The neocons have learned nothing from five years of catastrophe

Their zealous advocacy of the invasion of Iraq may have been a disaster, but 
now they want to do it all over again - in Iran 

Francis Fukuyama
Wednesday January 31, 2007
The Guardian 

The United States today spends approximately as much as the rest of the world 
combined on its military establishment. So it is worth pondering why it is 
that, after nearly four years of effort, the loss of thousands of American 
lives, and an outlay of perhaps half-a-trillion dollars, the US has not 
succeeded in pacifying a small country of some 24 million people, much less in 
leading it to anything that looks remotely like a successful democracy. 

One answer is that the nature of global politics in the first decade of the 
21st century has changed in important ways. Today's world, at least in that 
band of instability that runs from north Africa and through the Middle East, 
sub-Saharan Africa and central Asia, is characterised by numerous weak and 
sometimes failed states, and by transnational actors who are able to move 
fluidly across international borders, abetted by the same technological 
capabilities that produced globalisation. States such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, 
Iraq, Lebanon, Somalia, Palestine and a host of others are not able to exercise 
sovereign control over their territory, ceding power and influence to terrorist 
groups such as al-Qaida, political parties-cum- militias such as Hizbullah in 
Lebanon, or various ethnic and sectarian factions elsewhere. 

American military doctrine has emphasised the use of overwhelming force, 
applied suddenly and decisively, to defeat the enemy. But in a world where 
insurgents and militias deploy invisibly among civilian populations, 
overwhelming force is almost always counterproductive: it alienates precisely 
those people who have to make a break with the hardcore fighters and deny them 
the ability to operate freely. The kind of counterinsurgency campaign needed to 
defeat transnational militias and terrorists puts political goals ahead of 
military ones, and emphasises hearts and minds over shock and awe. 

A second lesson that should have been drawn from the past five years is that 
preventive war cannot be the basis of a long-term US nonproliferation strategy. 
The Bush doctrine sought to use preventive war against Iraq as a means of 
raising the perceived cost to would-be proliferators of approaching the nuclear 
threshold. Unfortunately, the cost to the US itself was so high that it taught 
exactly the opposite lesson: the deterrent effect of American conventional 
power is low, and the likelihood of preventive war actually decreases if a 
country manages to cross that threshold. 

A final lesson that should have been drawn from the Iraq war is that the 
current US government has demonstrated great incompetence in its day-to-day 
management of policy. One of the striking things about the performance of the 
Bush administration is how poorly it has followed through in accomplishing the 
ambitious objectives it set for itself. In Iraq, the administration has acted 
like a patient with attention-deficit disorder. The US succeeded in organising 
efficiently for key events such as the handover of sovereignty on June 30 2004, 
or the elections of January 30 2005. But it failed to train Iraqi forces, 
failed to appoint ambassadors, failed to perform due diligence on contractors 
and, above all, failed to hold accountable those officials most responsible for 
these and other multiple failures. 

This lack of operational competence could in theory be fixed over time, but it 
has important short-term consequences for American grand strategy. 
Neoconservative theorists saw America exercising a benevolent hegemony over the 
world, using its enormous power wisely and decisively to fix problems such as 
terrorism, proliferation, rogue states, and human-rights abuses. But even if 
friends and allies were inclined to trust America's good intentions, it would 
be hard for them not to be dismayed at the actual execution of policy and the 
amount of broken china this particular bull left behind. 

The failure to absorb Iraq's lessons has been evident in the neoconservative 
discussion of how to deal with Iran's growing regional power, and its nuclear 
programme. Iran today constitutes a huge challenge for the US, as well as for 
America's friends in the Middle East. Unlike al-Qaida, Iran is a state, deeply 
rooted historically (unlike Iraq) and flush with resources as a result of 
energy price rises. It is ruled by a radical Islamist regime that - 
particularly since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad' s election in June 2005 - has turned in 
a disturbingly intolerant and aggressive direction. 

The US unintentionally abetted Iran's regional rise by invading Iraq, 
eliminating the Ba'athist regime as a counterweight, and empowering Shia 
parties close to Tehran. It seems reasonably clear that Iran wants nuclear 
weapons, despite protestations that its nuclear programme is only for civilian 
purposes; nuclear energy makes little sense for a country sitting on some of 
the world's largest oil reserves, but it makes sense as the basis for a weapons 
programme. It is completely rational for the Iranians to conclude that they 
will be safer with a bomb than without one. 

It is easy to outline the obstacles to a negotiated end to the Iranian 
programme, but much harder to come up with an alternative strategy. Use of 
force looks very unappealing. The US is hardly in a position to invade and 
occupy yet another country, especially one three times larger than Iraq. An 
attack would have to be conducted from the air, and it would not result in 
regime change, which is the only long-term means of stopping the WMD programme. 
It is hard to have much confidence that US intelligence on Iranian facilities 
is any better than it was in the case of Iraq. An air campaign is much more 
likely to build support for the regime than to topple it, and will stimulate 
terrorism and attacks on American facilities and friends around the globe. The 
US would be even more isolated in such a war than during the Iraqi campaign, 
with only Israel as a certain ally. 

None of these considerations, nor the debacle in Iraq, has prevented certain 
neoconservatives from advocating military action against Iran. Some insist that 
Iran poses an even greater threat than Iraq, avoiding the fact that their 
zealous advocacy of the Iraq invasion is what has destroyed America's 
credibility and undercut its ability to take strong measures against Iran. 

All of this could well be correct. Ahmadinejad may be the new Hitler; the 
current negotiations could be our Munich accords; Iran could be in the grip of 
undeterrable religious fanatics; and the west might be facing a 
"civilisational" danger. I believe that there are reasons for being less 
alarmist. Iran is, after all, a state, with equities to defend - it should be 
deterrable by other states possessing nuclear weapons; it is a regional and not 
a global power; it has in the past announced extreme ideological goals but has 
seldom acted on them when important national interests were at stake; and its 
decision-making process appears neither unified nor under the control of the 
most radical forces. 

What I find remarkable about the neoconservative line of argument on Iran, 
however, is how little changed it is in its basic assumptions and tonalities 
from that taken on Iraq in 2002, despite the momentous events of the past five 
years and the manifest failure of policies that neoconservatives themselves 
advocated. What may change is the American public's willingness to listen to 
them. 

· This is an edited extract from After the Neocons by Francis Fukuyama, 
published in paperback by Profile books at £7.99
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