http://gulfnews.com/opinions/columnists/has-the-us-learned-the-lessons-from-iraq-war-1.1160318


Has the US learned the lessons from Iraq war?
With Afghanistan still unresolved, spectre of an Iran conflict looming and Arab 
Spring nations in a nascent state, US policy on Iraq raises questions galore

  a.. By Gordon Robison | Special to Gulf News 
  b.. Published: 20:00 March 19, 2013 
  c.. 

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  a.. Image Credit: Gulf News Archive 
  a.. George W. BushTen years ago, when the Iraq War began, I was a producer in 
CNN’s Kuwait Bureau. For months leading up to that day, I had struggled to 
understand both — why George W. Bush and his administration seemed so 
determined to fight the war and why they were so convinced it would go smoothly.

The answers to those questions have filled many books over the last decade and 
remain the subject of intense debate. What was clear even at the time was that 
the terms of the discussion were badly skewed.

We in the media led earnest conversations about whether or not war would happen 
long after it became obvious that the White House and Pentagon had decided that 
question. We allowed ourselves to be distracted by arguments about what the UN 
inspectors were or were not finding as they moved around Iraq in the winter of 
2002-03 and, in the process, ignored the clear signals the Bush administration 
was sending that the entire exercise was mainly about public relations, at 
least from the American perspective.

A decade later, there is little disagreement in the US that Iraq was a disaster 
of the first order: An avoidable tragedy for America and, on a vastly greater 
scale, for Iraq itself. To the extent that if the war still has any supporters 
at all, they are found on the hard right and among the neoconservative foreign 
policy types who once staffed the Bush administration. These figures tend to 
insist that the Iraq War as a whole was morally, politically and militarily 
sound and would have succeeded if only the planning had been more thorough and 
the post-invasion administration more competent. A few of them persist in 
portraying Iraq’s current deeply flawed, deeply sectarian government as a model 
for the rest of the Middle East.

To America’s credit, this is not a popular viewpoint. Indeed, even before Bush 
left office, it had largely been rejected. By 2007, the war’s most important 
advocates — secretary of defence, Donald Rumsfeld, and his deputies, Paul 
Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith — were out of government. Its earliest military 
commanders, Tommy Franks and Ricardo Sanchez, were retired as was the 
occupation’s civilian administrator, Paul Bremer.

Most of these men were not missed by the wider American public. When the former 
CIA director, George Tenet, published a memoir in 2007, his book tour became a 
painful exercise in black comedy as one interviewer after another browbeat the 
author relentlessly, verbalising an anger that Tenet himself never quite seemed 
to comprehend.

By that time most Americans understood, even if former senior Bush 
administration officials did not, that the most basic answer to the question 
“what went wrong in Iraq” was: First, America probably should not have been 
there to begin with and, second, if the US insisted on going in then there 
ought to have been a back-up plan. Instead, when things on the ground failed to 
unfold in the manner senior officials in Washington had expected, the upper 
levels of the American government retreated into denial and insisted that any 
and all criticism amounted to partisan sniping.

Looking back last week, Stuart Bowen, the soon-to-retire Special Inspector 
General for Iraq Reconstruction, told the US television network MSNBC: “The 
United States wasn’t well-structured to carry out its mission. It shifted in 
the spring of 2003 from a policy of ‘liberate and leave’ to ‘occupy and 
rebuild’; from spending $2 billion (Dh7.35 billion) to $20 billion in the blink 
of an eye. Ultimately, $60 billion [was] appropriated. But there wasn’t an 
integrated interagency capacity to execute the programme.”

A Bush crony, whose appointment was initially viewed sceptically by many in 
Washington, over the last nine years, Bowen has more than proved his 
independence. The question going forward is whether the lessons his office has 
identified will be learned by a new generation of American political leaders.

At the most basic level these involve thinking through the potential 
consequences of one’s actions — the sort of thing that graduate students in 
public policy schools spend a lot of time working on, but which decision-makers 
in the real world often lack the time and expertise to tackle.

The deeper debate, one that has to take place both inside and outside the 
policy world, concerns America’s role in the world and the extent to which the 
projection of military power remains an effective tool of foreign policy. There 
are clear differences of opinion on this score, as Washington’s recent debate 
over the confirmation of Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel (who, as a senator, was 
initially an Iraq War supporter, later a high-profile sceptic) proved.

And what of those in the press? The American media have been widely, and 
justifiably, criticised for their gullibility in the run-up to the March 2003 
invasion. Some were too ready to accept administration assurances that invading 
Iraq would be easy. Too few in the media asked hard questions about how, 
exactly, the US planned to rebuild a country that, in 2003, had been at war or 
under sanctions for more than two decades. Have the lessons of 2003 been 
learned? The current debate over military action and Iran leaves that open to 
question.

Facing a still-unresolved war in Afghanistan, the possibility of a future 
conflict with Iran and an uncertain relationship with all of the governments 
emerging from the Arab Spring, the question for the future is whether 
Washington, the American media and the public at large have learned the lessons 
of this lengthy and unnecessary war. The answer, for now, is that the question 
remains open.

Gordon Robison, a longtime Middle East journalist and US political analyst, 
teaches political science at the University of Vermont.


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