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During
the Vietnam War, the U.S. military released body
counts of enemy and friendly dead to the media,
which reported them voraciously. Invariably, the
military's data--showing more enemy than friendly
dead--was designed to give the illusion that the
United States was winning the war. What the data
didn't show was more important: that a tenacious
enemy fighting for its homeland would be willing
to incur high casualties and outwait an opponent
with a short attention span. Similarly, in Iraq,
the U.S. military gleefully reports that attacks
against U.S. soldiers have dropped by more than
half since their peak in November of last year
and that firefights between U.S. soldiers and
Iraqi guerrillas in Iraqi towns have also diminished.
But like the body counts in Vietnam, the American
public should be wary of such rosy assessments.
The
major reason that fighting between the U.S. military
and the insurgents has declined is that the American
forces have vacated the field of battle. However
unfortunate, with a competitive election coming
up this year, the White House knows that the only
thing in Iraq that matters to the American public
is how many U.S. soldiers are killed and wounded
there. Thus, "force protection" has become the
number one unstated goal in Iraq. American forces
have been pulled out of Iraqi cities and towns
and most security functions have been turned over
to the amateurish, ill-trained and poorly equipped
Iraqi security forces. This same phenomenon occurred
in Bosnia in the mid-to late-nineties, when American
public support for U.S. involvement in peacekeeping
there was lukewarm. American soldiers were ridiculed
by the peacekeeping forces of other nations for
rarely coming out of their fortified bastions.
What
is the result of a policy designed more to avoid
a catastrophe before the election than to pacify
Iraq? Answer: One of the worst weeks of violence
since America's occupation began. Last week, 125
people were killed in suicide bombings of a police
station and an Iraqi Army recruiting station and
a violent raid on an Iraqi police station to free
prisoners. In addition, guerillas, seemingly tipped
off that a VIP would be visiting, attacked the
motorcade of John Abizaid, the American general
in-charge of all U.S. forces in the Middle East.
Most of those attacked or killed in this recent
spate of attacks--save the U.S. general--were
Iraqi police or military people perceived as collaborating
with the American occupation.
Although
U.S. officials claim that security in Iraq is
improving, a confidential and little noticed report
by the American occupation authority itself belies
those statements and confirms the intuitive impression
that attacks by insurgents are getting worse.
The occupation authority's findings, as reported
by London's Financial Times, state that "January
has been the highest rate of violence since September
2003. The violence continues despite the expansion
of the Iraqi security services and increased arrests
by coalition forces in December and January."
The report concludes that in recent months, attacks
against international and nongovernmental organizations,
strikes using mortars and explosives (including
roadside bombs), strikes in Baghdad and attacks
that were non-life threatening have all increased
substantially. Also, attacks on military targets
rose faster than strikes on their civilian counterparts.
Yet
the only recent public indication of underlying
security problems was made by Paul Bremer, the
U.S. administrator of Iraq, who was forced by
last week's mayhem to admit that the indigenous
security services would not be ready to guarantee
public safety in time for the ostensible mid-year
turn over of Iraq to the Iraqis, "I think it's
quite clear the Iraqi security forces, brave as
they are, and beaten and attacked as they are,
are not going to be ready by July 1." Ideally
suited for his job, Mr. Bremer has a gift for
understatement.
So
if the Iraqi security forces are in shambles and
insurgent attacks are rising, the casual observe
might ask why are the Americans pulling back to
fortified garrisons outside Iraqi cities? Answer:
That policy saves the lives of American soldiers
while leaving the Iraqi citizenry to the wolves.
Strangely, the U.S. military admits this increased
risk to Iraqis. So much for the Bush administration's
high-flying rhetoric about making Iraq a better
place for its citizens. If a civil war eventually
breaks out--as a U.N. representative recently
warned and as the occupation authority worried
euphemistically in its report--Saddam Hussein's
regime could seem like the good ole' days for
Iraqis.
So
although the Bush administration's policy may
be achieving its primary goal--avoiding a sharp
escalation in the U.S. body count before November--the
voting public should not mistakenly conclude that
the United States is winning this war. A reckless
Bush administration--like the Johnson and Nixon
administrations during the Vietnam War--has stumbled
into a war that it can neither win nor escape
from gracefully. Ivan Eland is Senior Fellow and
Director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The
Independent Institute in Oakland, CA., and author
of the book, Putting "Defense" Back into U.S.
Defense Policy: Rethinking U.S. Security in the
Post-Cold War World. For further articles and
studies, see the War on Terrorism and OnPower.org.
Topplebush.com
Posted: March 1, 2004
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