Washington Retreating on Iraq
Summary
The Bush administration has begun to back down from plans for a near-term attack on Iraq. The controversial plan was shredding the coalition against al Qaeda, which Washington needs in battling the group. But the Bush administration's retreat from Iraq, although necessary, forces it to manage a political and psychological defeat.
Analysis
The Bush administration in the past few days has begun backing down from its single-minded commitment to attacking Iraq. This was forced in part by broad opposition in the Middle East and Europe to such a plan and dissension at home.
The White House's wavering reflects the tortuous political and military complexity of containing a war on Iraq and its aftermath. But the Bush administration, unilateralist chest-thumping aside, also realizes that it needs the assistance of many countries if it is to keep al Qaeda and its sympathizers in check.
A reversal of policy on Iraq was necessary in terms of both long-term U.S. anti-terrorism goals and short-term preparedness for new al Qaeda attacks. However, the retreat is a strategic psychological defeat for the administration, particularly in the Middle East. Washington inadvertently stumbled into exactly the trap al Qaeda hoped to set for it.
Its Iraq policy united the Muslim Middle East across border, racial and sectarian lines against the United States. And that opposition appears to have thwarted a major U.S. attack in the region. Washington will need to exercise damage control in its relations with individual Muslim countries, and despite the drawdown on Iraq, could face increased resistance in the region in the near future.
U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice began the administration's message-tempering last week. In an interview with the BBC, she continued to lambaste Iraqi President Saddam Hussein as an evil man and argued that the case for regime change was very powerful. However, she also acknowledged that President George W. Bush had not yet chosen the method for Hussein's ouster.
Presidential communications director Dan Bartlett highlighted the ambiguity of the White House's Iraq policy on Aug. 18, when he announced that Bush had not yet decided what to do in Iraq but would articulate a plan when he had one and would certainly receive the support of Americans and their allies.
Washington already has begun searching for alternative strategies. The London-based Sunday Times reported Aug. 18 that the Pentagon would for the first time begin funding covert operations by Iraqi opposition groups. The State Department reportedly also is freeing up money earmarked for the Iraqi opposition that had been tied up until now.
Support for an attack -- which was never particularly strong to begin with -- has been crumbling at home and abroad.
For instance, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal announced Aug. 7 that Riyadh would not allow the United States to launch an attack on Iraq from Saudi territory. Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Oman have all stated their opposition to an attack on Iraq.
Two more countries joined the opposition Aug. 18. After a meeting with Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, King Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa of Bahrain -- where the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet is based -- said his country opposes unilateral U.S. military action against Iraq. The same day, after a meeting in Jeddah with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh declared his opposition to a war as well.
There is also little enthusiasm for an Iraq campaign in Europe, including in countries with bases and forces needed for a major campaign. German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has openly rejected participation by his country, which was a key staging area for operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. Even British Prime Minister Tony Blair, one of the few supporters of an attack, is facing major opposition from within his own party over the plan.
Taking it one step further, the European Union reportedly is pressuring Turkey -- a critical ally in any attack plan -- to help thwart Washington's goals.
At home, congressional Republicans have begun breaking ranks, arguing that the administration has failed to prove that an attack is needed at this time or even to provide a coherent plan. Brent Scowcroft, national security adviser to former President George Bush during Operation Desert Storm, recently warned in the Wall Street Journal that an attack on Iraq could destroy the global anti-terrorism coalition. And within the administration, Secretary of State Colin Powell felt confident enough to go against the administration openly and meet with Henry Kissinger to discuss options other than war for dealing with Iraq.
The administration's about-face indicates that it recognizes the grim reality on three counts. First, despite the increasingly strident assertions by unilateralists within the administration that the United States could attack Iraq without the support of a coalition, the need for friendly bases in the Middle East argued otherwise. The United States literally was running out of room to maneuver. Second, given its battlefield constraints, Washington could not be sure it could contain a war on Iraq within that country's borders or manage the war's aftermath.
Finally, the administration accepted that Iraq is peripheral to its primary strategic concern: al Qaeda. And while the United States may have the firepower to defeat the Iraqi army, it needs intelligence as much as rifles to defeat al Qaeda. That intelligence comes from allies in the Middle East, and the United States cannot afford for it to dry up.
Aside from some small skirmishes in Afghanistan and a few thwarted solo efforts, al Qaeda has been inert since Sept. 11. With elections approaching and the market psychology uneasy in the United States, now would be an opportune time from its standpoint for an attack.
Moreover, al Qaeda has placed itself under pressure to demonstrate that it remains intact and effective, after a spokesman announced in June that the group would strike again soon. And as Al Qaeda cannot afford the perception that it was crushed by the United States, Washington cannot afford to be expending all its political capital on a war with Iraq, only to be blindsided by an al Qaeda attack in the United States.
While there may have been a logic behind the Iraq campaign, it failed when it came at the expense of the war on al Qaeda. The question is not whether Washington can back down from its Iraq policy. It must. The question is how can it manage the political retreat?
This shouldn't be too difficult at home. CNN's broadcast over the weekend of al Qaeda's video library -- showing chemical gas experiments and explosives-making -- is perfectly timed to help begin refocusing the American public. The Democrats will have to think twice before adopting a pro-war stance as a campaign issue while Republicans will find it easy to again rally around the anti-al Qaeda campaign.
There may be some squabbling within the administration itself, as the unilateralists attempt to defend their positions against Powell and the resurgent coalitionists, but nothing too drastic will emerge.
Overall, a policy reversal should play well for domestic politics. It should not pose much of a problem for U.S. relations with its European allies either, as they will see this as a rare case of Washington knocked to its senses by reality.
However, for those who hope to challenge U.S. hegemony, Washington's retreat on Iraq will be seen as a major victory. Al Qaeda's strategic goal was to pit the United States against all of Islam, in the process giving the Islamic world a common enemy against which to unite. Washington stumbled into that trap with its Iraq policy, with Arabs and Persians, Sunnis and Shiites uniting against the campaign and thwarting U.S. intentions.
Washington must now counteract this precedent in its relations with individual Muslim states. Though the Iraq issue may subside temporarily, Washington should expect increased resistance on other issues from countries across the region emboldened by their success. A series of confrontations over the next few months -- like the recent and as-yet unexplained dispute between Washington and Cairo that led to a withholding of future U.S. aid to Egypt -- can be expected.
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