AUSA=
: Army
Magazine
Historically Speaking
03=
/20/2007

Ignoring Our Past in Iraq
By=
Brig.
Gen. John S. Brown, U.S. Army retired
As=
a
nation, we are in the process of proving that those who ignore the errors=
of
the past are doomed to repeat them. Time and again we have made commitmen=
ts
to policies opposite those that historical precedents favor. In Iraq,
exemplary missteps have occurred with respect to troop-to-task ratios,
de-Baathification, alliance involvement, advisory efforts, constabulary
responsibilities, the pursuit of an achievable end state and sources of
professional advice. In each instance, historical precedent was dismissed,
though it is not too late to reconsider our course in light of what we sh=
ould
have learned.
Se=
ldom,
if ever, have we asked so few troops to accomplish so much.
Our
forces now in Iraq would be too thin even if we did not have an insurgency
and significant border security issues to take into account. This mismatch
between manpower and mission has hardly gone unnoticed. Gen. Eric K.
Shinseki's prewar congressional cautionary is now iconic. Gen. Shinseki, a
thoughtful, deliberative man, considers things carefully before he commit=
s to
words. He had the benefit of the Army Staff's analytic capabilities, the
Army's historical records and his own personal experiences in Vietnam and=
the
Balkans before he said it would take several hundreds of
thousands—which I interpret as 300,000 to 500,000—to secure I=
raq.
Gen. Shinseki was not alone. Secretary of the Army Thomas E. White backed=
him
at great personal cost, and retired Generals Barry R. McCaffrey and Antho=
ny
C. Zinni articulated their own warnings as well. There have been others.<=
/span>
On=
ce
occupying Iraq and thinly manned, it seemed imperative that we secure act=
ive
Iraqi cooperation to redress our troop deficits. During Operation Just Ca=
use we
put the Panamanian army in uniform and back on the streets within days of
crushing it. We cleaned up criminals in its hierarchy after the fact.
Lt=
. Gen.
Jay M. Garner, U.S. Army retired, who was director of the Office for
Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance for the Coalition Provisional
Authority of Iraq, was mindful of this precedent, and of his own realp=
olitik
when in command of Operation Provide Comfort in Kurdistan a decade earlie=
r.
He was accompanied by an official historian in whom he had confidence and=
who
had tapped the Army's records on de-Nazification, the postwar settlement =
of
Japan and related topics. Garner absorbed all of this and intended to skim
off only the highest levels of the Baathist superstructure. Iraqi Army un=
its
would return to security responsibilities as soon as possible, and we wou=
ld
police out criminal elements over time. Garner was replaced by the more
politically connected L. Paul Bremer, who decided that half measures would
never do. In May 2003, within about a day's time, he fired the entire Ira=
qi
Army and severed virtually the entire Baathist superstructure. Pundits wi=
thin
Garner's organization commented that Bremer created 350,000 new enemies f=
or
the United States in a single day.
Gi=
ven
that we would get little help from the Iraqis after May, it would have be=
en
helpful to have had numerous allied troops on the ground. Unfortunately, =
in
the rush to go to war we had left virtually all of our traditional allies
behind—and alienated many of them. We did not do much to coax
untraditional allies into common cause either. Retired Gen. Wesley K. Cla=
rk,
ever the champion of a combined approach, had forcefully argued for patie=
nce.
What was our hurry? Would not Saddam Hussein's intransigence eventually
become so egregious our allies would become as enraged as we already were?
His books Waging Modern War and Winning Modern Wars
convincingly make the case that the inefficiencies of working with allies=
are
more than offset by the effectiveness of greater numbers and the moral hi=
gh
ground. He should know; as architect of the successful Kosovo Campaign, he
reflected an American capacity for coalition warfare we have refined thro=
ugh
four generations of overseas soldiering.
Re=
cognizing
that Saddam's army was gone and that allies were scarce, we set about
rebuilding the Iraqi Army from the ground up. This required an advisory
effort. The U.S. Army has had considerable advisory experience, and Army
Chief of Staff Gen. Peter J. Schoomaker methodically set about culling
lessons we had already learned to support an advisory effort appropriate =
to
Iraq. Given his extensive special operations background, Schoomaker was no
stranger to this aspect of warfare. At the height of the Vietnam War, more
than half of our advisers were with regional and local forces. Most
Vietnamese maneuver divisions were regionally oriented as well. Since the
Philippine Insurrection—if not the Indian Wars—we have known =
that
guerrilla wars are won locally. A "neighborhood watch" has far =
more
at stake in a neighborhood than a maneuver force ever could. We have also
known that all armed men acceptable to the government need to be on our
payroll. Resourcing indigenous troops gives leverage, if not necessarily
control. Unfortunately, in Iraq we have been averse to supporting local
forces. Advisory efforts have focused on the regular army, when much of
Baghdad and the country is actually secured by local militias we object to
and with whom we have no influence—despite the fact that the elected
government accepts their presence. If we allow local forces to exist, we
should be paying them and training them. If we do not allow them to exist,
who will reliably secure the people they were attempting to secure? Advoc=
ates
of the Mahdi Army argue with some persuasiveness that our campaign to cur=
tail
them has exposed Sadr City to recent horrific attacks.
To=
fill
the security void that is left by an inadequate Iraqi Army, lack of allies
and lack of leverage with local militias, we have fallen back, inevitably=
, on
our American soldiers and placed them in a constabulary role. The U.S. Ar=
my
has had considerable experience as a constabulary. One of the most import=
ant
imperatives when filling such a role overseas is divestiture; we want to =
be
rid of that responsibility as soon as possible. Only indigenous forces ha=
ve
the language skills and cultural familiarity necessary to effectively pol=
ice
their own streets. The success of the Philippine constabulary illustrates
this premise, as do a dozen other constabulary efforts in Army occupation=
s since.
Gen. George W. Casey Jr. recognized this and, after two years of steadily
increasing the wherewithal of the Iraqi Army, made it clear that surging
American soldiers back into policing the streets of Baghdad was going in
precisely the wrong direction. His congressional testimony included T.E.
Lawrence's admonition that it is better to let Arabs do things
"tolerably well" than to assume (or in this case resume) the bu=
rden
oneself. When acting as constables, American soldiers shed virtually all =
of
their technological advantages and expose themselves to myriad close
encounter casualties they otherwise would not face.
Yet
another concern is the pursuit of an achievable end state. The missions of
toppling Saddam Hussein's regime and scouring Iraq for weapons of mass
destruction were achievable with the forces we were willing to commit, but
not the mission of constructing a viable multiethnic democracy in a count=
ry
seething with ethnic hostilities and without democratic traditions. A sen=
se
of community, a willingness to compromise and mutual respect for a body of
law are preconditions for democracy. Last December's "Historically
Speaking" article ("National Self-Determination") explored
promoting democracy amid the wreckage of multiethnic empires after World =
War I.
Democracy was only feasible when ethnicities previously held together by
force were permitted national self-determination. This phenomenon has
repeated itself more recently in Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union and even
Czechoslovakia. The Iraq Study Group had much to say about an achievable =
end
state, and Lt. Col.(P) Craig T. Trebilcock's fine article "The Modern
Seven Pillars of Iraq" in the February issue of this magazine
illustrates Iraqi cultural aspects impeding an easy transition to represe=
ntative
democracy.
In=
Dereliction
of Duty: Lyndon Johnson, Robert McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and =
the
Lies That Led to Vietnam, H.R. McMaster argues that men who knew bett=
er
failed to speak out as we stepped ever deeper into the morass. This does =
not
seem the case with Iraq. At each major misstep, prominent and positioned
members of the Army family spoke out forcefully, sometimes at a risk to t=
heir
careers. If their public representations were so obvious, one can only
imagine how candid their private representations must have been. <=
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Wh=
y were
they not heeded? There are pundits enough to dissect our political
leadership, so I won't, but I will comment upon our own complicity as a
profession. We stifle debate, defer unduly to jointness and allow interlo=
pers
onto our professional pulpit. One of our hallowed traditions is to express
our opinions until the boss makes a decision and then to salute the flag =
and
follow his lead. This is fine when action and result are proximate in tim=
e, but
dangerous when long durations invite midcourse corrections. Finally, we h=
ave
dismantled our Army Staff and Army school system to the point that, in
effect, we hire contractors to do much of our thinking for us. Once we ha=
ve
given up the pulpit, we are no longer the sole source of professional adv=
ice.
It will not do for subordinates to reiteratively debate with their superi=
ors,
of course, but we should have forums wherein some of our best minds openly
debate our most significant issues without being construed as unpatriotic=
or
as a threat to those with whom they disagree. For Gen. George C. Marshall
such forums existed within the Army school system and their associated
professional journals. If we restored these to their former glory, would =
our
capacity for debate improve?
Wh=
at
should we be debating now? Some argue that we have made significant and
consequential mistakes with respect to tactics, techniques and procedures=
in
Iraq. I disagree. Wouldn't we be better off debating our objectives in Ir=
aq
and the resources we are willing to commit to achieve them? Within our
historical experience we have redesigned alien societies by force, evolved
alien societies through education, backed alien winners at the expense of
alien losers and facilitated the reorganization of alien societies into
entities their citizens could support.
Our
post-World War II redesigns of Germany and Japan were predicated by horri=
fic
losses we and our allies had inflicted upon their military manpower. Such
forcible redesign of Iraq is no longer feasible, however, if it ever was.=
The
manpower required would dwarf present commitments, and the Iraqi blood
necessarily shed would be unacceptable to our public.
In=
the
Philippines our Progressive Era Army, after an initial spasm of significa=
nt violence,
adopted a more benign approach. Educational efforts, civil works projects=
and
steadily increasing Filipino participation in constabulary, army and
government combined with commercial investment to steer the Philippines
towards independent democracy. This worked, but took two generations to
complete. Iraq is not central enough to our national interests to suggest
that we will unilaterally support an evolution that long with a sustained
military presence.
The
British have more experience than we do in advancing their interests by
backing the right horse. They built an empire employing the adage
"divide and conquer," reinforcing friendly indigenous forces ju=
st
enough for them to win, and then capitalizing upon gratitude and dependen=
cy.
During the Cold War we supported a number of proxy wars and insurgencies,
with uneven results. Perhaps most notably, we favored Iraq during its 198=
0-88
war with Iran, only to find that Saddam Hussein's gratitude and dependency
did not last very long. If it comes to open civil war in Iraq, the Shia w=
ould
win, and would do so more expediently were we to actively support them. T=
his
would not sit well with our Sunni allies in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey a=
nd
Kurdistan, however.
At=
times
we have let indigenous peoples decide for themselves the governance they
would choose. Plebiscites following World Wars I and II offer cases in po=
int.
More recently, through Partnership for Peace, we have followed up on the
disintegrations of Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union to ease
transitions from multiethnic states held together by force to nations
ethnically homogenous enough to achieve a sense of community—and to
move beyond bloodlines as their dominant political issue. In Bosnia and
Kosovo we found peace was best achieved when unfriendly ethnicities were
separated. This suggests a model for Iraq. Ethnic states could police
themselves, and we could focus on establishing lines of demarcation,
resettlement, external defense and the diplomacy necessary to achieve
acceptance of the new regimes. All of these tacks would be challenging and
demanding, but none would expose our soldiers to the risks they now face =
on
Iraqi streets.
Hi=
story
offers no clear blueprint for Iraq. It does suggest approaches that might
work, and even more capably identifies approaches that will not work. Our
national interests are oil that flows, indigenous states that do not thre=
aten
their neighbors and keeping faith with the Kurds to encourage others who =
cast
their lot with us. It would be nice if the resultant states were stable
democracies, but they can evolve in that direction if they do not get the=
re
right away. Their good governance is more in the interests of their own
citizens than it is of ours, so their own soldiers should police their
streets. Insofar as deterring bad behavior, the fact that we can destroy
regimes is a powerful deterrent, even if we cannot as readily rebuild the=
m.
However the present surge strategy turns out, it is now time to debate the
next steps. We should do a better job of taking historical precedent into
account.
BRIG.
GEN. JOHN S. BROWN, USA Ret., was chief of military history at the U.S. A=
rmy
Center of Military History from December 1998 to October 2005. He command=
ed
the 2nd Battalion, 66th Armor, in Iraq and Kuwait during the Gulf War and
returned to Kuwait as commander of the 2nd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division,=
in
1995. He has a doctorate in history from Indiana University. <=
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