Info about subscribing or unsubscribing from this list is at the bottom of this 
message.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://snipurl.com/olau

America in Iraq Three Years Later
Why we should leave
by Brian Katulis

Originally published in the San Jose Mercury News on March 19, 2006

The gruesome discovery of dozens of men found shot to death
execution-style last week provided more evidence that on the eve of the
third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, the country teeters on the
brink of an all-out sectarian civil war.

Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, recently
told a Senate committee that sectarian violence was now becoming a greater
security concern than the bloody Sunni-led insurgency that has claimed
thousands of American and Iraqi lives. And in a speech Monday, President
Bush made reference twice to various groups' attempts to ignite a civil
war among Iraq's fractious Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds.

But even as the president suggested that the facts on the ground were
changing, he offered no change in U.S. strategy. ``We will not lose our
nerve,'' Bush declared, reaffirming his ``stay the course'' posture.

Abizaid did tell reporters Thursday that the United States was still
planning on reducing the number of U.S. troops in Iraq if the battling
factions manage to form a unity government. But he did not give any
specifics on how many troops could leave, nor has the administration set
any timeline for withdrawal.

But keeping U.S. troops indefinitely in Iraq will do nothing to calm
growing tensions between Iraq's Sunnis and Shiites, who are by far the
largest group in the country and in the government. That anger has only
worsened as some Sunnis waged an insurgency to try to retake control of
the country they ran for decades and, more recently, as Shiite-dominated
police and military have been accused of torturing Sunnis and operating
death squads.

No good military options exist. What is needed is a political deal, a
power-sharing compromise devised by elected Iraqi leaders. Without a deal
that equitably divides Iraq's oil wealth and gives all the major political
factions a stake in the new federal government, Iraqis will have little
incentive to build a unified state.

One effective way to get all sides to make a deal is to say we're going to
leave Iraq -- and set a timetable for doing so.

Such a plan has three other major advantages. It will take the strain off
our ground forces, which have been pushed to the breaking point. It will
allow the United States to redeploy many of the troops stationed in Iraq
to long-neglected hot spots in the war on terror. And it will deprive
terrorists worldwide of a rallying cry against the United States, which
they have portrayed as an occupation force in a Muslim-majority country.

At the center of America's Iraq debate is what to do about U.S. troops.
Some leaders, such as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., argue that the United
States should send more troops. But ``extra'' troops do not exist; the
U.S. Army has been stretched thin by three years of continuous deployment
in Iraq. And increasing U.S. troop presence would further inflame a
precarious situation in Iraq by feeding perceptions of occupation; nearly
all Iraqis reject U.S. troop increases. The American people also do not
support this option: Only one in 10 favor increasing troops.

President Bush espouses linking troop withdrawals with conditions in Iraq,
a position also vocally endorsed by Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., among
others. But this is a recipe for quagmire. Conditions do not have a chance
of improving until Iraqis understand that the U.S. military is not
planning to serve as a crutch indefinitely.

Some policy analysts have proposed keeping the troop levels the same but
using them differently. One proposal -- by Stephen Biddle at the Council
on Foreign Relations -- would have the United States pick sides and use
its military power to force a political solution. That proposal, explained
in the accompanying article, is almost certain to fail, as have other U.S.
attempts to micromanage Iraq's opaque politics over the last three years.

The reality is that the U.S. military is neither inclined nor qualified to
meddle deeply in Iraqi politics; it does not have enough people who speak
Arabic and understand Iraqi politics and culture.


Some want out now

Still others -- Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa. among them -- have argued for a
rapid withdrawal. But a precipitous departure risks all-out civil war that
could draw in Iraq's neighbors and close off any possibility for Iraqi
security forces -- which now number more than 240,000 -- to stand on their
own.

There are two key problems with America's current debate on Iraq. First,
it is narrowly focused on the troops, ignoring the fact that the
diplomatic and economic levers the United States has at its disposal will
have a greater chance of stabilizing Iraq. Second, it fails to examine
Iraq in the broader context of the global threats the United States faces.

The best alternative is a balanced plan named strategic redeployment,
which calls for a gradual drawdown of U.S. forces from Iraq over the next
two years and which has the backing of former Senate leader Tom Daschle of
South Dakota and Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean.

The plan began circulating in Washington in September after Lawrence Korb,
a former Reagan administration assistant defense secretary, and I
published a paper on it at the Center for American Progress, a Washington
think tank.

The proposal says the United States should draw down its troop presence
from its present level of 136,000 to 60,000 by the end of the year, and to
virtually zero by the end of 2007. It also encourages more vigorous
diplomacy in the region and in Iraq, to bring the country's factions
together, and redeploys some of the troops leaving Iraq to other countries
where anti-American terrorists appear to be gaining footholds.

The gradual drawdown would allow U.S. troops to continue providing crucial
support to the nascent Iraqi security forces. (The performance of Iraqi
security forces, while it has not met expectations, has by most accounts
improved.) But the plan also clears the way for a political solution and
recognizes that current troop levels are unsustainable without a draft.


Army needs relief

It has become clear that if we still have more than 130,000 ground
soldiers in Iraq a year from now, we will destroy the all-volunteer Army.
Keeping such a large contingent of troops there will require the Pentagon
to send many units back to Iraq for a third time and to activate reserve
and Guard forces a second or third time. To paraphrase Vietnam-era Army
Gen. Maxwell Taylor, while we sent the Army to Iraq to save Iraq, we now
have to redeploy the Army to save the Army.

Under strategic redeployment, all Guard and reserve troops would be
demobilized and would immediately return to the United States. This would
allow the Guard and reserve to return to their policies of troops not
spending more than one year out of five on active duty and let the Guard
focus on shoring up gaps in homeland security.

Approximately 20,000 soldiers would be sent this year to bolster U.S. and
NATO efforts in Afghanistan and support counterterrorist operations in
Africa and Asia. In Afghanistan, more troops are urgently needed to beat
back the resurging Taliban forces and to maintain security throughout the
country. In the Horn of Africa, countries like Somalia remain a breeding
ground for terrorists.

Another 14,000 of the soldiers serving in Iraq would be positioned nearby
in Kuwait starting this year. Along with a Marine expeditionary force
located offshore in the Persian Gulf, these ``over the horizon'' forces
would be well-positioned to strike at any terrorist camps in Iraq and
guard against any major acts that risk further destabilizing the region,
such as an incursion of conventional forces from Turkey or Iran into Iraq.

Even with all those redeployments, the number of soldiers deployed
overseas in the war on terror would drop by more than 40,000 in the first
year. This would enable the Army and Marines to return to the time-tested
policy of allowing a soldier or Marine to spend at least two months at
home for every month deployed abroad.

The key to strategic redeployment is that it acknowledges up front that
Iraq's problems cannot be solved by American boots on the ground. A
timetable for withdrawal will spur Iraq's battling factions to try harder
to reach a compromise before U.S. troops leave. But U.S. leaders should
also actively work to help Iraqi leaders negotiate and to draw in leaders
from the region.

The redeployment of U.S. forces from Iraq requires that Iraq's neighbors
play a more active role in supporting Iraq's stability and reconstruction.
Iraq's neighbors have a better chance of persuading recalcitrant Iraqis to
compromise than we do. It was, after all, regional diplomacy and
engagement that put an end to Lebanon's civil war. Thursday's announcement
that Iran and the United States had agreed to hold talks on how to halt
Iraq's sectarian violence was welcome news.


Bold action needed

Until our leaders take more bold steps to motivate others to provide help,
our troops are likely to find themselves increasingly in the cross-fire of
sectarian and ethnic conflict. In that case, the United States may end up
exacerbating the tensions Gen. Abizaid is worried about and may be forced
to choose sides in what may be an emerging full-blown sectarian civil war.

Not setting a timeline holds the United States hostage to terrorists and
cynical Iraqi politicians like Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, who blamed the United
States for the recent Sunni-Shiite violence. Americans, in the end, will
be safer if our Army is rested and ready to take on necessary assignments,
if our National Guard and reserve are home to respond to terrorism or
other disasters and if terrorists can no longer use Iraq as a recruiting
tool. The time has come for decisive action to put the United States back
in charge of its national security.


Brian Katulis is director of democracy and public diplomacy on the
National Security Team at the Center for American Progress. Katulis, who
worked at the Department of State during the Clinton administration, wrote
this article for Perspective.

_____________________________

Note: This message comes from the peace-justice-news e-mail mailing list of 
articles and commentaries about peace and social justice issues, activism, etc. 
 If you do not regularly receive mailings from this list or have received this 
message as a forward from someone else and would like to be added to the list, 
send a blank e-mail with the subject "subscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or you 
can visit:
http://lists.enabled.com/mailman/listinfo/peace-justice-news  Go to that same 
web address to view the list's archives or to unsubscribe.

E-mail accounts that become full, inactive or out of order for more than a few 
days will become disabled or deleted from this list.

FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the 
information in this e-mail is distributed without profit to those who have 
expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational 
purposes.  I am making such material available in an effort to advance 
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, 
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair 
use' of copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright Law.

Reply via email to