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US generals call for extension of Iraq war
By Patrick Martin
23 July 2007
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In an unprecedented display of military intervention into an
ongoing political debate in the United States, five high-ranking
officers, four of them in command positions in Iraq, have publicly
opposed the growing popular demand for immediate withdrawal of
US troops and urged the extension of the war at current or even
greater levels of violence, for years to come.
These declarations amount to blatant defiance of the longstanding
principle that the US military should stay out of politics, and
that the military is subordinate to civilian control, exercised
through representatives elected by the people. The military brass
is instead rallying to the anti-democratic posture taken by President
Bush, who has repeatedly declared that decisions on military policy
in Iraq should be made by commanders on the ground, not by politicians
in Washington.
The statements by the five officers were the product of a coordinated
White House effort to go on the political offensive after the
abandonment of attempts by Senate Democrats to impose even the
mildest of restrictions on US military operations in Iraq. Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid called off debate on war-related amendments
to the defense authorization bill Wednesday, and the barrage of
bellicose comments from the Pentagon began the next day.
General David Petraeus made his remarks during a videoconference
briefing on Iraq July 19 for senators and congressmen who sit
on committees with responsibility for military and foreign policy
and military appropriations. In response to a question from a
pro-war Republican congressman, he said that any announcement
of a planned US withdrawal would spread fear among Iraqis who
were cooperating with the occupation, disrupt ongoing political
negotiations in Baghdad, and increase sectarian violence.
Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the deputy US commander in Iraq,
went considerably further in his comments. Both during the videoconference
and in subsequent remarks to reporters in Iraq, he called into
question the mid-September deadline set by Congress for a report
on results of the surge. Odierno claimed that there
had been significant success in the past month but
that it would not be possible to know by mid-September whether
this was just a blip. He said that to do a good
assessment would require at least until November.
After congressional and media criticism of this open challenge
to the legislated mandate of a September 15 reporting datevoiced
even by Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnellOdierno
and the White House each issued statements denying that the general
had said what he said.
There is no intention to push our reporting requirement
beyond September, Odierno said in a written statement. Nothing
I said yesterday should be interpreted to suggest otherwise. My
reference to November was simply suggesting that as we go forward
beyond September, we will gain more understanding of trends.
White House spokesman Tony Snow added, Were not
trying to sort of change the ball game. We understand what the
reporting requirements are.
His words were contradicted, however, by the comments of two
other American generals in Iraq, speaking to the Associated Press
Friday. Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of the Third Infantry
Division, which operates south of Baghdad, said, I worry
about this talk about reducing or terminating the surge.
Lynch said that from the time he arrived in Iraq to head his
portion of the escalation last March, he had calculated that his
mission would require 15 months deployment. Its
going to take through summer, into the fall, to defeat the extremists
in my battle space, he elaborated, and its going
to take me into next spring and summer to generate this sustained
security presence.
A pullback before the summer of 2008 would amount to negating
the sacrifices made by his soldiers, including the deaths of 56
men in the past three months, he maintained, adding, It
would be wrong to have fought and won that terrain, only to give
it back.
Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Walter E. Gaskin, the commander of American
forces in western Anbar province, suggested an even longer timeframe
for the current escalation, up to two years, although he repeated
the claims from the Pentagon that the collaboration of a group
of Sunni sheiks meant that the US forces had turned the
corner in the struggle in Anbar.
Gaskin argued that Iraqi security forces needed considerable
training and combat experience. I see that experience happening
every day, but I dont see it happening overnight,
he said. I believe its another couple of years in
order to get to that.
Conceding that he was out of step with public opinion in the
United States, Gaskin said, Thats not a political
answer. Thats a military answer.
In Washington, the commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. James
T. Conway, spoke at the National Press Club Friday to condemn
a premature withdrawal, embracing the Bush administrations
claim that Iraq is part of a worldwide, generation-long struggle
against Islamic terrorism.
If you lose the first battles of a long war, the war
gets tougher, Conway said. If you win the first battles,
youve got momentum on your side, and, guess what, the war
is shorter.
Referring to proposed legislative mandates for withdrawal of
combat troops, Conway added, My concern is if we prematurely
move, were going to be going back.... I tend to think its
better to get it done the first time.
Bush lined up alongside the generals. In a stage-managed appearance
in the White House Rose Garden Friday, he denounced congressional
criticism of his Iraq war strategy and demanded passage of new
legislation that would authorize and fund the war through the
remainder of his term of office.
Appearing after a meeting with pro-war veterans and military
family members, Bush portrayed the indefinite continuation of
the slaughter in Iraq as support for the soldiers
who are dying there. He called on Congress to give our troops
time to carry out our new strategy in Iraqthe escalation
of the war through the dispatch of an additional 30,000 combat
troopswhich he claimed had achieved important successes.
The Los Angeles Times reported Saturday that while Congress
was debating the course of the war in Iraq, inside the administration,
a less visible but no less passionate debate is quietly underwayover
whether the surge should continue even longer.
The report to be submitted by Petraeus in September would include
the option of expanding or extending the surge, the newspaper
revealed, adding, Evidence is mounting that military commanders
favor a continuation of the buildup, which now has the troop level
at 158,000, through next spring.
The Bush administration is elaborating military plans on the
basis of an assumption that the war will continue at least at
present levels of intensity through the remaining 18 months of
Bushs tenure in the White House. According to other press
reports, Pentagon officials have denied making any plans for a
post-surge presence in Iraq. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan
Crocker, speaking on the same videoconference Thursday with General
Petraeus, said no such planning was underway. I am not aware
of these efforts and my whole focus is involved in the implementation
of Plan A, he said.
Bush administration officials have even publicly suggested
that to discuss plans for a post-surge reduction in US forces
amounts to strengthening the enemy in Iraqinvariably
defined as Al Qaeda terrorism, not Iraqi resistance to foreign
occupation.
That was the substance of the extraordinary letter sent to
Senator Hillary Clinton July 16 by Eric S. Edelman, the undersecretary
of defense for policy, and the senior surviving neo-conservative
in the Pentagon civilian hierarchy (as well as a former aide to
Vice President Cheney).
Clinton wrote to Edelman in May, in her capacity as a member
of the Senate Armed Services Committee, asking what planning had
been done in the Pentagon for the kind of partial drawdown in
US troop presence advocated by Senate Democrats. Edelman waited
two months, until the day of the Senates 24-hour debate
on Iraq war policy, before firing off a two-page letter containing
a thinly disguised suggestion that Clinton was a traitor.
Premature and public discussion of the withdrawal of
US forces from Iraq reinforces enemy propaganda that the United
States will abandon its allies in Iraq, much as we are perceived
to have done in Vietnam, Lebanon, and Somalia, he wrote.
Such talk understandably unnerves the very same Iraqi allies
we are asking to assume enormous personal risks.... It also
exacerbates sectarian trends in Iraq, as the rival
factions focus their maneuvers on securing the most advantageous
position in a post-occupation environment.
Clintons office released the letter with an obvious political
motive, hoping that the vitriolic attack on the senator would
raise her standing among antiwar voters and help overshadow her
long record of support for the invasion and continuing US occupation
of Iraqa position she still holds today.
The letter is nonetheless significant, mainly for its tone
of belligerent intolerance of any criticism of the war and any
congressional input into policymaking. This reflects the mood,
not just of the desperate neo-conservative faction within the
Bush administration, which spearheaded the drive to war, but of
wide sections of the military establishment.
The Pentagon brass, whatever their conflicts with former defense
secretary Donald Rumsfeld over the conduct of the war, regard
a forced US withdrawal from Iraq as a debacle for the American
military machine that will have incalculable consequences.
The military officer corps has been trained in the purported
lesson of the Vietnam War, that it was civilian interference
with military operations that produced the historic US defeat.
This theory resembles nothing so much as the infamous stab-in-the-back
theory of Adolf Hitler, whose Nazi Party blamed Germanys
defeat in World War I on the activities of socialists, communists
and Jews.
In a similar fashion, the American military more and more sees
itself arrayed against what it regards as the enemy withinnot
so much the congressional Democrats, whose opposition
to the war is both toothless and insincere, as the great majority
of the American people who have turned decisively against the
war and all its perpetrators and apologists.
See Also:
Democrats halt Senate debate on Iraq
war
[20 July 2007]
Bush administration releases report on
terror threat: A new pretext for American militarism and domestic
repression
[19 July 2007]
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