Objectives and End-Games in the Middle
East
Remarks to the Institute for Defense Analyses
Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr., USFS (Ret.)
Alexandria,
Virginia, November 19, 2004
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I'd like to thank you for inviting me here this afternoon. I note, however,
that Julian Nall and the other organizers of this
event passed up a perfectly good opportunity to hear me talk about China, a
mostly uplifting story of peace and development, laced with a titillating war
jitter or two over the Taiwan issue, and instead asked me to speak about Emerging
Trends in the Middle East, an altogether depressing set of exceedingly
complex issues on which there is little, if anything, cheery to say.
I will open with some thoughts about why the United States perennially fails to
translate military triumph into political victory. I will then briefly review
the situations in Afghanistan,
Iraq,
and the so-called War on Terror and conclude with some thoughts about how to
turn capitalize on success, mitigate failure, or reverse adverse trends. My
views are my own. They do not represent those of the IDA Board, IDA management,
the Middle East Policy Council, or any organization I am affiliated with. They
are emphatically not the views of the Bush Administration, nor do they
represent the views of its recently defeated opposition. They will very likely invite
as much disagreement as agreement from those present. Nevertheless, I hope you
find them stimulating. I will be brief in order to leave time for discussion.
William Tecumseh Sherman once succinctly observed that "the legitimate
purpose of war is a more perfect peace." It is the political results of
war that translate battlefield successes into victory. And it is the defeated,
not the victors, who decide when the war has ended. No war ends until the
vanquished accept their defeat.
Therefore, "the first question anyone planning to start a war or to
respond with force to an act of aggression should ask is not whether his
nation's force can prevail in battle, though that is indeed a vital question.
He should ask what objectives, once achieved, would justify
ending the war and why anyone on the other side should regard these changes in
the status quo as either temporarily or permanently acceptable. How will the
fighting be ended? On what terms? Negotiated by and
with whom? What happens after the conflict is over? Will the seeds of future
military actions be planted in the terms of the peace?"
As U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia, I put these questions to the first
Bush Administration before our liberation of Kuwait from Saddam Hussein's
occupation. My cables were never answered. There was no war termination
strategy. Generals Schwarzkopf and Khalid bin Sultan met their Iraqi
counterparts at Safwan without political
instructions. Saddam was never forced to accept the political consequences of
his defeat. Therefore he remained in power. And the war never ended. It
continued as low intensity conflict until our March 20, 2003 invasion and
subsequent conquest of Iraq.
The Gulf War thus failed General Sherman's test; it did not produce a better
peace.
I've spent a lot of time trying to understand how a politico-military
integration failure of this magnitude could have occurred. My first instinct
was to blame the nature of coalition warfare. Coalitions harmonize objectives
to the lowest common denominator; they are the enemies of clarity. But, on
further reflection, I have come to the conclusion something more fundamental
was at work, reflecting a basic flaw in the American way of war.
In the Asian tradition of Sunzi and the European
tradition of Clausewitz, war is a means of accomplishing political objectives
that cannot be achieved by less costly means. When the fighting ends,
negotiations between victor and vanquished define the
adjustments - in frontiers, territories, or behavior - necessary to make peace.
Long ago, for example, in our war for independence and the Mexican War
Americans fought that way too. But, the ending of wars through negotiation has
not been our formative experience. Our views of war have been shaped in
existential struggles against enemies we demonized and whose continued
existence we pronounced to be morally unacceptable. In our civil war, in World
War I, and in World War II, as well as in the Cold War, we fought with the
expectation of unconditional surrender and the subsequent reconstruction of our
enemies. Not surprisingly, it is these experiences, rather than the awkward
stalemate in Korea or
dishonorable retreat from Indochina that
inspire us when we go to war. The Spanish-American War, in which military
success against enemy forces preceded any serious effort to concoct war aims,
is also not a model, except perhaps in terms of encouraging us to believe that
we can somehow sort out how to deal with the aftermath of war after we've
destroyed the enemy's combat power.
The American idea of war termination is the annihilation of the enemy's forces
and the temporary replacement of his sovereignty with our own. We seem to have
no idea of how to settle for less than that. In this context, it is hardly
surprising that we should have been unable to formulate a war termination
strategy for the Gulf War, which was fought to repel aggression and restore a
regional balance of power disturbed by the Iran-Iraq War. The failure to craft
a sustainable post-war order for the Gulf and to assign Iraq an appropriate
role in it meant that there was no post-war regional balance. This, in turn,
left the United States
to fill the power vacuum.
Many Americans were inclined to see anything less than the occupation and
reconstruction of Iraq
as an incomplete war, even if that had not been our original objective. The war
was indeed incomplete, but this was not why. The sad fact is that Saddam's
military defeat was never translated into his political humiliation. Thus, our
military triumph was never translated into a political victory over Iraq. Instead,
we showed once again that one can win every battle and prevail in every
military contest of strength and still lose politically. To lose politically,
as we should have learned in Vietnam,
is to be defeated.
This brings me to the conflicts in Afghanistan,
Iraq,
and with terrorists throughout the world today. To gain victory in these
conflicts we must have clear and unwavering objectives. To consolidate victory
in these conflicts we must think through how they should conclude. Where do we
now stand? Let's start with 9/11.
In the more than three years since America was cruelly maimed by terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington, the United States has disrupted the
corporate headquarters of al-Qa`ida, killed much of
its original leadership, and driven from power those who gave it safe haven in
Afghanistan. In doing so, we more or less accomplished our original objectives
of apprehending the perpetrators of 9/11 and punishing their Afghan hosts so as
to deter other countries from sheltering al-Qa`ida or
its like.
But al-Qa`ida has grown new
leaders, reorganized, and expanded its operations internationally. It has, in
short, metastasized, not collapsed or shrunk into irrelevance. The war in Afghanistan,
meanwhile, is largely forgotten here, but it is far from over. It is an
expensive war in every sense. 143 U.S. soldiers have died; 423 have
been seriously injured.
But, as our war with Aghan insurgents continued, we
have often seemed to forget that al-Qa`ida,
not Afghans associated with the Taliban, did 9/11. Unlike al-Qa`ida, this should make the
Taliban not an enemy to be annihilated but a politico-military problem to be
managed as much by political means as by force of arms. We have slain 8,587
Afghan warriors and seriously wounded 25,761. More to the point, we have killed
3,485 Afghan civilians and seriously injured 6,273. In proportion to
population, the Afghan dead are the equivalent of 85,000 dead and 250,000
gravely wounded American soldiers, and 34,000 dead American civilians, with
another 62,000 seriously injured. As we seemed to turn our attention from
capturing al-Qa`ida's leadership to annihilating the
Taliban, Afghan tolerance of our presence, not surprisingly, is beginning to
wear thin.
Some 18,000 American troops remain engaged in combat with various terrorist and
resistance forces in Afghanistan
as we meet this afternoon. No one has told us - apparently no one can now say -
what might constitute victory there or when our intervention can end. Afghanistan's pro-American
president needed American bodyguards to conduct his successful electoral
campaign. The once-discredited Taliban seem to be regaining lost political
ground.
Presumably, our central objective remains strategic denial of Afghanistan to al-Qa`ida and other terrorist enemies of the United States.
This now depends, apparently, on maintaining a huge American pacification force
there while looking the other way as contented Afghan farmers exercise their
democratic right to harvest the largest opium crop in history.
A year and a half ago, in the second major development since 9/11, we invaded Iraq. We did so
for a tangle of five or six theses and reasons that no one has yet been able
convincingly to untangle. I will not attempt to do so this afternoon. I will
simply note that our one indisputable achievement has been the overthrow of
Saddam Hussein, a very bad man whose fall from power few in Iraq and no one
outside it laments.
But we invaded Iraq
with a bunch of dogmas rather than a set of plans. So, as we removed the Iraqi
regime, we inadvertently destroyed the Iraqi state. We replaced that state not
with a new regime but with an overwhelmingly American military occupation. 137
Americans died during our invasion of Iraq. During the same period, we killed
about 30,000 Iraqi troops and seriously wounded another 90,000. In terms of our
population, these figures equate to about 349,000 American military dead, with
1,050,000 seriously injured. Not surprisingly, Iraqis had distinctly mixed
feelings about our arrival from the outset.
Since the President declared our "mission accomplished" in May 2003,
another 1,079 American military personnel have given their lives in Iraq. Our
military no longer do body counts so it is hard to know how many Iraqi
guerrillas or civilians have died under our occupation. Hospital-documented
deaths add up to at least 15,000, with 26,000 seriously injured, while recent
estimates in the British medical journal, the Lancet, suggest as many as
100,000 dead. Again, to imagine the impact on ordinary Iraqis of these figures,
we must translate them into American terms. They equate to between 175,000 and
1,160,000 dead American civilians. The 6oo civilian deaths documented over the
past week in Falluja alone are the equivalent of
nearly 7,000 in America.
It's hard to think of any occupation anywhere that has been welcomed or
accepted as legitimate for long by those occupied. But, given our inability
even to repair basic infrastructure, let alone reconstruct Iraq, and the
figures I have just cited, our occupation is now so
universally regarded as illegitimate that it invites resistance and taints any
project and any person associated with it. Our aid workers and journalists are
now essentially confined to fortified enclaves, military bases, or convoys
escorted by our troops. The only thing keeping Iraqis from civil war is their
unity in opposing our occupation.
In this increasingly hostile environment, we are nonetheless asking our
military simultaneously to create a state and an army to back it while
providing security for reconstruction and the installation through elections of
a government with the legitimacy we and the interim authority we appointed
lack. Apparently, we then plan to hang around in the 14 permanent military
bases we are building, as a guarantee of Iraqi democracy and Kurdish autonomy.
This is an ambitious, not to say preposterous, tasking to give the U.S. Army.
Support of this kind from us is very likely the kiss of death for any new Iraqi
government.
Under the circumstances, perhaps the best outcome we can hope for is that the
January elections in Iraq
come off and produce a government that asks us to leave. Declaring democracy
and withdrawing may be our best option. But is that what we plan to do? And, if
not, what do we plan to do?
Our vagueness -- maybe it's just honest confusion -- about what we are trying
to accomplish in Iraq
and how and when we might leave carries a heavy cost, and not just to the
American taxpayer. Increasingly, Iraqis, other Arabs, and Muslims around the
globe see our presence there as part of a broad assault on the fifth of the
human race that is Muslim. They connect our actions in Afghanistan and Iraq with our unconditional
support, including generous subsidies, for the Israeli government and its
policies in the Arab territories it occupies. They do not believe our president
when he promises to resume a peacemaking role between Israelis and
Palestinians. They see the United States
as now so closely aligned with Israel
as to be essentially indistinguishable from it in policy terms and to be
disqualified as a mediator.
Identification with Israel
remains a big plus in American politics. But it is no longer a plus elsewhere.
Here too, it helps to consider the conflict statistics. Since Ariel Sharon's
provocative visit to the Al-Aqsa Mosque on September
29, 2000, the intifada has taken the lives of 942 Israelis and seriously
wounded perhaps another 4,500. Critics of Israel should take note! The
ascendancy of the Israeli right wing is easier to understand when one considers
that this is the equivalent of 44,715 dead and 215,000 wounded Americans. After
all, 3,000 deaths on 9/11 were enough to send the United States into a sort of
national nervous breakdown.
We focus on the Israeli dead and wounded. Arabs and Muslims are naturally more
apt to focus on the comparable Palestinian statistics. Since September 29,
2000, 3,447 Palestinians have died, while another 40,000 or so have been
seriously injured. In our terms, this would be 284,964 dead and 3.4 million
wounded. As I said a moment ago, rightly or wrongly, Arabs and indeed Muslims
globally see this bloodbath in the Holy Land as a direct result of U.S. policy.
And they now connect it to lethal American actions against Arabs and Muslims
elsewhere.
The decisive shift in foreign views of the United States is the third and most
significant change in our situation since 9/11. Our allies and Islamic partners
were with us in Afghanistan.
Our invasion of Iraq
separated most of them from us and set us against three-fourths of the member
states of the United Nations. Abu Ghraib and the
scofflaw behavior at Guantanamo now belatedly being set right by the federal
judiciary subsequently erased much of the admiration the United States enjoyed
when we stood unequivocally for a just world order based on the rule of law.
Most, though not all, of our allies and friends in Europe and Asia
are now skeptical, even apprehensive, about us. The political burden of proof
internationally is against any leader who proposes to follow our lead. Most
notably, in Muslim countries, huge majorities have now concluded that the United States
is an international predator and implacable enemy of their values. Osama bin Ladin and others of like mind see this not only as a boon
to recruitment but as a major opportunity to build a transnational political
movement to back their terrorist struggle. This is why Osama's latest message
has such a confident, even upbeat tone. He thinks he's winning his war with us.
If our measure of success is whether we kill more terrorists than we create,
Osama may be right. In places like Falluja, to kill
one so-called terrorist is to get five free. And Falluja
is now connected to Gaza and Kandahar in the Muslim mind.
If we continue on course, we can expect the world to become ever less
hospitable and safe for Americans. And we can expect others to continue to
attempt to do to us what they perceive us to be doing to them. Our homeland
remains highly vulnerable to attack or, as the terrorists would describe it,
counterattack. As we deal with the irregular rhythms of our mounting conflict
with the Muslim world, we will be hard pressed to deal with other issues of
concern, like the North Korean and Iranian nuclear programs, or our precarious
international financial standing. In fact, some of these issues have already
been adversely affected by the various developments I have discussed tonight.
Our invasion of Iraq, for
example, caused both North Korea
and Iran
to accelerate their plans to acquire nuclear deterrent forces. The mounting
costs of the war drive up our budget deficits and increase our dependence on
purchases of our national debt by the Japanese, Chinese, and Koreans. And so
forth.
Which brings me back to the terrible challenges facing our
president. We must hope that Kaiser Wilhelm was right when he claimed
that "God watches over idiots, little children, and the United States of America."
Or that Winston Churchill was prescient when he observed that "one can
always count on the United
States to do the right thing, after it has
exhausted all the alternatives." We are getting somewhat short of
alternatives, I sense. But what is the right thing to do in these
circumstances?
As recently as two years ago, there was no real connection between Afghanistan, Iraq,
and the Holy Land. As a result of our
decisions and actions, they are now inextricably connected both to each other
and to the future of al-Qa`ida
and other Islamic extremist movements. As we deal with each of these issues, we
must therefore weigh the extent to which our actions aid or impede resolution
of the others.
The place to start is probably Afghanistan,
where, I would argue, we have been guilty of "mission creep" - an
unwitting and somewhat witless shifting of the goal posts. What are our
goals in Afghanistan
now that we have al-Qa`ida
on the run and the Taliban out of office? Are there no alternatives to
perpetual military intervention in Afghanistan and to uncontrolled
production of the raw material for heroin to accomplish these goals, whatever
they may be?
With a presidential election in Afghanistan
behind us and parliamentary elections in sight, it is time to clarify and
refocus our policy to substitute diplomacy and foreign aid for military
intervention. If a fraction of the money we are spending on military operations
in Afghanistan were made
available to its government for army and nation-building activities, with a bit
left over to fund a public school program in Pakistan to give kids in the border
areas an alternative to the madrassas there, much
might be accomplished. What's more, I believe that such an effort could attract
matching money and other help from allies, partners, and friends, not just in
Europe, but in Asia and even the Arab world.
An approach like this would not represent an abandonment of Afghanistan but
a recognition that, in the end, Afghans are likely to
be more effective in excluding Islamist terrorists from their territory if the
terrorists cannot pose as the resistance to an American-led occupation that is
killing other Afghan Muslims. The Afghan government will need to be able to
count on us, with other members of the international community, in its struggle
to coopt regional warlords
and end the Taliban insurgency. Our withdrawal must be orderly and phased. As
we withdraw, we should do everything possible to help the Afghan government
succeed, while ensuring that we retain the capacity to re-intervene in the
unlikely event that a future Afghan government repeats the error of offering a
home to terrorists with global reach.
Then there is Iraq.
Here, too, policy clarification is urgently required. The biggest gift we could
give to the Iraqi constituent assembly to be elected in January would be a
clear statement that our first order of business with it will be to negotiate the
terms of our orderly withdrawal from Iraq. We might add that we intend,
as and after we withdraw, to channel a continuing flow of American and other
international assistance to Iraqi reconstruction through the Iraqi government
and Iraqi companies, not carpetbaggers from the United States. As part of our
withdrawal plan, we should propose protective arrangements with Iraq's
neighbors.
The fledgling Iraqi state needs assurances of non-intervention from Iran, Syria,
and Turkey.
It needs help rather than opposition from Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait
and it requires the cooperation of Jordan. Among Iraq's neighbors, the most important in terms of
capacity to intervene in Iraqi politics is Iran. As a neighbor of Afghanistan, Iran is important in that context
too. If the Bush Administration can find a way to do business with Col. Qaddhafi's wacky regime in Libya,
where the stakes are much smaller, one may hope that it might have the
political courage to deal with Iran.
This brings us to the Israeli-Palestinian dispute, which is at the core of al-Qa`ida's and other extremists' hopes of uniting the Muslim
world against the United
States. There was, as far as I could tell,
no difference at all between the presidential candidates on any issue touching
on Israel
and our relations with it. That is truly remarkable, because Israelis
themselves are deeply divided and carry on a vigorous debate about these
issues. American politicians now compete for the favor of whoever is Prime
Minister in Israel,
regardless of whether that Prime Minister pays any attention at all to American
opinions or views. All this recalls the fact that it was the Middle
East that first gave hypocrisy a bad name. It leads me to the
conclusion that an answer to the question of how to secure peace between Israelis
and Palestinians is more likely to originate with outspoken Israelis and
Palestinians than it is among brain-dead and intimidated politicians here.
But here's the rub. Well-intentioned American subsidies and pledges of
unconditional support for Israel,
regardless of its policies, mean not only that Israelis can act without regard
to American interests and views. They also mean that Israelis don't have to
make the hard choices they would have to make if they were -- or feared they
might end up -- on their own.
Confident of subsidies from the American taxpayer, Israelis are under little,
if any, pressure to reform their inefficient,
socialist economy, now one of the most statist in the world. Peace is not
impossible, as the Geneva Accords negotiated between former Israeli and current
Palestinian officials attest. Assured of military superiority and support
against the Arabs, however, Israelis do not need to end their expansion into
Palestinian lands or make the diplomatic compromises necessary to define their
borders with a viable and therefore stable Palestinian state. Israelis could
benefit from some tough love from their American backers.
Israel is the strongest
power in the Middle East by a wide margin, even if its security were not
guaranteed by the United
States, as it is and will continue to be.
The only thing that could now call Israel's existence into question is
a long-term failure on its part to make peace with its neighbors. Israel's cold war with the Arabs has now emerged
as a grave threat to U.S.
interests as well as to those of the Jewish state. It is time, therefore, to
use American leverage to help change the political context in Israel. We
should be trying to help those within Israel who advocate policies
intended to achieve peace rather than continued oppression of the Palestinians
and expansion into Arab lands. American support for the existence of the state
of Israel
is and should be unquestionable. American support for particular policies of
that state should not, however, be exempt from scrutiny and debate.
Let me conclude by noting, once again, that there are vastly cheerier topics to
discuss than those I was assigned today. I do not, however, apologize for the
grave tone of my remarks. Systematically thinking through what we are trying to
accomplish in Afghanistan, Iraq, and the
Arab-Israeli dispute is now an imperative for our country. So is developing
strategies for the successful consolidation of victory in these conflicts on
terms that advance our national interests. We cannot hope to end hatred and
enmity toward the United
States in the hearts of all, but we can
reverse current trends that are causing that hatred and enmity to deepen and
spread internationally. Terrorists represent a grave threat to our liberties as
well as to our wealth and power as a nation. We are not winning our struggle
with them at present. But I believe that, with clear objectives and
well-defined end-games, with the right policies and actions, we can.
Thank you.