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Britain: Brown rules out Iraq troop withdrawal as top general
speaks of a generation of conflict
By Julie Hyland
30 August 2007
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As tensions continue within political and military circles
over Britains role in Iraq, Prime Minister Gordon Brown
has made clear that he will not bow to calls for a troop withdrawal.
In reply to a letter from Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies
Campbell urging an exit strategy, Brown said that Britains
troops still have an important job to do in Iraq,
and that setting a timetable for withdrawal would undermine the
UKs clear obligations in the country. And he
defended Britains current policy in Afghanistan, insisting
that despite the tough, dangerous and difficult tasks and
terrain involved there...I will strongly defend the integrity,
bravery and intelligence with which UK commanders and forces are
taking forward the strategy they have developed.
Campbell has been at the forefront of calls for a refocusing
of the UKs military efforts from Iraq to Afghanistan. There
are currently just 5,500 British forces in Basra, southern Iraq.
In the next days, the UKs contingent that is currently holed
up in Basra Palace is due to pull back to Basra airport.
The government claims that the move is in line with long-established
plans for a handover to Iraqi security forces, with
the UK playing a supportive, holding role. But UK
casualties have risen significantly with 41 killed so far this
year, and it is openly acknowledged that British troops are now
the main focus of attacks by the insurgency.
According to the Independent on Sunday, two senior British
generals had told Brown that Britain can achieve nothing
more in the southeast, and that rather than remain as sitting
ducks, there should be a move towards troop withdrawal without
further delay.
In his August 16 letter, Campbell cited concerns that the governments
continued refusal to draw up a timetable for withdrawal had less
to do with military considerations than a public display of solidarity
with the United States. And he has argued, The debate on
this issue will not go away, particularly as the American presidential
elections will put Iraq at the centre of American politics.
Establishing an exit strategy in Iraq, Campbell argued, would
enable Britains military to refocus its efforts on Afghanistan,
which is portrayed as the more winnable war.
The situation facing the UKs overstretched
contingent in Afghanistan, he wrote, would be made much
easier if we were not engaged simultaneously in two such demanding
deployments.
In short, is it not clear that withdrawal from Iraq would
give us a considerable advantage in Afghanistan, where the military
advice is that Natos mission can still be successful?
In his reply, Brown argued, it is wrong to say
that UK military operations are restricted in what they
can do.
UK forces in Basra continue to have the capability to
strike against the militias and provide overall security.
They will continue to work with the Iraqi authorities
and security forces to get them to the point where they can assume
full responsibility for security.
Transatlantic tensions
Browns defence of British policy was followed by Foreign
Secretary David Milibands insistence that any decision on
UK strategy in Iraq would be made independent of the US and based
only on the British national interest.
The fact that a British foreign secretary should have to make
such statements is itself telling. For the fact remains that Browns
highly publicised reply to Campbell was mainly intended to reassure
the Bush administration that the government has no intention of
cutting and running.
Of more fundamental importance to Britains ruling elite
than the discontent already swirling in its own ranks has been
the open criticisms of any suggestion of a UK withdrawal from
within the US itself.
Earlier this month, the Washington Post cited a senior
US intelligence official as stating, The British have
basically been defeated in the south. The Post continued,
The administration has been reluctant to publicly criticise
the British withdrawal, but cited an expert
as stating that concerns have been expressed at the highest
levels by the US government to British authorities.
Last week, senior US military advisor General Jack Keanea
chief architect of Bushs surgeexpressed
frustration that Britain was not controlling the deteriorating
situation in Basra.
And, at the weekend, Bush advisor Frederick Kagan gave notice
that the special relationship between Britain and
the US was threatened by the restrictions on the UKs military.
Britains ground forces are too small and are now
paying the price, he said, adding that any UK withdrawal
would mean extra US troops having to be deployed.
I do worry about the short-term effects on the relationship
between the two countries, he said. It will create
bad feeling with American soldiers if they cant go home
because the British have left.
Myth-making and the Brown premiership
Campbell complained that Browns reply could have been
written by his predecessor, Tony Blair. That a differing response
could be anticipated points to the myth-making that was involved
in preparing the so-called seamless transition from
Blair to Brown back in June.
Conscious of popular hostility to Blair and faced with a desperate
political need to create some popular basis for the chancellor,
who is credited with imposing Labours big business strategy
of tax breaks for the rich and growing social inequality, the
media had claimed Brown would implement more social democratic
policies and would even distance his government from Washington.
For weeks, pro-Labour political commentators had forecast Brown
would utilise the opportunity presented by General David Petraeuss
presentation on Iraq to the US Congress next month to announce
a scale-back.
It is a myth that the Stop the War Coalition (STWC), led by
the Socialist Workers Party, has been only too willing to promulgate.
All the efforts of the STWC are now directed towards a petition
to Brown urging him to use his parliamentary statement in October
to signal a break from George Bushs foreign policy
and to bring all the British troops out of Iraq immediately, regardless
of US plans. It has become increasingly apparent, however,
that Petraeus has no intention of announcing any softening
of the US administrations line on Iraq, let alone Afghanistan
and Tehran, as underscored by Bushs recent belligerent speeches
on foreign policy objectives.
The sense of dismay amongst what passes for Britains
liberal circles is palpable. The Guardian editorialised
Wednesday, As the Americans struggle to extricate themselves
from Iraq, they are creating an increasingly difficult dilemma
for their British allies.
Helping the American endgame in Iraq might well be a
legitimate aim, it continued, but it is apparently
one difficult for a government anxious to show its independence
from Washington to publicly discuss. Even if it is a legitimate
objective, there are limits to the price Britain should be ready
to pay....
If it is right that we should consult American interests,
they should also consult ours. There is much talk in American
circles of the Baghdad clock and the Washington clock. But there
is a London clock too, and it too is ticking.
Britains geo-political ambitions
The claim that Britain is simply the hostage of a more powerful
ally does not wash, however. This was reinforced by a speech delivered
by the head of the British Army, General Sir Richard Dannatt,
to a Royal United Services Institute conference in June.
The Ministry of Defences decision to release the text
of Dannatts conference speechfrom which the press
was excludedwas clearly aimed at reminding its critics just
what Britains foreign policy objectives are and demanding
they fall into line.
Stressing the need for progress in Iraq and significant
achievement in Afghanistan, he continued that this meant
The heady appeal of go first, go fast, go home
has to be balanced with a willingness and a structure to
go strong and go long.
Success today in these two theatres, he said, was
the top and bottom line.
Dannatts remarks were couched in the usual banal propaganda
of a battle of ideology, values and the
fight against global terrorism. But within this, he gave some
indication of British imperialisms strategic geo-political
concerns.
Francis Fukuyama had been mistaken when he claimed the
end of the 20th century marked the triumph of the West and that
capitalism, liberalism and democracy had emerged victors of that
centurys protracted ideological conflicts, Dannatt
said.
He was correct, however, in positing the origins of current
events in the end of the stability of the old bi-polar World,
which gave way to the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the 9/11
attacks.
Dannatt cited 1979 as the year in which the plates adjoining
the fault lines became activeciting the Reagan presidencys
adoption of the roll back strategy against the Soviet
Union, the Iranian revolution, the Chinese bureaucracys
open embrace of capitalist restoration and the period in which
Osama Bin Ladenin the wake of the Afghanistan warfound
a vocation in promoting Holy War.
His main point was that many powerful forces had
been set in motion, from which Britain was not able to extricate
itself.
The British Army was now extensively enmeshed in
the remnant of the post-communist Balkans, On
the edge of a new and deadly Great Game in Afghanistan and
helping construct a modern Islamic state in Iraq,
in a region perched precariously above a large proportion
of the Worlds remaining supply of oil.
And far from outlining a scale back in military operations,
Dannatt insisted that the key question was how to
prepare Britains armed forces for a generation of
conflict.
The challenge was for the British Army to move from being
Continentally-based facing a single threat, to becoming a genuinely
Expeditionary Army...widely committed on operations, he
said.
See Also:
Bush threatens to militarily confront
Iran
[29 August 2007]
Britain acquires thermobaric weapons
for Afghanistan
[29 August 2007]
US fears of British pullout from Basra
raise transatlantic tensions to new pitch
[25 August 2007]
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