Partial Peace, Looming War

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090316/hayden?rel=emailNation

By Tom Hayden
March 1, 2009

President Obama has surprised the national security establishment, 
and not a few in the peace movement, with his Friday commitment to 
pull all American troops out of Iraq by 2011.

The Washington Post's Thomas Ricks predicted in his recent 
authoritative history, The Gamble, that Obama would keep 25,000 to 
50,000 troops in Iraq as a "residual" force indefinitely. Ricks 
reports that generals like David Petraeus and Raymond Odierno were 
expecting at least that many troops, and predicts that the fighting 
will continue for decades.

Obama's announced new policy must shock Ricks and the military 
leaders he extensively interviewed. Obama's official stance comes 
after many months of appearing to support the notion of residual 
forces, which many in the peace movement correctly believed could 
lead to low-visibility counterinsurgency and a permanent military 
occupation. Obama said nothing to dissuade the critics until Friday's 
speech at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.

In debates within the Obama camp, only John Podesta, transition 
adviser and head of the Center for American Progress (CAP) was 
publicly advocating that all troops, including trainers and advisers, 
be withdrawn within one year.

Ricks' book is wrong on another related matter, the role of the 
antiwar movement in this process. Ricks celebrates Petraeus for 
having pacified Iraq in the face of considerable Democratic doubt, 
and for winning the political war at home in 2007-2008. Petraeus's 
stated goal was to speed up the Iraqi clock (the surge) while slowing 
down the American one (the electoral calendar). Ricks says he pulled 
it off. After Petraeus's appearance before Congress in September 
2007, Rick says, domestic criticism faded away. News coverage of Iraq 
sharply declined, as networks began to withdraw from Iraq. The March 
2008 antiwar demonstrations were "tiny," he writes, with fewer than 
1,000 in Washington and 500 in San Francisco.

Ricks is partly right. Democratic party leaders and big donors pulled 
back from the issue of Iraq after Petraeus's testimony, and after a 
MoveOn advertisement accusing the general of betrayal. The resulting 
crisis in the DC hub of antiwar advocates was never resolved, but the 
grassroots peace bloc in the Democratic primaries mushroomed anyway, 
giving Obama a needed edge in Iowa and a string of wins against 
Hillary Clinton.

When there was a choice between supporting Barack Obama and attending 
rallies organized by various Maoists, Trotskyists and neo-anarchists 
opposed to Obama and electoral politics, the grassroots peace 
movement headed for the precincts by the thousands. What appeared to 
Ricks to be a failed antiwar rally in Washington was only evidence 
that the movement was moving on, becoming a voting force in and 
around the Obama campaign.

That turned out to be the right strategy for the peace movement when 
John McCain was defeated in November, but many continued to 
wonder--with good reason--whether Obama was promising nothing more 
than partial peace under a new form of military occupation. Now it is 
clear that somewhere along the way Obama became persuaded that it 
made little sense to leave 50,000 troops in Iraq when the Pentagon 
couldn't win with 150,000, the American economy was collapsing and 
his hands were full in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In Iraq the situation remains unpredictable. A brutal nationalist and 
authoritarian state, with sectarian police and thousands of 
detainees, looms as the result of a seven-year war. Under Odierno's 
command, according to Ricks, tens of thousands of military-aged Sunni 
males (called MAMs) were held in preventive detention. Bob Woodward's 
recent book goes further, crediting a top-secret US program of 
extrajudicial killings for imposing a peace of the dead in Baghdad. 
The Sunni insurgency decided in 2007 that an alliance with the 
Americans would thwart their Al Qaeda rivals while providing 
protection against the Shi'a majority. They were right, and 100,000 
of the so-called Sons of Iraq were paid $20 million per month not to 
shoot at Americans. On the other hand, the Shi'a who already were 
installed in power by the Americans had no reason to fight their 
sponsors, especially when even the militias loyal to Moktada al-Sadr 
chose to take a political path to power, at least for the moment. The 
Iranians will be pleased to see the US troops depart on any schedule, 
and enjoy good relations with whichever Shi'a party prevails in Iraq. 
The festering Kurdish crisis could boil over, but is localized. 
Things could change, but most Iraqis have an interest in seeing the 
Americans implement the "withdrawal agreement." Who knows, they may 
even throw flowers to the retreating troops instead of shoes.

The greater danger from Iraq for Obama may lie at home politically if 
Republicans and the generals, echoed by the mainstream media, protest 
Obama's withdrawal plan as naïve or worse. In Ricks's analysis, Obama 
would not want to risk a confrontation with the military early in his 
presidency:

"Like Clinton, Obama would also face the prospect of a de facto 
alliance between the military and congressional Republicans to stop 
him from making any major changes. "

Since Ricks was wrong about Obama's fortitude, he may be wrong on the 
danger of a backlash as well. The American people are in no mood for 
a "forever war" in Iraq, whatever the malcontents believe in 
Washington think tanks.

That leaves Afghanistan and Pakistan, both in flames. In those 
places, the politics are reversed, with Obama having promised to 
defeat Al Qaeda by using Predators in Pakistan and more ground troops 
in Afghanistan. So far he is keeping his campaign pledges, while 
still proceeding cautiously in developing an overall plan. Neither 
the neoconservatives nor the generals are fully happy with Obama's 
early approach, which they see as pointed towards a diplomatic 
settlement instead of "winning" militarily. On this point, Secretary 
Gates seems to have the president's back, repeatedly warning that no 
military solution is possible.

Nevertheless, Obama is beginning an escalation with 17,000 troops 
bringing the American total in Afghanistan to over 50,000. Except for 
its political rationale, this is a puzzling military gesture. By comparison:

• In South Vietnam, the US deployed 500,000 troops on a battlefield 
of 67,000 square miles containing 19 million people

•n Iraq, we deployed 160,000 troops on a battlefield of 168,745 
square miles, with 26 million people

•n Afghanistan, Obama plans to deploy some 60,000 US troops on a 
battlefield of 250,001 sqare miles with 30 million people

• And in Pakistan he has 100 special ops on the ground, with $400 
million allocated for 85,000 tribal paramilitaries.

The geography and demographics are staggering. Obama cannot possibly 
be considering a military solution while deploying fewer American 
troops on larger and larger battlefields. It is hard to imagine that 
he plans a Vietnam-style escalation either. At the current rate of 
Afghanistan spending, the costs will reach over $1 trillion by the 
end of Obama's first term, while he risks his presidency on economic recovery.

Until a brave few in Congress begin to catch up, the critics of 
Afghanistan policy will have to launch a passionate and substantive 
debate over the "long war" ahead, oppose the 17,000 new troops as 
simply 17,000 more targets for the Taliban, sketch in the content of 
a diplomatic settlement and propose an exit strategy. The first arena 
for debate, recalling the 1965 Vietnam teach-ins on campuses, will be 
the blogosphere. The second will be Congressional hearings, with 
critics at the table. And the third phase is likely to be direct 
dialogue and engagement in the 2010 elections, district by district. 
At this point, however, the movement will have to engage MoveOn and 
many liberal Democrats who are mired in the lingering belief that 
Afghanistan is the "good war." (We might ask, what does that make Pakistan?)

There are still more battlefields in the long war. Obama will have to 
be persuaded to say no to an Israeli strike on Iran while he tries to 
engage Tehran on stability in Iraq and Afghanistan. Ultimately, Obama 
will also find ways to increase support for Palestinian aspirations, 
as the most effective approach to lessening Arab and Islamic support 
for jihad. It's a long way down the road, but his choices of George 
Mitchell as an envoy along with Charles Freeman to a high 
intelligence post are the most progressive and independent Middle 
East appointments in a generation.
--

About Tom Hayden

Tom Hayden is the author of The Other Side (1966, with Staughton 
Lynd), The Love of Possession Is a Disease With Them (1972), Ending 
the War in Iraq (2007) and Writings for a Democratic Society: The Tom 
Hayden Reader (2008).

.


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