

There is something rather odd in the way America has come to fight its wars since World War II.

For one thing, it is now unimaginable that we would use anything approaching the full measure of our military power (the nuclear option aside) in the wars we fight. And this seems only reasonable given the relative weakness of our Third World enemies in Vietnam and in the Middle East. But the fact is that we lost in Vietnam, and today, despite our vast power, we are only slogging along--if admirably--in Iraq against a hit-and-run insurgency that cannot stop us even as we seem unable to stop it. Yet no one--including, very likely, the insurgents themselves--believes that America lacks the raw power to defeat this insurgency if it wants to. So clearly it is America that determines the scale of this war. It is America, in fact, that fights so as to make a little room for an insurgency.

Certainly since Vietnam, America has increasingly practiced a policy of minimalism and restraint in war. And now this unacknowledged policy, which always makes a space for the enemy, has us in another long and rather passionless war against a weak enemy.

Why this new minimalism in war?

It began, I believe, in a late-20th-century event that transformed the world more profoundly than the collapse of communism: the world-wide collapse of white supremacy as a source of moral authority, political legitimacy and even sovereignty. This idea had organized the entire world, divided up its resources, imposed the nation-state system across the globe, and delivered the majority of the world's population into servitude and oppression. After World War II, revolutions across the globe, from India to Algeria and from Indonesia to the American civil rights revolution, defeated the authority inherent in white supremacy, if not the idea itself. And this defeat exacted a price: the West was left stigmatized by its sins. Today, the white West--like Germany after the Nazi defeat--lives in a kind of secular penitence in which the slightest echo of past sins brings down withering condemnation. There is now a cloud over white skin where there once was unquestioned authority.

I call this white guilt not because it is a guilt of conscience but because people stigmatized with moral crimes--here racism and imperialism--lack moral authority and so act guiltily whether they feel guilt or not.

They struggle, above all else, to dissociate themselves from the past sins they are stigmatized with. When they behave in ways that invoke the memory of those sins, they must labor to prove that they have not relapsed into their group's former sinfulness. So when America--the greatest embodiment of Western power--goes to war in Third World Iraq, it must also labor to dissociate that action from the great Western sin of imperialism. Thus, in Iraq we are in two wars, one against an insurgency and another against the past--two fronts, two victories to win, one military, the other a victory of dissociation.

The collapse of white supremacy--and the resulting white guilt--introduced a new mechanism of power into the world: stigmatization with the evil of the Western past. And this stigmatization is power because it affects the terms of legitimacy for Western nations and for their actions in the world. In Iraq, America is fighting as much for the legitimacy of its war effort as for victory in war. In fact, legitimacy may be the more important goal. If a military victory makes us look like an imperialist nation bent on occupying and raping the resources of a poor brown nation, then victory would mean less because it would have no legitimacy. Europe would scorn. Conversely, if America suffered a military loss in Iraq but in so doing dispelled the imperialist stigma, the loss would be seen as a necessary sacrifice made to restore our nation's legitimacy. Europe's halls of internationalism would suddenly open to us.

Because dissociation from the racist and imperialist stigma is so tied to legitimacy in this age of white guilt, America's act of going to war can have legitimacy only if it seems to be an act of social work--something that uplifts and transforms the poor brown nation (thus dissociating us from the white exploitations of old). So our war effort in Iraq is shrouded in a new language of social work in which democracy is cast as an instrument of social transformation bringing new institutions, new relations between men and women, new ideas of individual autonomy, new and more open forms of education, new ways of overcoming poverty--war as the Great Society.

This does not mean that President Bush is insincere in his desire to bring democracy to Iraq, nor is it to say that democracy won't ultimately be socially transformative in Iraq. It's just that today the United States cannot go to war in the Third World simply to defeat a dangerous enemy.

White guilt makes our Third World enemies into colored victims, people whose problems--even the tyrannies they live under--were created by the historical disruptions and injustices of the white West. We must "understand" and pity our enemy even as we fight him. And, though Islamic extremism is one of the most pernicious forms of evil opportunism that has ever existed, we have felt compelled to fight it with an almost managerial minimalism that shows us to be beyond the passions of war--and thus well dissociated from the avariciousness of the white supremacist past.

Anti-Americanism, whether in Europe or on the American left, works by the mechanism of white guilt. It stigmatizes America with all the imperialistic and racist ugliness of the white Western past so that America becomes a kind of straw man, a construct of Western sin. (The Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo prisons were the focus of such stigmatization campaigns.) Once the stigma is in place, one need only be anti-American in order to be "good," in order to have an automatic moral legitimacy and power in relation to America. (People as seemingly disparate as President Jacques Chirac and the Rev. Al Sharpton are devoted pursuers of the moral high ground to be had in anti-Americanism.) This formula is the most dependable source of power for today's international left. Virtue and power by mere anti-Americanism. And it is all the more appealing since, unlike real virtues, it requires no sacrifice or effort--only outrage at every slight echo of the imperialist past.

Today words like "power" and "victory" are so stigmatized with Western sin that, in many quarters, it is politically incorrect even to utter them. For the West, "might" can never be right. And victory, when won by the West against a Third World enemy, is always oppression. But, in reality, military victory is also the victory of one idea and the defeat of another. Only American victory in Iraq defeats the idea of Islamic extremism. But in today's atmosphere of Western contrition, it is impolitic to say so.

America and the broader West are now going through a rather tender era, a time when Western societies have very little defense against the moral accusations that come from their own left wings and from those vast stretches of nonwhite humanity that were once so disregarded.

Europeans are utterly confounded by the swelling Muslim populations in their midst. America has run from its own mounting immigration problem for decades, and even today, after finally taking up the issue, our government seems entirely flummoxed. White guilt is a vacuum of moral authority visited on the present by the shames of the past. In the abstract it seems a slight thing, almost irrelevant, an unconvincing proposition. Yet a society as enormously powerful as America lacks the authority to ask its most brilliant, wealthy and superbly educated minority students to compete freely for college admission with poor whites who lack all these things. Just can't do it.

Whether the problem is race relations, education, immigration or war, white guilt imposes so much minimalism and restraint that our worst problems tend to linger and deepen. Our leaders work within a double bind. If they do what is truly necessary to solve a problem--win a war, fix immigration--they lose legitimacy.

To maintain their legitimacy, they practice the minimalism that makes problems linger. What but minimalism is left when you are running from stigmatization as a "unilateralist cowboy"? And where is the will to truly regulate the southern border when those who ask for this are slimed as bigots? This is how white guilt defines what is possible in America. You go at a problem until you meet stigmatization, then you retreat into minimalism.

Possibly white guilt's worst effect is that it does not permit whites--and nonwhites--to appreciate something extraordinary: the fact that whites in America, and even elsewhere in the West, have achieved a truly remarkable moral transformation. One is forbidden to speak thus, but it is simply true. There are no serious advocates of white supremacy in America today, because whites see this idea as morally repugnant. If there is still the odd white bigot out there surviving past his time, there are millions of whites who only feel goodwill toward minorities.

This is a fact that must be integrated into our public life--absorbed as new history--so that America can once again feel the moral authority to seriously tackle its most profound problems. Then, if we decide to go to war, it can be with enough ferocity to win.

Mr. Steele, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, is author, most recently, of "White Guilt: How Blacks and Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era," published this week by HarperCollins.
 
Aside from the sociological discourse in the article, which I won't get into, the article misses entirely the fact that the war being fought in Iraq is totally and entirely different from that of WWII. WWII was a clash of societies, an all-out battle of one country against another, with civilians either targeted directly or simply ignored due to military concerns. Militarily appropriate in a war to destroy Germany and Japan as world powers, this sort of wanton destruction would NOT be appropriate in a battle of liberation where the hearts and minds of the populace must be won. Blow them up willy-nilly, and there's nobody to liberate.

"Enough ferocity to win" works in wars where you're trying to destroy an enemy's country, not liberate the people therein. We can't firebomb en masse (or nuke) insurgents that we can't even differentiate from the population in general, and since we're trying to help that population and not subdue it, the way the war is fought is different.

The comparison of the strategic situation in Iraq to that of WWII is apples and oranges, IMHO.
 
...the war being fought in Iraq is totally and entirely different from that of WWII. WWII was a clash of societies, an all-out battle of one country against another, with civilians either targeted directly or simply ignored due to military concerns. Militarily appropriate in a war to destroy Germany and Japan as world powers, this sort of wanton destruction would NOT be appropriate in a battle of liberation where the hearts and minds of the populace must be won. Blow them up willy-nilly, and there's nobody to liberate.

"Enough ferocity to win" works in wars where you're trying to destroy an enemy's country, not liberate the people therein. We can't firebomb en masse (or nuke) insurgents that we can't even differentiate from the population in general, and since we're trying to help that population and not subdue it, the way the war is fought is different.

I disagree. Over the last few years I have come to the same conclusion as the WSJ on this subject. Indeed, this IS a clash of societies and WWII-style conflict may be the only plausible answer. Why is the war in Iraq "different"? According to your reasoning we did not liberate Japan and Germany, when in fact I think most of the world (even Japanese and Germans) are grateful for being treated so well AFTER having been defeated.

I remember a few years back when we very carefully smart-bombed most of the strategic targets in Bagdad, and took great care not to hit civillian areas. I distinctly remember an Iraqi being interviewed after several weeks of this. He replied (paraphrasing), "That's it?!? The most powerful nation on earth stikes against us and we still have electricity? We suffered more under Saddam's purges. The U.S. is a paper tiger!"

So much for winning the hearts and minds.
 
Granted you can't compare WWII to the war in Iraq because the war in Iraq was a war of choice. There is a strong case to be made for the war and a strong case to be made against it. But right or wrong, once the decision to go to war was made, we should have followed the Powell Doctrine and went in with overwhelming force, rather than trying to do it on the cheap, as advocated by Rumsfeld. The author of the article completely ignores the fact that Collin Powell developed an effective battle strategy in the late 20th century. Of course Collin Powell doesn't suffer from the "white guilt" of which the author writes. Perhaps this is reason enough to draft the man for president.
 
Make me President - I'm white, and I feel no guilt for the past wrongs of anyone (except my own, which are relatively minor compared to those of which "white civilization" is accused). If I were to be in charge of the war in Iraq or anywhere else, absolutely overwhelming force would be used. This would accomplish a number of goals:

1) Win the war at hand very quickly;

2) Minimize US casualties;

3) Deter anyone else who'd like to fornicate with us (most especially China); and

4) Dispel the naive notion that "war never solved anything." BS, war put an end to the Nazis and the Japanese Empire, and that alone is enough to prove the point to me.

Oh, and we ARE in a clash of civilizations. Lose this battle against a few thousand terrorists armed primarily by 2 pissant countries (Syria and Iran), and we will guarantee ourselves many decades more of conflict and probably hundreds of thousands of dead (if not more). Speaking of Syria and Iran, the President should openly show photos or movies of IEDs and terrorists coming into Iraq from both countries, then give each of them 1 - repeat 1 - chance to stop, and if they fail to do so then let them learn what the richest and most advanced nation on earth can do.

Someday we as a society will get sick of this "white man's guilt" crap. I just hope it won't take a mushroom cloud over one of our cities to get there. If so, woe unto our enemies.
 
all we can hope for sam is that if that does happen it wakes the cry babies up and when we go to war agianst them we do it to win.
 
Can someone pleaes make clear what exactly this "clash of civilizations" is that we're fighting over again?

A bunch of terrorists from Saudi Arabia attack the US, therefore:

We're at war with Iran, Syria, and Iraq??? And all the civilians in those countries too?

I'm not sure I understand this colossal clashing. Who exactly is threatening America, how do they threaten us, and how does invading and bombing Iraq, Iran, and Syria repel the threat?
 
SS,
a read of the "Islamo-supremacist" literature will soon discover that the secular orientation of Western civilization marks us as being part of the "body of Satan" to paraphrase the obvious. You should be able to find a copy of Sayeed Qutb's "Milestones" fairly easily. Be attentive to his parrot of the Koranic accusation that Jews and Christians take their rabbies and priests as their lords. Note also that according to Sayeed Qutb it is redundant to call Islam civilized as it is the only true civilization according to him. If that book is too hard to find, you can find "Dajjal, the Anti-Christ" by Ahmed Thomson. According to him the Jews and Freemasons conspire to rule the world. The solution? Theocracy.

The democracy process that began in independent churches in Holland and England around 1580-1640 is anti-thetical to the style of rule of a self-appointed theocratic elite like the Imams and Mullahs. Give a reading to "Mysticism and Democracy" and "The Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism". The foundation of our nation is from the Puritan ideal. Therefore the abstract ideals of the antagonists are exclusive. Therefore this is a clash of civilizations.
 
Can someone pleaes make clear what exactly this "clash of civilizations" is that we're fighting over again?

A bunch of terrorists from Saudi Arabia attack the US, therefore:

We're at war with Iran, Syria, and Iraq??? And all the civilians in those countries too?

I'm not sure I understand this colossal clashing. Who exactly is threatening America, how do they threaten us, and how does invading and bombing Iraq, Iran, and Syria repel the threat?

You go right to the heart of this debate.

There are generally two different opinions on the current situation.

1) that the 9-11 terrorists were a small group of fanatics, essentially criminals, that do not represent the majority of the Muslim world. Thus, we need to catch them, try them in court as criminals, and cut deals with other countries to help us catch these criminals.

2) The other school of thought is that the 9-11 terrorists are the product of massive support of the Muslim world. They were trained and financed by Wahibists in high places (as well as massive public support) of Middle Eastern nations. Unable to battle the U.S. conventially, they have given up on producing weapons such as fighter-jets and are instead producing suicide bombers. Note that Saddam directly compensated the families of suicide bombers. Thus, the nations themselves are directly responsible. There really is a clash of civilizations, a "war". Yes, there are many Muslims that do not support terrorism. But there were also many Germans that did not support Facism. That did not stop us from bombing Dresden.

I am of the latter opinion. I think that the only difference between WWII and today's conflict is the weapons (suicide bombers rather than blitzkrieg) and the very real lack of consensus in this country. In WWII the entire nation rallied to the cause. Now, we face very real resistance within our own borders. This is due to a lack of leadership.
 
a read of the "Islamo-supremacist" literature will soon discover that the secular orientation of Western civilization marks us as being part of the "body of Satan" to paraphrase the obvious. You should be able to find a copy of Sayeed Qutb's "Milestones" fairly easily. Be attentive to his parrot of the Koranic accusation that Jews and Christians take their rabbies and priests as their lords. Note also that according to Sayeed Qutb it is redundant to call Islam civilized as it is the only true civilization according to him. If that book is too hard to find, you can find "Dajjal, the Anti-Christ" by Ahmed Thomson. According to him the Jews and Freemasons conspire to rule the world. The solution? Theocracy.

I understand this, and I'm familiar with the Al Ikhwan movement and its political arms (like Hamas.) What I'm curious about is this:

The people you mentioned are bitter enemies of the former Iraqi leadership, Syrian leadership, and Iran. Why then are we attacking those countries, and not attacking at all the financial backers of the Al Ikhwan (Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Qatar)?

Why does total war encompass enemies of the people you identify as the source of the problem?

Flechette,
2) The other school of thought is that the 9-11 terrorists are the product of massive support of the Muslim world. They were trained and financed by Wahibists in high places (as well as massive public support) of Middle Eastern nations. Unable to battle the U.S. conventially, they have given up on producing weapons such as fighter-jets and are instead producing suicide bombers. Note that Saddam directly compensated the families of suicide bombers. Thus, the nations themselves are directly responsible. There really is a clash of civilizations, a "war". Yes, there are many Muslims that do not support terrorism. But there were also many Germans that did not support Facism. That did not stop us from bombing Dresden.

It's true that Saddam was a bitter foe of Israel, and supported evil terrorism against the Israeli people. But it's equally obvious that he did not do this for religious reasons like the Wahhabists in Saudi Arabia do.

Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Qatar are the Wahhabist states in the middle east. Why are we attacking and destroying their enemies, the Baathists and Shia?

I see your point about firebombing Dresden, but this would be more akin to firebombing London in response to Nazi aggression. If Wahhabi support networks are the problem, why haven't we attacked the Wahhabis?

How does destroying the most initimate and nearby military opponents of Wahhabism help to end the threat that international wahhabi extremism poses?
 
If Wahhabi support networks are the problem, why haven't we attacked the Wahhabis?

I'll give you a hint: it's thick, black, sticky, and keeps our economy chugging along. Also, it's bought and sold in U.S. greenbacks.
 
Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Qatar are the Wahhabist states in the middle east. Why are we attacking and destroying their enemies, the Baathists and Shia?

I see your point about firebombing Dresden, but this would be more akin to firebombing London in response to Nazi aggression. If Wahhabi support networks are the problem, why haven't we attacked the Wahhabis?

How does destroying the most initimate and nearby military opponents of Wahhabism help to end the threat that international wahhabi extremism poses?

Good observation. I have long held that we attacked the wrong country. If I were Bush I would have attacked Saudi Arabia. Iraq was probably more attractive for strategic as well as oil reasons (ie, not to 'take' Iraqi oil as much as to not distrupt Saudi oil).
 
Good observation. I have long held that we attacked the wrong country. If I were Bush I would have attacked Saudi Arabia. Iraq was probably more attractive for strategic as well as oil reasons (ie, not to 'take' Iraqi oil as much as to not distrupt Saudi oil).

I agree, but that leaves us with not really having a total war against the rest of the middle east (since those people oppose and hate the groups that attacked our country as much as we do.)
 
I'll give you a hint: it's thick, black, sticky, and keeps our economy chugging along. Also, it's bought and sold in U.S. greenbacks.

I agree with that also, but that leaves a further question: How does making war on their enemies help to promote victory in the "clash of civilizations"?
 
I agree, but that leaves us with not really having a total war against the rest of the middle east (since those people oppose and hate the groups that attacked our country as much as we do.)

Yup. The current administration is trying to have a 'war' without really having a war. No rationing, no war bonds, no draft, no oil problems...it is like being 'half-pregnant'; not plausible.

I agree with that also, but that leaves a further question: How does making war on their enemies help to promote victory in the "clash of civilizations"?

It doesn't. It is my belief that we should have very quickly taken the Saudi oil fields, just like we took oil fields in WWII, and then moved to wipe out the nations that created the 9-11 hijackers. This would have required an actual declaration of war (not merely a resolution) and real leadership.
 
It doesn't. It is my belief that we should have very quickly taken the Saudi oil fields, just like we took oil fields in WWII, and then moved to wipe out the nations that created the 9-11 hijackers.

Holding those oil fields against the mother of all insurgencies would have proven an interesting task, I think.
 
It doesn't. It is my belief that we should have very quickly taken the Saudi oil fields, just like we took oil fields in WWII, and then moved to wipe out the nations that created the 9-11 hijackers. This would have required an actual declaration of war (not merely a resolution) and real leadership.

So you would've elected to leave Iran, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Jordan alone, right? They didn't create the 9-11 hijackers, and they don't fund the Ikhwan like the Saudis do.

I'm not comofortable with talk of "wiping out nations". We didn't do that in WWII (there are still Germans and Japanese), and I'm not sure how with the nature of terrorist groups you could actually hold a populace responsible. The problem with wiping out the idea of terrorism is the same as wiping out Nazism, if you ask me:

Stopping germany stopped one powerful group of anti-semites, but it didn't end anti-semitism or anti-semitic attacks. If we'd gone on to exterminate every last German citizen, I doubt that would've stopped anti-semitism either...so why should we expect to end anti-Americanism by "wiping out" middle eastern nations?
 
So you would've elected to leave Iran, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Jordan alone, right? They didn't create the 9-11 hijackers, and they don't fund the Ikhwan like the Saudis do.

In general, yes. However, if you are of the opinion that this is a "conflict between civilizations" then you need to consider that many of these nations may be legitmate targets. For example, Italy never directly attacked us but we invaded them due to their allegiance to Facism.

I'm not comofortable with talk of "wiping out nations".

I wasn't referring to genocide; I was referring to destroying the government, economy and function of the nation that we are at war with. Example: We destroyed the Third Reich but did not kill every last German. Also note that we did not destroy the Third Reich by practicing a "minimalist" war strategy; we broke the whole country, occupied it for 40 years and fully committed to the war.
 
It seems to me that most folks are way too focussed on Iraq and 9/11. They're important, yeah, no doubt, but they're just part of a much larger picture.

Ask yourself about the "Why?" of the Jihadist actions in the southern Philippines, Indonesia, Africa and many other places: Places where we were not involved in the internal affairs there. "Yankee Imperialism" was not a factor in the killings that have happened and are happening.

The opening post and the article speak to the reasons for the "How" of what we are doing, more than why we're in this war. Built into the article are clues as to why we might wind up losing the war that's going on about world domination. That is, the Jihadists have said it's all about world domination, but we don't seem to be willing to believe them.

"Liberal Guilt" has long been known as a factor in our messed-up ways of "helping" the "disadvantaged", ever since LBJ's Great Society got going. The article is an attempt to extend "Liberal Guilt" to "White Guilt" in an effort to describe why we're messed up in how we're attempting to deal with today's world and its conflicts.

One way to compare civilizations is to compare the productivity. By that I mean goods and services for export. For instance, the oil-rich countries of the middle east essentially ONLY sell oil. The total of all those countries' exports of any manufactured goods is less than the GDP of Denmark. The same sort of thing holds for most African nations. They have no manufacturing base; they export natural resources, often in raw-material form.

What we call "civilization" is shaped or formed by economic activity. It shapes the social structure of a society. When a lack of economic activity on a world scale is coupled with a militant religion, you then have an "other" sort of civilization, rather than our more familiar western style.

That's what it looks like to me, anyhow...

Art
 
Ask yourself about the "Why?" of the Jihadist actions in the southern Philippines, Indonesia, Africa and many other places: Places where we were not involved in the internal affairs there. "Yankee Imperialism" was not a factor in the killings that have happened and are happening.

Not involved in the Philippines, Indonesia, or Africa?? Don't we still have a major base in the Phillipines? Indonesia and most of Africa have both had significant US backed international interventions, military and financial.

But they don't react like the Saudis do because the "jihadis" in those places aren't even remotely related to the jihadis in Saudi Arabia and Iran. They are mainly ethnic minorities with tribal customs that don't take well to corrupt leaders in Manila, Bangkok, or Jakarta. So even though the US is involved in all of those places, they could care less what's going on in America, because America isn't the most significant barrier to achieving their political goals.

I don't believe the Jihadists have even said it's about world domination, and that includes the Arab radicals. What they say repeatedly is: "no western invaders in Muslim lands." I think they are flat out wrong in their assessment of what's good for the "muslim lands", but I've yet to see any serious push to conquer the world (except for that supposed 12 step plan that was released a few months back.)

To me, these struggles are nothing new under the sun. If we try to take lessons from dealing with Saudi hijackers and apply them to Iranian human-waves, we'll likely fail. Likewise, the proposition that you might better understand what's going on in Mindanao or South Thailand by studying what some Saudi Cleric says just doesn't wash.

In my opinion, oversimplification and a strange lumping of peoples who are in fact widely separated by language, culture, and religion only adds fuel to the fire, and leads us to support misguided policies, like, for example, invading Iraq instead of taking on the financial backers of the most dangerous international terrorist networks.
 
Here's an interesting take on the Iraq war from foriegnpolicy.com (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3430&print=1):

Cut and Run? You Bet.

By Lt. Gen. William E. Odom
May/June 2006

Why America must get out of Iraq now.
Courtesy US DOD

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.
 
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