From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
R
Subject: [CubaNews] US risks losing coalition if it hits Iraq

Washington's alleged coalition seems to
be limited to its one active junior partner
with the others providing diplomatic and
logistical cover, rather than armed force,
with their resulting potential for body bags.
=============================

October 12, 2001
US risks losing coalition if it expands war targets

Talk that the US may eventually strike at Iraq
raises concerns about allies' support.

By Howard LaFranchi
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

WASHINGTON - Afghanistan's Taliban government was a
friendless regime before the United States commenced
airstrikes against it this week, and that hasn't changed as
American bombs and missiles continue to hit targets there.
Yet, while the international coalition the US has assembled
is holding firm, that could change once the US moves beyond
a reviled regime to other countries it accuses of harboring
terrorists.

The test case that will try the resolve of countries is
Iraq, many experts believe.

The US has hinted at no specific action beyond its current
mission in Afghanistan, but a letter it presented to the
United Nations this week, warning that military action
against other countries may be necessary, was enough to
touch off speculation.

Military action against Iraq would be a very different
story, leading many observers to dub the initial air
campaign in Afghanistan the easiest chapter of a long and
complex war. Furthermore, some of the hottest anti-US
demonstrations in the wake of this week's strikes are in
Indonesia - the world's largest Muslim country, where
terrorist groups linked to the Al Qaeda organization, the
US's prime target, are known to operate.

Yet Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries with
Islamic extremist groups - including the Philippines and
Malaysia - are friends of the US, which means
counterterrorist action there would be very
different from what is hitting Afghanistan.

For now, even Britain, America's closest ally in the
war's initial phase, is hinting the fight should stick to
Afghanistan and its terrorist-guest-in-residence,
Osama bin Laden.

As the military campaign sets in, a coalition that is global
but actually very thin when it comes to military action is
indicating that the Bush administration's design for
international support was right on target, some experts say.
That design has essentially been to leave most countries on
the sidelines as moral cheerleaders, while the US carries
out the search-and-destroy missions almost alone.

"This is a coalition of variable geometry, where at the
outer limits nothing more is expected than broad political
approval and where for the moment only the US and Britain
are involved in the actual military operations," says John
Chipman, director of the Institute for International and
Strategic Studies in London.

Different from a decade ago
This construction makes the coalition very different from
the one assembled for the Gulf War a decade ago,
Mr. Chipman says, where more than 30 countries
participated to some degree in the military campaign.

"In that case, the US was coming to the assistance of many
countries in the [Persian Gulf] region who were aggrieved
parties," he says. "Here, the US is appealing for support
from many of those same countries as it comes to its
self-defense."

The US is getting some of the political support it worked
hard to rally in the weeks since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. In Egypt, a key US ally, President Hosni Mubarak,
declared Tuesday, "We support all measures taken by the
United States to resist terrorism." But he also renewed
insistence on creation of a Palestinian state.

In Qatar, where the 56-member Organization of the Islamic
Conference began meeting Wednesday, delegates resisted
Iraqi demands that the conference condemn the US strikes.

Publicly, the US is expressing satisfaction with the support
it is garnering, but it is also not pressing governments -
especially of Islamic and Arab countries - for any more
public show of support than they feel they can give in a
delicate situation.

Support among Muslim countries remains important primarily
to help the US demonstrate that, as President Bush says,
this is not a war on Islam. At this point, the support is
relatively painless for many countries to offer.

That feeling may change if other countries are targeted.
"The coalition may very well break up as we move on to other
other phases," says John Hulsman of the Heritage Foundation,
a Washington think tank whose policy analysis broadly
parallels that of the administration.

The Bush security team has debated the necessity of hitting
Iraq as part of the war on terrorism. John Negroponte, US
Ambassador to the UN, visited Iraqi officials there to warn
the country not to think it could take advantage of the US
focus on Afghanistan to make aggressive moves.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Naji Sabri and other Iraqi
officials say they take the US warning about further action
as indication that the US wants to settle old scores from
the Gulf War.

Mr. Hulsman says that although the coalition will begin to
splinter if the US moves against Iraq, it shouldn't matter
to the Bush administration. "This coalition wasn't built for
the sake of the coalition as we've sometimes done in the
past. This time, it's the outcome that matters."

Risking isolation
But others believe allies do matter to the US, and that it
risks dangerous isolation if it handles matters differently
than it is doing with Afghanistan. In this case, the US has
presented compelling evidence, coalition members say.

The suspicion of many countries would be that the US was
"using the situation to tidy up problems with regimes around
the world," London's Chipman says. Europeans worry that any
attempt to extend the campaign to Iraq would alienate not
only Arab and Muslim states but also key European partners,
including Russia - which Bush has worked with particularly
closely.

The Taliban's problem is that it has no friends in the
global community of nations and manifestly few on the
world's streets. "But if the US targets Iraq," Chipman says,
"that [friendless] situation wouldn't be the same."
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Copyright � 2001 The Christian Science Monitor.
All rights reserved.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2001/1012/p2s1-usmi.html




































 


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