I heard Bush's guru Karen Hughes use language (on U.S. NPR) that comes
directly from the White House play-book, as reported in SLATE by Fred
Kaplan:
>David Ignatius recently reported in the Washington Post that the "hot
book" among top Iraq strategists this season is Lewis Sorley's A
Better War, which argues that we were on the verge of winning the
Vietnam War just as political pressures forced Richard Nixon to pull
out. The war started to go our way in 1972, Sorley contends, when Gen.
William Westmoreland retired as U.S. commander, and his successor,
Gen. Creighton Abrams, abandoned the "search and destroy" strategy in
favor of "clear and hold." Westmoreland had focused on attrition and
body counts; Abrams started clearing insurgents out of villages, one
by one, then holding each area securely.

>The commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Gen. John Abizaid, was seen
reading the book in September. It's on the bookshelves of many senior
officers in Baghdad. It also caught the eye of State Department
counselor Philip Zelikow. Most pertinent of all, Ignatius notes that
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice practically quoted from it in her
Oct. 19 testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: "Our
politico-military strategy has to be clear, hold and build—to clear
areas from insurgent control, to hold them securely, and to build
durable, national Iraqi institutions."

>The idea—which is similar to the counterinsurgency strategy that
Andrew Krepinevich Jr. recently laid out in Foreign Affairs—is
appealing in theory. The problem—in Vietnam then and in Iraq now—is
the "hold" part. American troops could, and can, "clear" an area of
insurgents. But the South Vietnamese army couldn't "hold" it
securely—couldn't keep the North Vietnamese army from coming back and
retaking it. And neither the American nor the Iraqi army can keep the
insurgents from coming back to cities like Fallujah. The Americans
lack the numbers, and the Iraqis as yet lack the wherewithal or the
training. Until that situation is changed, "clear and hold" is a
daydream.

>So, why are the country's leaders conducting this war so cavalierly?
William Kristol, one of the leading neocons who advocated this war,
blames Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. "I don't think he ever
really had his heart in it," Kristol is quoted as saying in last
Sunday's Washington Post Magazine. At every stage of the war, Rumsfeld
pushed for doing less—fewer troops, skimpier supplies, shorter
training time, and so forth.

>This theory doesn't wash. By most accounts, Rumsfeld was bent on war
with Iraq from the first moments after 9/11. His push for a small
invasion force—which he demanded, and micromanaged, in the face of
fierce resistance by the Army establishment—stemmed not from tepidity
but from deep enthusiasm for "military transformation," a theory that
touts light, lithe, high-tech forces. It was a theory that seemed
redeemed by the unconventional invasion of Afghanistan. And, as things
turned out, it was further vindicated by the first month of the war in
Iraq—the battlefield phase of the war.

>Which leads us to the ultimate source of the problem: Rumsfeld and
most of the others who planned the war thought the battlefield phase
would be the only phase; contrary to advice from the CIA and the State
Department's regional specialists (whom the White House and Pentagon
brusquely ignored), they truly believed that the aftermath wouldn't be
a problem. Saddam would be ousted, freedom would be rung, flowers and
candies would be flung, Ahmad Chalabi and his militia would ascend to
power, and our troops would be home by Christmas, if not by the Fourth
of July.

>The civilian hawks and neocons weren't alone in this
shortsightedness. Military leaders were culpable as well. In 2002, the
Army and Air Force conducted war games that simulated an invasion of a
country resembling Iraq. In both cases, victory was declared with the
toppling of the enemy's leader—not with the accomplishment of the
larger strategic goals. As the real war began in the spring of 2003,
there was no Army field manual on what used to be called "war
termination"—i.e., how to end a war and what to do afterward.

>By summer, it was clear to many that capturing Baghdad wasn't
synonymous with victory. But the mantra within Bush's inner circle, on
all matters of high policy, was firm: Never admit mistakes, never
alter course. All hell broke loose in Iraq, and our leaders let it. By
the time their attitude changed, and they realized the need for
concessions to reality, it was in many ways too late. They never
forged a coherent new policy, so even their adjustments were fitful
and ad hoc.

>Hence the bizarre attempt to seek a formula for victory from the grim
playbooks of Vietnam. <
--
Jim Devine
"Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own way and let
people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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