The Army War College thinks the Bush Administration has been ignoring 
Afghanistan in its zeal to go after Iraq.


Army War College essay calls Iraq war 'distraction'
By THOMAS E. RICKS
Washington Post

WASHINGTON -- A scathing new report published by the Army War College broadly 
criticizes the Bush administration's handling of the war on terrorism, 
accusing it of taking a detour into an "unnecessary" war in Iraq and pursuing an 
"unrealistic" quest against terrorism that may lead to U.S. wars with states that 
pose no serious threat .

The report, by visiting professor Jeffrey Record, who is on the faculty of 
the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala., warns that as a result of 
those mistakes, the Army is "near the breaking point." It recommends, among 
other things, scaling back the scope of the "global war on terrorism" and instead 
focusing on the narrower threat posed by the al-Qaida terrorist network.

"[The] global war on terrorism as currently defined and waged is dangerously 
indiscriminate and ambitious, and accordingly .�.�. its parameters should be 
readjusted," Record writes. Currently, he adds, the anti-terrorism campaign "is 
strategically unfocused, promises more than it can deliver, and threatens to 
dissipate U.S. military resources in an endless and hopeless search for 
absolute security."

Record, a veteran defense specialist and author of six books on military 
strategy and related issues, was an aide to former Sen. Sam Nunn when the Georgia 
Democrat was chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

His essay, published by the Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute, 
carries the standard disclaimer that its views are those of the author and 
don't necessarily represent those of the Army, the Pentagon, or the U.S. 
government.
But retired Army Col. Douglas C. Lovelace Jr., the director of the Army War 
College's Strategic Studies Institute, whose Web site carries Record's 56-page 
monograph, hardly distanced himself from it. "I think that the substance that 
Jeff brings out in the article really, really needs to be considered," he 
said.

Academic freedom
Publication of the essay was approved by the Army War College's commandant, 
Maj. Gen. David H. Huntoon Jr., Lovelace said. He said he and Huntoon expected 
the study to be controversial, but added, "He considers it to be under the 
umbrella of academic freedom."

Larry DiRita, the top Pentagon spokesman, said he had not read the Record 
study. He added: "If the conclusion is that we need to be scaling back in the 
global war on terrorism, it's not likely to be on my reading list anytime soon."

A 'war of choice'
Many of Record's arguments, such as the contention that Saddam Hussein's Iraq 
was deterred and did not present a threat, have been made before by critics 
of the administration. Iraq, he concludes, "was a war-of-choice distraction 
from the war of necessity against" al-Qaida. But it is unusual to have such views 
published by the War College, the Army's premier academic institution.

In addition, the essay goes further than many critics in examining the Bush 
administration's handling of the war on terrorism.

Record's core criticism is that the administration is biting off more than it 
can chew. "A cardinal rule of strategy is to keep your enemies to a 
manageable number," he writes.

He scoffs at the administration's policy of seeking to transform and 
democratize the Middle East."

The essay concludes with several recommendations. Some are fairly 
non-controversial, such as increasing the size of the Army and the Marine Corps. But 
he 
also says the United States should scale back its ambitions and be prepared to 
settle for a "friendly autocracy" rather than a genuine democracy in Iraq.





Tom Beck

www.mercerjewishsingles.org

"I always knew I'd see the first man on the Moon. I never dreamed I'd see the 
last." - Dr Jerry Pournelle
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