-Caveat Lector-

http://www.spiked-online.com/printable/00000006DCFA.htm
Article24  March 2003
Making a mess
by Brendan O'Neill


On Friday the war in Iraq was, apparently, 'going well'. One report claimed
that 'the success of the US invasion shows that the right course of action
has been taken' (1).

Today, The Times (London) heralds the 'dawning of war's harsh reality', as
British and US

forces apparently 'suffered jolt after jolt in their advance towards
Baghdad' (2).

Watching the coverage (and trying to see through the 'fog of war'), it
seems that American

and British forces faced some fairly average wartime problems over the
weekend: scrappy battles in the south, friendly fire incidents, the death
of some troops and the capture of others. Yet some reports now claim
that it's all going horribly wrong, and that the invasion, and the military
strategy itself, are on 'very shaky ground'. What's going on?

The perception of 'war gone wrong' reveals as much about America's
cautious military

strategy as it does about events on the ground. Having launched a war
with the aim of doing as little as possible to achieve its ends - and a
military strategy that stressed avoiding risky action and hand-to-hand
combat - military commanders now seem surprised that they may actually
have to fight. It is the wishful-thinking element of the military strategy, and
America and Britain's own defensiveness, that makes the current situation
seem so very 'shaky'.

>From the outset, the stated aim of the war was to do as little as necessary
to get rid of

Saddam's regime. Some US commanders expressed their hope that the Iraqi
leadership would simply implode once America and Britain started dropping
bombs. According to the Los Angeles Times, Pentagon officials hoped that
'shock and awe' bombing would 'stun the Iraqi system and plunge it into
such disarray that mutinies, coups or civil unrest will break out, isolating
Saddam from his forces' (3).

Other US officials hoped that, after coalition forces dropped their loads
over Baghdad, Iraqi

dissidents would finish off Saddam by themselves. General Richard Myers,
chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, wished upon a star that, having
witnessed America's power, Iraqis would 'clean their own stable' (4). In
military circles, this became known as the preferred 'silver bullet' outcome
- where Iraqis would take out their leader once they had seen the ferocity
of America's war machine.

After this strategic emphasis on doing not very much to topple Saddam's
regime, allied forces

now face 'pockets of resistance' apparently popping up all over the place.
When one of the USA's professed military aims was to show its hand and
then wait for things to collapse/ implode/work themselves out, the
existence of resistance must come as a bit of a shock.

At times, the US military seemed to hope (against hope) that a propaganda
war, or a 'Psy-

Ops war', would be enough to defeat Saddam's regime, instead of an all-out
military campaign. In Washington's military bunkers, officials discussed the
use of 'effects' and 'demonstrations of power' as means of overthrowing
Saddam's regime. In the run-up to war, one report said: '"Shock and awe" is
the latest Pentagon buzzword for an American blitz against Iraq that, if war
comes, will seek to defeat Saddam Hussein with "effects" rather than the
physical destruction of enemy troops or their resources.' (5)

Having elevated 'effect' over engagement, it seems that reality now appears
rather

frightening. When US commanders hoped that 'shock and awe' would be
enough to terrify Saddam's regime into surrender, it must come as a blow
to realise that more hard work will be needed - perhaps even scrappy
battles on the ground.

Consider Basra. Before the war, US officials talked about Basra as a relative
pushover. Basra

is a city with a large anti-Saddam Shi'ite population, and American
commanders hoped that its residents would welcome Western forces,
allowing coalition forces to 'capitalise on any scene of liberation and beam
it to a sceptical world' (6).

But, like everywhere else, Basra appears to have some of those dreaded
'pockets of

resistance'. Coalition forces have ended up dithering on the outskirts of
Basra, uncertain of whether to go in and face urban combat. The
difference between the strategy and reality in relation to Basra captures
the deep divide between the 'effects' of the military planning and reality of
the military campaign.

It may even be the cautiousness of the allied military strategy that is
buoying up the Iraqi

resistance. Many reports claim that small groups of Saddam's Republican
Guard are being sent to towns like Umm Qasr and Basra to hold off the
advancing US and UK forces by locating themselves in urban areas with
high numbers of civilians. If this is true, then the Iraqis would appear simply
to be exploiting the US strategy of avoiding urban combat and civilian
casualties.

In the build-up to war, US Marine Corps Major General James Mattis said,
'We'd much rather

go round a city if we can, even if the main road goes through it', claiming
that 'urban areas will be avoided if possible' (7). Now that the war has
started, the US military has aborted a large number of operations that
could potentially put civilians at risk. On 23 March 2003, the New York
Times reported that 'senior American commanders have avoided bombing as
many as three dozen high-priority Iraqi targets for fear of civilian
casualties' (8).

Given the caution about urban combat and the defensiveness about civilian
casualties, it

would hardly be surprising if Iraqi troops exploited such concerns for their
own ends. In war, each side exploits what it perceives to be the
weaknesses of the other. Perhaps the 'stiffer than expected' Iraqi
resistance that all the reports now refer to is itself a product of America's
uncertain strategy.

The crisis in the war is of the coalition forces' own making. What they are
finding out the hard

way is that risk-averse military strategies don't translate very well on the
ground. So there remain few objective barriers to the all-powerful America
storming Iraq and defeating Saddam's inferior forces; instead, it seems to
be a lack of subjective determination that has contributed to the current
crisis.

Read on:


spiked-issue: War on Iraq
(1) Analysts say Iraq war is going well, Christian Bourge, United
International Press, 21 March 2003
(2) 'Dawning of war's harsh reality', Tim Reid and Roland Watson, The Times
(London), 24 March 2003
(3) Will 'shock and awe' be sufficient?, William M Arkin, Los Angeles Times,
16 March 2003
(4) Will 'shock and awe' be sufficient?, William M Arkin, Los Angeles Times,
16 March 2003
(5) Will 'shock and awe' be sufficient?, William M Arkin, Los Angeles Times,
16 March 2003
(6) Taking Basra key to strategy, Patrick E Tyler, LA Daily News, 18 March
2003
(7) Civilian casualties a big worry for Iraq attackers, Sean Maguire, Reuters,
12 March 2003
(8) Rumsfeld says important targets have been avoided, Eric Schmitt, New
York Times, 23 March 2003





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