The media, egged on by John McCain and his campaign, are going to twist
the arm of Barack Obama until he cries "uncle" and admits the U.S. troop
"surge" has worked in Iraq. So far, Obama has not cracked under the
pressure and, for reasons of political expediency, admitted this dubious
proposition.
The smart political course of action for Obama - but not the correct one
- would be to admit the surge has worked to reduce violence but to
observe that that's little solace after a needless invasion and
five-year (and counting) occupation that has cost more than 4,000 lives
and about $600 billion. So far, Obama has stuck to the correct, and
maybe even charitable, conclusion that the surge is only one of many
factors that has reduced the carnage in Iraq.
Using logic, if the U.S. troop surge had been the cause of the
diminished violence, then why did the mayhem go up in 2005 when the
United States undertook a troop surge of similar magnitude? Moreover,
because little true political reconciliation has occurred in Iraq since
the surge began, if the additional troops were the cause of the new
tranquility, that calm should be evaporating now that U.S. forces are
being reduced to pre-surge levels. Yet so far, no spike in violence is
occurring. Thus, the logical conclusion is that other factors are likely
to have been more important in improving conditions than the addition of
more troops.
For example, many experts believe that the prior violent cleansing of
ethno-sectarian populations has separated the battling Shi'ite and Sunni
groups and thus reduced the internecine warfare. Also, the U.S. military
finally implemented a true counterinsurgency strategy in which it
eschewed killing lots of guerrillas (and civilians collaterally) with
heavy firepower and moved toward holding ground and winning the "hearts
and minds" of the Iraqi population. One would have thought it would not
have taken the U.S. military so long to relearn this lesson after the
searing experience of the Vietnam War.
Finally, and maybe most important, the U.S. decided to negotiate with
(Muqtada al-Sadr and his Shi'ite militia) and pay off (the Sunni
guerrillas) enemies to get their forces to quit attacking U.S. troops.
U.S. politicians, thinking it is not macho to do either, have either
downplayed these factors or preferred to refer to the latter by
euphemism. The former is especially embarrassing to the politicians
because the United States has criticized the new Pakistani government
for negotiating with, instead of fighting, the Taliban and other
Pakistani militants, while the U.S. government has pursued the same
strategy in Iraq with the al-Sadr Shi'ite militia. The latter is
embarrassing because it is considered wimpy to pay off, rather than do
battle, with your enemies.
Make no mistake: paying off your enemies is always a better and cheaper
strategy than expending the blood and treasure to fight them. For
example, if Abraham Lincoln had offered the South compensated
emancipation of its slaves - which he had advocated before becoming
president - before the Civil War started, he might have avoided the
killing of more than 600,000 Americans (38,000 of whom were
African-American) in a war that provided freedom for blacks only in name.
Yet paying off enemies to reduce the violence is not a long-term
solution to stability in Iraq. In that part of the world, if you quit
making the pay offs or conditions change in such a volatile and
fractured society, violence could quickly escalate again. The
reconciliation occurring in Iraq is largely cosmetic and forced by U.S.
pressure. It is analogous to two sets of parents arranging a marriage
between two young people who don't get along and locking them up in a
room together until they like each other. To get out of the room, they
will go through the motions of amity, but probably will eventually end
up divorced.
If the United States is smart, it will avoid the consequences of the
likely future divorce among Iraqi groups and move toward Obama's
tendency to declare victory and start leaving while things are going
better. Such a policy would leave a better chance of U.S. forces
avoiding the likely coming storm of resumed violence. If the United
States wants to give Iraq the best chance of stability in the post-U.S.
era, it should use its withdrawal to negotiate a radically decentralized
government in which exiting armed militias maintain security in their
own autonomous regions.
Above all, the U.S. should avoid John McCain's conclusion that the surge
worked in Iraq and should be tried Afghanistan. Obama and McCain are
engaged in a bidding war to see how many U.S. troops they can add to
another lost war in Afghanistan, which has even lower prospects for
future stability than Iraq. The Taliban are much more ideological and
militant than most of the Sunni guerrillas in Iraq and far less likely
to agree to be paid off. Also, the Taliban have a sanctuary (Pakistan)
that the Sunni guerrillas in Iraq never had.
The al-Qaeda that threatens the United States is in Pakistan, not
Afghanistan or Iraq. The U.S. occupation of Afghanistan merely helps
al-Qaeda gain support in Pakistan. Thus, the U.S. should withdraw all of
its forces from Iraq and Afghanistan and concentrate on dealing with
al-Qaeda in Pakistan.