Time to Quit Iraq (Sort Of)

Ithaca 37

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Many Americans now believe that the United States is depleting its military strength, diplomatic leverage and Treasury to pursue unrealistic aims in Iraq. They are right. Democracy seems to interest few Iraqis, given the widespread Shiite proclivity to follow unelected clerics, the Sunni rejection of the principle of majority rule, and the preference of many Kurds for tribe and clan over elected governments. Reconstruction was supposed to advance rapidly with surging oil export revenues, but is hardly gaining on the continuing destruction inflicted by sabotage and thievery. And in any case, it is unlikely that the new Iraqi interim government will be able to oversee meaningful elections in a country where its authority is more widely denied than recognized.

Yet few Americans are prepared to simply abandon Iraq. For one, they are rightly concerned that to do so would be a mortal blow to America's global credibility and encourage violent Islamists everywhere. An outright withdrawal would leave the interim government and its feeble forces of doubtful loyalty to face the attacks of vastly emboldened Baath regime loyalists, Sunni revanchists, local and foreign Islamist extremists and the ever-more numerous Shiite militias. The likely result would be the defection of the government's army, police and national guard members, followed by a swift collapse and then civil war. Worse might follow in the Middle East - it usually does - even to the point of invasions by Iran, Turkey and possibly others, initiating new cycles of repression and violence.

Thus the likely consequences of an American abandonment are so bleak that few Americans are even willing to contemplate it. This is a mistake: it is precisely because unpredictable mayhem is so predictable that the United States might be able to disengage from Iraq at little cost, or even perhaps advantageously.

Here's why: In Iraq America faces several different enemies, as well as some remarkably unhelpful nominal allies. As things stand, their intense mutual hostility now brings no advantage to the United States. But all could be unbalanced by a well-devised policy of disengagement, and forced to stop harming American interests and possibly even serve them in some degree.

At present, because the United States is fully committed in Iraq, the Shiite followers of the renegade cleric Moktada al-Sadr feel free to attack the same American forces that elsewhere are fighting Sunnis bent on restoring their ancestral supremacy. Many Shiite clerics and the population at large - the very people the Sunnis are hoping to oppress once again - either applaud Mr. Sadr or do nothing to stop him.

But if the Shiites were persuaded that America might truly abandon them to face Saddam Hussein's loyalists alone, it seems certain that they would quickly revert to the attitude of collaboration with the occupation forces they showed in the aftermath of invasion.

Likewise, while some say that the two major powers in the region, Iran and Turkey, would see an anarchical Iraq as an opportunity to expand their influence, that seems unlikely. Rather, a divided Iraq would be a base from which those countries' enemies - especially dissident Kurds - would be able to operate with impunity.

For now, with the United States viewed as determined to stay the course, the hard-liners in Iran can pursue their anti-American vendetta by encouraging the Shiite opposition, supplying Mr. Sadr's militia and encouraging Syria to help Islamist terrorists sneak into Iraq. But an American withdrawal would mean the end of any hopes for a unified, Shiite-led Iraq, which is Iran's long-term goal, and likely a restored Sunni supremacy, which is Iran's greatest fear.

As for Turkey, our ever-more nominal ally, it now seems focused on uniting the Turkmen minority in Iraq under its leadership, while dividing the Kurds. It has done nothing to help the United States in its difficulties - and Turkey could do much, most obviously sharing information collected by its intelligence units operating in Iraq. But if the alternative is an imminent American withdrawal - and a de facto independent Iraqi Kurdistan - Turkey would soon come to heel.


The threat of disengagement would affect the lesser players as well. Kuwait, whose very existence depends on American power, has done little to help. At a time of exploding oil revenues, and with Kuwaiti subcontractors collecting huge sums from Pentagon contracts, the Kuwait Red Crescent is sending only odd truckloads of food into Iraq (and even those figures seem inflated). As for the Saudis, their attitude is exemplified by their recent offer of an Islamic contingent to help garrison Iraq: it sounded courageous at first, but turned out to be a promise of troops other than their own, and was hedged by conditions that made it worse than useless.

Yet Kuwait and Saudi Arabia would be greatly endangered by an anarchical Iraq, which might even allow Iran to invade its southern regions on the pretext of protecting fellow Shiites. Again, the threat of American withdrawal would be apt to concentrate minds wonderfully. The goal would be to get Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to replace the American taxpayer in aiding Iraq; the two could also jointly sponsor peacekeeping troops, in earnest this time, financially rewarding poorer Muslim countries with troops to spare. While deploying such soldiers across Iraq would be a very bad idea - they would be Sunnis of course, and most unwelcome to Iraq's Shiites - they would be fine for the recalcitrant Sunni towns.

This is no diplomatic parlor game. The threat of an American withdrawal would have to be made credible by physical preparations for a military evacuation, just as real nuclear weapons were needed for deterrence during the cold war. More fundamentally, it would have to be meant in earnest: the United States is only likely to obtain important concessions if it is truly willing to withdraw if they are denied. If Iraq's neighbors are too short-sighted or blinded by hatred to start cooperating in their own best interests, America would indeed have to withdraw.

That is a real constraint. Then again, the situation in Iraq is not improving, the United States will assuredly leave one day in any case, and it is usually wise to abandon failed ventures sooner rather than later.

Yes, withdrawal would be a blow to American credibility, but less so if it were deliberate and abrupt rather than a retreat under fire imposed by surging antiwar sentiments at home. (See Vietnam.)

So long as the United States is tied down in Iraq by over-ambitious policies of the past, it can only persist in wasteful futile aid projects and tragically futile combat. A strategy of disengagement would require risk-taking statecraft of a high order, and much competence at the negotiating table. But it would be based on the most fundamental of realities: for geographic reasons, many other countries have more to lose from an American debacle in Iraq than does the United States itself. The time has come to take advantage of that difference.


Edward N. Luttwak is a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the author of "Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace."


http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/18/opinion/18luttwak.html?pagewanted=2
 
An opinion piece from the WSJ yesterday kind of along the same theme.

http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110005488
Bringing Troops Home
Germany no longer gets the benefit of so many U.S. troops.

Tuesday, August 17, 2004 12:01 a.m. EDT

President Bush announced yesterday plans to withdraw 60,000 to 70,000 U.S. troops from Europe and Asia and close hundreds of military facilities abroad, beginning in 2006. Fifteen years after the Berlin Wall fell, U.S. force structure is finally catching up with the reality that the Cold War is over.

The Pentagon said yesterday that two Army divisions would leave Germany; the withdrawal of 12,500 troops from South Korea has already been announced. More specifics are to come, and the redeployment will take place over the course of the next decade.

But it is already clear that there is a lot more to the Bush plan than was evident in the drawdown of troops that took place in the mid-1990s under President Clinton. The aim is to redeploy U.S. forces so that they are better able to address the 21st-century threats of global terrorism, rogue nations and weapons of mass destruction. Some troops will come home, while others will be shifted to new posts in new parts of the world.

This is a good idea on several levels--geographic, political and strategic. The Soviet threat has been replaced by what military analyst Andrew Krepinevich calls an "arc of instability" stretching from the Middle East to India and Pakistan and on to Southeast Asia and China. While it once made sense for U.S. forces to be massed in Germany, it now is preferable for them to be situated closer to the potential threats.

That means a presence in, among other places, Eastern Europe and Central Asia. We know the kinds of threats we are likely to face--U.S. military capabilities are already in the process of being transformed to address them--but it's hard to predict exactly where they will emerge. Pre-9/11 who would have thought U.S. troops would be fighting a war in Afghanistan?
Politically, it means expanding the circle of allies on which the U.S. can depend. One of the lessons of the Iraq war is that allies are putting more restrictions on how U.S. forces based in their territory can be used. Turkey refused to let U.S. forces operate from bases there and Saudi Arabia was reluctant to permit American strikes against Iraq to originate from its soil.

It also means redefining the word "bases." "We're trying to find the right phraseology," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said yesterday. The U.S. will continue to have permanent bases in Germany, he said, but it will also have "forward operating locations" in other countries where smaller numbers of U.S. military personnel will serve temporarily. He gave the examples of landing strips for aircraft in distress or refueling sites. "If you know where they are and you have those arrangements all set beforehand," he said, "it gives you flexibility to do a lot more."

The Bush plan also means a greater reliance on U.S. territory such as Guam and on sea basing. Thanks to advances in technology, the U.S. can launch a precision weapon on just about any target in the world from a warship in international waters--without having to get permission from a foreign government. Also thanks to technology, command-and-control, maintenance and other jobs that once were done on foreign soil can be handled in the U.S.

The effects of the restructuring will be felt in the U.S. Some 100,000 military families and civilian workers will be returning home. Since a high percentage of troops in the volunteer military are married, this change will make life easier for spouses and children. Troops will be more likely to be deployed abroad on temporary assignments while their families stay in the U.S.

On the negative side, the redeployment is likely to further politicize the next round of base closings in the U.S., scheduled for May 2005. The Pentagon says there's 24% excess capacity in domestic bases and that it could save billions of dollars a year by closing unneeded facilities. The Bush plan will give ammunition to Members of Congress of both parties seeking to preserve military pork for their home districts. Senator John Kerry has already latched onto base closings as a campaign issue, calling last week for a moratorium on the process because of the war on terror.
Rethinking America's global bases was one of Mr. Rumsfeld's goals even before 9/11. Yesterday's announcement is the product of a review that took three years and included intensive consultations with U.S. allies. It will have profound consequences for our allies and for the U.S. military. It will also demonstrate that the U.S. government is capable of adapting to changing circumstances in fulfilling its obligation to make the world, and America, a safer place.
 

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