This I got from a free subscription. What do you lot think is the most
likely endgame? Your confidence (or lack of) in the info will also help
decide whether a subscription is warranted given that they send out their
weekly summary free. Sorry it's long.
Adit.

Stratfor: Geopolitical Intelligence Report - August 27, 2007

Endgame: American Options in Iraq

  The latest National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) summarizing the
U.S. intelligence community's view of Iraq contains two critical
findings: First, the Iraqi government is not jelling into an
effective entity. Iraq's leaders, according to the NIE, neither can
nor want to create an effective coalition government. Second, U.S.
military operations under the surge have improved security in some
areas, but on the whole have failed to change the underlying
strategic situation. Both Sunni insurgents and Shiite militias
remain armed, motivated and operational.

Since the Iraq insurgency began in 2003, the United States has had
a clear strategic goal: to create a pro-American coalition
government in Baghdad. The means for achieving this was the
creation of a degree of security through the use of U.S. troops. In
this more secure environment, then, a government would form, create
its own security and military forces, with the aid of the United
States, and prosecute the war with diminishing American support.
This government would complete the defeat of the insurgents and
would then govern Iraq democratically.

What the NIE is saying is that, more than four years after the war
began, the strategic goal has not been achieved -- and there is
little evidence that it will be achieved. Security has not
increased significantly in Iraq, despite some localized
improvement. In other words, the NIE is saying that the United
States has failed and there is no strong evidence that it will
succeed in the future.

We must be careful with pronouncements from the U.S. intelligence
community, but in this case it appears to be stating the obvious.
Moreover, given past accusations of skewed intelligence to suit the
administration, it is hard to imagine many in the intelligence
community risking their reputations and careers to distort findings
in favor of an administration with 18 months to go. We think the
NIE is reasonable. Therefore, the question is: What is to be done?

For a long time, we have seen U.S.-Iranian negotiations on Iraq as
a viable and even likely endgame. We no longer believe that to be
the case. For these negotiations to have been successful, each side
needed to fear a certain outcome. The Americans had to fear that an
ongoing war would drain U.S. resources indefinitely. The Iranians
had to fear that the United States would be able to create a viable
coalition government in Baghdad or impose a U.S.-backed regime
dominated by their historical Sunni rivals.

Following the Republican defeat in Congress in November, U.S.
President George W. Bush surprised Iran by increasing U.S. forces
in Iraq rather than beginning withdrawals. This created a window of
a few months during which Tehran, weighing the risks and rewards,
was sufficiently uncertain that it might have opted for an
agreement thrusting the Shiites behind a coalition government. That
moment has passed. As the NIE points out, the probability of
forming any viable government in Baghdad is extremely low. Iran no
longer is facing its worst-case scenario. It has no motivation to
bail the United States out.

What, then, is the United States to do? In general, three options
are available. The first is to maintain the current strategy. This
is the administration's point of view. The second is to start a
phased withdrawal, beginning sometime in the next few months and
concluding when circumstances allow. This is the consensus among
most centrist Democrats and a growing number of Republicans. The
third is a rapid withdrawal of forces, a position held by a fairly
small group mostly but not exclusively on the left. All three
conventional options, however, suffer from fatal defects.

Bush's plan to stay the course would appear to make relatively
little sense. Having pursued a strategic goal with relatively fixed
means for more than four years, it is unclear what would be
achieved in years five or six. As the old saw goes, the definition
of insanity is doing the same thing repeatedly, expecting a
different outcome. Unless Bush seriously disagrees with the NIE, it
is difficult to make a case for continuing the current course.

Looking at it differently, however, there are these arguments to be
made for maintaining the current strategy: Whatever mistakes might
have been made in the past, the current reality is that any
withdrawal from Iraq would create a vacuum, which would rapidly be
filled by Iran. Alternatively, Iraq could become a jihadist haven,
focusing attention not only on Iraq but also on targets outside
Iraq. After all, a jihadist safe-haven with abundant resources in
the heart of the Arab world outweighs the strategic locale of
Afghanistan. Therefore, continuing the U.S. presence in Iraq, at
the cost of 1,000-2,000 American lives a year, prevents both
outcomes, even if Washington no longer has any hope of achieving
the original goal.

In other words, the argument is that the operation should continue
indefinitely in order to prevent a more dangerous outcome. The
problem with this reasoning, as we have said, is that it consumes
available  ground forces , leaving the United States at risk in
other parts of the world. The cost of this decision would be a
massive increase of the U.S. Army and Marines, by several divisions
at least. This would take several years to achieve and might not be
attainable without a draft. In addition, it assumes the insurgents
and militias will not themselves grow in size and sophistication,
imposing greater and greater casualties on the Americans. The
weakness of this argument is that it assumes the United States
already is facing the worst its enemies can dish out. The cost
could rapidly grow to more than a couple of thousand dead a year.

The second strategy is a phased withdrawal. That appears to be one
of the most reasonable, moderate proposals. But consider this: If
the mission remains the same -- fight the jihadists and militias in
order to increase security -- then a phased withdrawal puts U.S.
forces in the position of carrying out the same mission with fewer
troops. If the withdrawal is phased over a year or more, as most
proposals suggest, it creates a situation in which U.S. forces are
fighting an undiminished enemy with a diminished force, without any
hope of achieving the strategic goal.

The staged withdrawal would appear to be the worst of all worlds.
It continues the war while reducing the already slim chance of
success and subjects U.S. forces to increasingly unfavorable
correlations of forces. Phased withdrawal would make sense in the
context of increasingly effective Iraqi forces under a functional
Iraqi government, but that assumes either of these things exists.
It assumes the NIE is wrong.

The only context in which phased withdrawal makes sense is with a
redefined strategic goal. If the United States begins withdrawing
forces, it must accept that the goal of a pro-American government
is not going to be reached. Therefore, the troops must have a
mission. And the weakness of the phased withdrawal proposals is
that they each extend the period of time of the withdrawal without
clearly defining the mission of the remaining forces. Without a
redefinition, troop levels are reduced over time, but the fighters
who remain still are targets -- and still take casualties. The
moderate case, then, is the least defensible.

The third option is an immediate withdrawal. Immediate withdrawal
is a relative concept, of course, since it is impossible to
withdraw 150,000 troops at once. Still, what this would consist of
is an immediate cessation of offensive operations and the rapid
withdrawal of personnel and equipment. Theoretically, it would be
possible to pull out the troops but leave the equipment behind. In
practical terms, the process would take about three to six months
from the date the order was given.

If withdrawal is the plan, this scenario is more attractive than
the phased process. It might increase the level of chaos in Iraq,
but that is not certain, nor is it clear whether that is any longer
an issue involving the U.S. national interest. Its virtue is that
it leads to the same end as phased withdrawal without the continued
loss of American lives.

The weakness of this strategy is that it opens the door for Iran to
dominate Iraq. Unless the Turks wanted to fight the Iranians, there
is no regional force that could stop Iran from moving in, whether
covertly, through the infiltration of forces, or overtly. Remember
that Iran and Iraq fought a long, vicious war -- in which Iran
suffered about a million casualties. This, then, simply would be
the culmination of that war in some ways. Certainly the Iranians
would face bitter resistance from the Sunnis and Kurds, and even
from some Shia. But the Iranians have much higher stakes in this
game than the Americans, and they are far less casualty-averse, as
the Iran-Iraq war demonstrated. Their pain threshold is set much
higher than the Americans' and their willingness to brutally
suppress their enemies also is greater.

The fate of Iraq would not be the most important issue. Rather, it
would be the future of the Arabian Peninsula. If Iran were to
dominate Iraq, its forces could deploy along the Saudi border. With
the United States withdrawn from the region -- and only a residual
U.S. force remaining in Kuwait -- the United States would have few
ways to protect the Saudis, and a limited appetite for more war.
Also, the Saudis themselves would not want to come under U.S.
protection. Most important, all of the forces in the Arabian
Peninsula could not match the Iranian force.

The Iranians would be facing an extraordinary opportunity. At the
very least, they could dominate their historical enemy, Iraq. At
the next level, they could force the Saudis into a political
relationship in which the Saudis had to follow the Iranian lead --
in a way, become a junior partner to Iran. At the next level, the
Iranians could seize the Saudi oil fields. And at the most extreme
level, the Iranians could conquer Mecca and Medina for the Shia. If
the United States has simply withdrawn from the region, these are
not farfetched ideas. Who is to stop the Iranians if not the United
States? Certainly no native power could do so. And if the United
States were to intervene in Saudi Arabia, then what was the point
of withdrawal in the first place?

All three conventional options, therefore, contain serious flaws.
Continuing the current strategy pursues an unattainable goal.
Staged withdrawal exposes fewer U.S. troops to more aggressive
enemy action. Rapid withdrawal quickly opens the door for possible
Iranian hegemony -- and lays a large part of the world's oil
reserves at Iran's feet.

The solution is to be found in redefining the mission, the
strategic goal. If the goal of creating a stable, pro-American Iraq
no longer is possible, then what is the U.S. national interest?
That national interest is to limit the expansion of Iranian power,
particularly the Iranian threat to the Arabian Peninsula. This war
was not about oil, as some have claimed, although a war in Saudi
Arabia certainly would be about oil. At the extreme, the conquest
of the Arabian Peninsula by Iran would give Iran control of a huge
portion of global energy reserves. That would be a much more potent
threat than Iranian nuclear weapons ever could be.

The new U.S. mission, therefore, must be to block Iran in the
aftermath of the Iraq war. The United States cannot impose a
government on Iraq; the fate of Iraq's heavily populated regions
cannot be controlled by the United States. But the United States
remains an outstanding military force, particularly against
conventional forces. It is not very good at counterinsurgency and
never has been. The threat to the Arabian Peninsula from Iran would
be primarily a conventional threat -- supplemented possibly by
instability among Shia on the peninsula.

The mission would be to position forces in such a way that Iran
could not think of moving south into Saudi Arabia. There are a
number of ways to achieve this. The United States could base a
major force in Kuwait, threatening the flanks of any Iranian force
moving south. Alternatively, it could create a series of bases in
Iraq, in the largely  uninhabited regions  south and west of the
Euphrates. With air power and cruise missiles, coupled with a force
about the size of the U.S. force in South Korea, the United States
could pose a devastating threat to any Iranian adventure to the
south. Iran would be the dominant power in Baghdad, but the Arabian
Peninsula would be protected.

This goal could be achieved through a phased withdrawal from Iraq,
along with a rapid withdrawal from the populated areas and an
immediate cessation of aggressive operations against jihadists and
militia. It would concede what the NIE says is unattainable without
conceding to Iran the role of regional hegemon. It would reduce
forces in Iraq rapidly, while giving the remaining forces a mission
they were designed to fight -- conventional war. And it would
rapidly reduce the number of casualties. Most important, it would
allow the United States to rebuild its reserves of strategic forces
in the event of threats elsewhere in the world.

This is not meant as a policy prescription. Rather, we see it as
the likely evolution of U.S. strategic thinking on Iraq. Since
negotiation is unlikely, and the three conventional options are
each defective in their own way, we see this redeployment as a
reasonable alternative that meets the basic requirements. It ends
the war in Iraq in terms of casualties, it reduces the force, it
contains Iran and it frees most of the force for other missions.
Whether Bush or his successor is the decision-maker, we think this
is where it must wind up.

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