http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=18705

 

The Iraq Surrender Report Post Mortem

Can anyone imagine Ronald Reagan appointing a blue-ribbon panel, partly
comprised of his political enemies, and ordering it to produce a report that
would tell him how to deal with the Soviet Union?

Perhaps the most odious aspect of Iraq Study Group report was that it linked
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with our decision to remove Saddam Hussein
from power, as if both were imperialist depredations of the Middle East,
wrongs for which America must atone. And in so doing, the report not only
sold out our troops lost in this war and those still there fighting, but it
sold out Israel, our most trusted ally in the region.

It was good news for those of us who hope our children and grandchildren
will be able to enjoy the benefits of still free Western Civilization to see
the report and its messengers mostly repudiated.

Our Base Must Not Go Wobbly Now

A recent op-ed, "The Iraq Commission Can
<http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=18480> 't Undo the Failures of
Others," written by the Chicago Tribune's Steve Chapman is indicative of
what many Americans, some even in conservative circles, can't understand
about the forces at play in Iraq. 
 
Historians have observed that many of the great civilizations of the past
didn't just fall to superior armies. They essentially committed suicide.
Chapman's piece is indicative of an alarmingly widespread suicidal
misperception here in the West that holds that we can somehow retreat and
talk our way out of the realities associated with 9/11, realities such as an
ascendant militarized Islam and its state-sponsored jihadists, the danger of
a Western Europe slipping into the Middle East orbit and the looming threat
of a nuclear Iran. His essay is filled with false assertions built upon
rewritten bogus history so much so that I nearly had to wonder if Chapman
hadn't already purchased his prayer rugs. But here is the good news and a
theme I will return to often in these columns-facts are stubborn things.
 
Stubborn Facts

Echoing what some former supporters of the Iraq War are now averring,
Chapman writes, "the invasion was a doomed enterprise from the start."
Really? The U.S. military removed the Iraqi regime, subduing organized
resistance in 18 days and did so with an amazingly low loss of life, an
unprecedented military and humanitarian event in all of human history. Iraq
has now held three free and fair elections and the percentage of people who
turned out to vote is greater than in the United States. Saddam Hussein is
not running a terrorism university south of Baghdad (try Googling Salman Pak
to learn about the thousands of terrorists he was training his training camp
in Iraq.). And Iraq is not diverting billions to Security Council members
through the oil-for-food program so as to get sanctions lifted which would
have allowed Saddam to continue making WMD's that he used so effectively in
his war against Iran and against his own people. In short, the good news is
that the American led coalition of countries has accomplished much, is much
closer to success than failure and has no need to make apologies to anyone
including our own American left. 

>From a geographic standpoint the country is mostly pacified. The current
hostilities are largely the product of assorted left-over Baathists and
freelance jihadists who've infiltrated the country from other Islamic
countries who are being funded and supplied munitions by Iran and Syria. The
bulk of Iraqi's want us to stay. The good news is that we have freed
millions of Iraqi Kurds, Iraqi Shiites and women from a despotic rule and
created a vast pool of potential intelligence operatives vital to our future
success. 

The Lawrence of Arabia Corollary

What no Western leader from either the political or diplomatic communities
will likely ever say publicly, even the largely reviled necons won't say, is
that one of the tactics that is in play in Iraq is aimed at the larger war
against international, state-sponsored terrorism and is the one used by the
Allies in World War I to dismantle the Germany ally, the Ottoman empire. At
the outbreak of the Great War, the Ottomans retained a hold on modern
Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, and the Arabian Peninsula.

The British field operation mounted to defeat the Ottomans was staffed by a
brilliant Oxford-educated Arabist, T.E. Lawrence, whose fame was renewed by
Hollywood and whose task it was to train, equip and most importantly inspire
the Arab revolt. At the outset, he organized and commanded a few thousand
primitive Islamic Bedouin horse and camel-mounted warriors to fight a
guerilla war against a vastly larger mechanized army of Islamic Turks.
Essentially, he became a field commander in an operation that pitted Islamic
freedom fighter against Islamic overlord, an operation which dispatched to
history the militant Islamic Ottoman Empire, a civilization that only 200
years earlier threatened to conquer all of Europe. (More on this
all-important, largely forgotten piece of history in my next edition.)

By the spring of 1918, as the war in the Middle East began to cascade down
against the hated occupying Turks and Germans, Lawrence's Bedouin army was
swelling in numbers. The Bedouin were emboldened and now ready to attack
head on their retreating overlords. What was left of the German and Turkish
armies headed north into Syria, quitting their Mediterranean and Red Sea
cities and strongholds, which they had held for 500 years. While in pursuit,
Lawrence's diary records that his Bedouin cavalry came upon a small village
named Tafas, where all the Arab inhabitants, men, women and children had
been brutally massacred by the embittered vanquished Germans and the Turks.
For the first time in his command, Lawrence gave the order to attack the
enemy and to take no prisoners. Perhaps what passes for failure in Iraq is
just due the fact that we have not been ruthless enough. Perhaps the
freelance jihadists and militia members simply don't fear us enough. 

The issue of how much force needs to be applied is, for the experts, running
this war. (Harry Reid has even come out with a qualified support for more
troops.) But the concept of using Islamic freedom fighters to fight Islamic
overlords, those who are today's state sponsors of terror, is a proven
strategy. And the good news is that it is at work now in both Iraq and
Afghanistan and must be used to dilute fundamentalist Islam's essential
aggression toward the West in new not fewer theaters. 

Vast Numbers of Intel Operatives Needed

In Frederick Kagan's new book, "Finding the Target: The Transformation of
American Military Policy," he makes the point that it is not sufficient that
we affect lightening fast victories as we did in Afghanistan and Iraq if,
years later, we're still losing soldiers to primitive suicide bombers and
improvised explosive devices. What is also necessary is human intelligence
and know how, men and women with intimate knowledge of the enemy, its
culture and its language, and most importantly with the ability to
infiltrate terrorist cells. The good news is that we have the resources. Our
budget for intelligence gathering among all agencies is $30 billion
annually. The other good news is that with the liberation of Afghanistan and
Iraq, we now have access to vast pools of manpower necessary for forward
intelligence gathering vital to the war on terrorists and their state
sponsors.

In the 4th century B.C., a 21-year-old Macedonian general with less than
30,000 soldiers, traveling on foot, conquered the entire Persian Empire and
subdued the entire Middle East. For Chapman and others to maintain that we
can't subdue Bagdad is to maintain that this country that led the conquest
of Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany is no longer a great power.

In Chapman's attempt at a clever summation he writes, "The Iraq study group
can be criticized for not offering a reliable path to victory. But that's
like blaming Noah for the flood."

No, Mr. Chapman, that's like blaming the Iraq Study Group and people like
you for acting the part of Neville Chamberlin and for emboldening our
enemies such as the new Iranian reincarnation of Adolf Hitler. The hard and
bitter truth is the path to victory is not through further negotiation,
capitulation, retreat, or appeasement. It runs through Tehran and Damascus. 



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