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US hearings on Iraq set course for intensified conflict
By Peter Symonds
17 November 2006
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Just over a week after American voters expressed their opposition
to the war in Iraq, Senate Armed Services Committee hearings on
Wednesday provided further confirmation that there will be no
rapid withdrawal of troops or end to the US occupation.
A string of top generals and officials argued that any pull-out
would be a disaster for US interests in Iraq and throughout the
Middle East. The decision to convene the committee so rapidly
after the election underscores the determination of Democrats
and Republicans alike to shift the focus of public debate on Iraq.
The hearings were staged quite consciously to undercut popular
antiwar sentiment and to address instead what the Bush administration
must do to shore up the US occupation.
In his testimony, General John Abizaid, the top US commander
in the Middle East, bluntly opposed the call made by some Democrats
in the course of the election campaign for a phased withdrawal
of US forces from Iraq. He rejected the suggestion that there
should be any timetable or constraints on troop numbers. Rather
than reduced troop levels, Abizaid strongly hinted there would
be an increase, ostensibly to provide more training for Iraqi
security forces.
Abizaid made a definite appeal to the Democrats, whose chief
criticisms of the Bush administration have been, not the invasion
of Iraq, but the tactics used to carry it out. He pointedly endorsed
the comments of retired General Eric Shinseki, who, in 2003, warned
Congress that several hundred thousand US troops would be needed
in Iraq, only to be publicly belittled by then Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld. I think you can look back and say that
more American troops would have been advisable in the early stages,
Abizaid said.
Rumsfelds claims that a smaller US military force could
seize and occupy Iraq have been discredited by the deepening disaster
in Iraq, which has already claimed the lives of nearly 3,000 American
soldiers. Abazaids comments reflect the opinions of the
Pentagon top brass that more troops should have been sent, and
that a sustained occupation required a general expansion of the
US military.
Indicating what is being prepared, Abizaid said the military
faces the same problem today. We can put in 20,000 more
Americans tomorrow and achieve a temporary effect. But when you
look at the overall American force pool thats available
out there, the ability to sustain that commitment is simply not
something that we have right now with the size of the Army and
the Marine Corps, he said.
Abizaids comments were supported by other officials,
who painted a bleak picture of the crisis facing the US military
in Iraq. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) director, Lieutenant
General Michael Maples cited the rising number of attacks on allied
forces, which averaged 180 per day last month, up from 170 a day
in September and 70 per day in January. He said sectarian violence
was rising in scope, complexity and lethality and
creating an atmosphere of fear and hardening sectarianism,
which is empowering militias and vigilante groups.
What was evident in the course of the hearing was the general
consensus that US troops have to remain in Iraq, not to secure
a better future for the Iraqi people, but to protect American
economic and strategic interests in the Middle East. Senior State
Department official David Satterfield told the committee that
the US had to prevent Iraq crumbling. Such an outcome in
Iraq is unacceptable. It would undermine US national interests
in Iraq and in the broader region, he warned.
While pointing to the disaster in Iraq, none of the Democrats
seriously challenged Abizaids insistence that US troop numbers
must not be reduced. The New York Times prominently featured
the generals testimony, reflecting its own support and that
of significant sections of the Democrats for the continued US
occupation. In the same edition, the newspaper highlighted the
remarks of various analysts in an article entitled, Get
out of Iraq now? Not so fast, experts say.
The course correction being discussed in ruling
circles is not to rapidly withdraw troops, but the opposite. Retired
general Anthony Zinni told the New York Times that any
substantial troop reduction would likely accelerate the slide
to civil war. Instead of taking troops out, General Zinni
said, it would make more sense to consider deploying additional
American troops over the next six months to regain momentum
as part of a broader effort to stabilise Iraq.
The bipartisan top-level Iraq Study Group co-chaired by James
Baker and Lee Hamilton is yet to formally hand down its recommendations,
but there are strong indications that the proposals being hammered
out involve a bolstering of troops numbers and a bloody crackdown
on anti-US opposition in Iraq.
Citing senior American officials, the British Guardian
reported yesterday that President Bush had told senior advisers
that the US must make a last big push to win the war.
According to the newspaper, Bushs refusal to give
ground, coming in the teeth of growing calls in the US and Britain
for a radical rethink or a swift exit, is having a decisive impact
on the [Iraq Study Groups] policy review.
The Guardian outlined the four points of a victory
strategy being circulated among senior US officials. These
include an increase in the number of US troops in Iraq by as many
as 20,000, enlisting the assistance of neighbouring states including
possibly Iran and Syria, and the establishment of an autocratic
regime in Baghdad. A former administration official told the newspaper:
What theyre going to say is: lower the goals, forget
about the democracy crap, put more resources in, do it.
Not coincidentally, the figure of 20,000 troops happens to
match the number floated by General Abizaid in the congressional
hearings. The purpose of these extra personnel was also hinted
in his testimony. While nominally allocated for training,
the Pentagon is planning to insert US advisers into the Iraqi
army at all levels, including in relatively small units with less
than 200 soldiers. The plan is to make them more capable
in their ability to confront the sectarian problem.
In reality what is being proposed are measures to bring Iraqi
security forces, which currently have various conflicting sectarian
loyalties, firmly under US control. Such a step is a necessary
precursor to demanding that the Iraqi government headed by Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki crack down on Shiite militias loyal to
parties in his ruling coalition, in particular the Mahdi army
of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. There have been repeated hints
in Washington and Baghdad that if Maliki refuses, he faces the
prospect of being removed.
In his congressional testimony, General Abizaid emphasised
that Maliki had to deal with the Shiite militias very soon.
We have to make sure that the Iraqi army is the paramount
force in the country to defend the country so people wont
turn to the militia for support. What would make me very pessimistic
is if the Iraqi government fails to disarm the illegal militias.
This is the bipartisan agenda being hammered out in Washington.
Far from ending the war, it involves a military build up and a
confrontation with the Shiite militias that will inevitably produce
a bloodbath for the Iraqi people and a further descent into the
quagmire for US soldiers.
See Also:
After the US elections: Renewed pro-war
consensus emerges in Washington
[16 November 2006]
Washington debate sets stage for escalation
of violence in Iraq
[14 November 2006]
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