THE WARNINGS. WHY NOT HEEDED? BLUNDER ON
A WORLD SCALE; IMPERATIVE TO HELP THE U.S.; NEED FOR "ADMINISTRATION
CHANGE"
By John Pedler, diplomatic consultant
(former British diplomat, ex-‘Cold Warrior’) 8 November 2003
(former British diplomat, ex-‘Cold Warrior’) 8 November 2003
[This remains one of our basic papers: it was prepared for correspondents in the US who sought 'ammunition' re foreign and defence policy to counter President GW Bush, presumed Republican candidate in 2004]
An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia regitur orbis?(Do you not know, my son, with what little wisdom the world is governed?)
Count Axel Gustafsson Oxenstierna, administrator of Sweden. Letter to his son, a young diplomat, 1648.
It is now increasingly recognised that the US and British rush to war with
Iraq on 20 March 2003 was a blunder on a world scale from which it is essential,
but very difficult, to recover. But too few, even among politicians, understand
how this occurred and what lessons must be drawn before the United States can
again lead in addressing the world's pressing challenges - only one of which is
international terrorism.
This note is necessarily repetitive of previous offerings. For it is compiled in response to US and UK correspondents' requests to set out in one place what seem the more important warnings given before the Iraq war by diplomatic, intelligence, military, academic, and media professionals about the likely consequences of an attack on Iraq not approved by the UN or at least by a consensus of the powers directly involved.
As one of these remarked - for various, often good, reasons, it is
difficult for many distinguished individuals, let alone governments, to
criticise the Bush Administration (or even the Blair premiership) as openly and
comprehensively as they might like. Part of this task thus falls to us lesser
mortals.
These warnings were well known. It took no great prescience to be among
this year's outsize crop of Cassandras. And it is daily becoming clear that, as
one assumed, these same warnings were also made within the US and UK governments
at high official level. At the top level, we are discovering, it appears that
they were sometimes played down, and "adjustments" made to the meagre
intelligence available, to meet the political expectations of the US President
and the British Prime Minister and their political advisers. (Mr. Bush and Mr.
Blair had, it now seems, decided on war, without international approval if need
be, at least as early as August 2002).
THE OVERRIDING CONSIDERATION - PROGRESS TOWARDS INTERNATIONAL RESOLUTION OF
THE WORLD'S PROBLEMS:
In August 2002 we expressed the fear that, as in August 1914, the world
stood at a crossroads where a wrong choice - like World War I - would determine
a subsequent dark history for the century. Many governments (with the exception
of the US and the UK) and leading international observers recognised that what
was at stake with the Iraq crisis was the world's gradual, fragile, progress
towards
international resolution of its many urgent problems. This progress cannot
be ensured without the participation, even leadership, of the US - the only
superpower at present.
Such progress involves eventually transforming war into international
police action - an aim for which, it can be said, tens of millions died in the
two World Wars. (This was what the World War I slogan "the war to end war"
implied). Would that slow, steady progress continue - or would the United States
and then others revert to unilateralism setting back the course of history? The
Iraq crisis, which (under a different US president), could relatively easily
have marked a defining step in this positive direction, marked instead a
reversal of this historic trend - humanity's one hope - back towards the
unbridled nationalism of 1914.
Recalling these warnings, the UN Secretary General made this observation
the central point in his "post mortem" speech after the defeat and occupation of
Iraq.
But it is astonishing that so many still cannot accept that President Bush
and Prime Minister Blair have indeed blundered on a world scale. And blundered
despite so many warnings which it did not take an expert to see were
well-founded. Let us consider the most important of these warnings and see how
far they are already proving correct. It is a formidable list:
1. A "UNILATERAL" US ATTACK ON IRAQ WAS IN AL-QAEDA'S INTEREST:
As all with any knowledge of Islam and the Middle East know, al-Qaeda's
ideology is an extreme and violent mutation of Saudi Arabia's official Wahabi
narrow, rigid, religious interpretation of Islam. Saddam Hussein, on the
contrary, was a secular dictator representing a particularly cruel form of
Ba'ath "national socialism" - somewhat akin to Hitler's Nazi National Socialist
fascism. Just as Hitler repressed communism, Saddam repressed Islamic religious
extremism.
So, not only would an American "unilateral" attack on Iraq
i) remove Saddam, al-Qaeda's principal ideological enemy, but, by ending
Ba'ath repression, it would:
ii) open up for international terrorists a second front in Iraq at the very
centre of the Middle East. A second front where al-Qaeda would be at home
culturally and linguistically and the US operating very much "away". The
collapse of Ba'ath control, particularly control of the frontiers, opened the
way for al-Qaeda (and its alter ego or ally Ansar al-Islam - hitherto confined
to a pocket in the Kurdish border area with Iran) to infiltrate Iraq - along
with other terrorists. And
iii) without the Ba'ath or some other strong uniting hand, Iraq would be
vulnerable to disintegration into Sunni, Kurd, and (backed by Iran) Shi'ite
areas - upsetting the stability of the entire Middle East (a major al-Qaeda
aim).
iv) Former Ba'athists, as Sunnis open to Wahabi doctrines and desperate to
recover some position after losing a war, could likely be encouraged to make
common cause with al-Qaeda cadres in terrorist opposition to the US occupation.
v) An open border would also enable Iranian hard liners to infiltrate to
give support to Iraq's majority Shi'ites who would be sure to seek the political
power denied them under Saddam. This could contribute towards a dissolution of
Iraq as desired by al-Qaeda.
vi) The American prewar attempt to bribe the new Turkish Government
(reportedly with some $11bn) to permit the US to attack Iraq from Turkey with
the involvement of Turkish troops, would prejudice hopes of Iraqi acceptance of
an American occupation. For all Iraqis, Turkey is the former imperial power
still on its doorstep - unlike the UK which is far away. Not only the Kurds, for
long oppressed by Turkey, but any Turkish involvement in war with Iraq or
occupation would be likely to be bitterly resented by many ordinary Iraqis,
Sunni and Shi'ite as well as Kurds.
Fortunately Turkey refused the American bribe. Although under renewed
American pressure post war, it did agree to provide occupation troops, but has
so far wisely refrained from doing so after the American-installed Iraqi
Governing Council opposed their arrival.
vii) Iraq's history suggested that the Iraqi public's relief, however
great, at being freed from Saddam, would quite soon turn against an American-run
occupation. The CIA warned, prewar, that the Administration's assumption that
American troops would receive long-standing welcome was mistaken. Although most
Iraqis appear glad to be free of Saddam, the American honeymoon lasted even less
time than many pundits predicted. One quote is typical of the ambivalent
attitude of a large number of Iraqis towards the occupation: "Let's say someone
came into your home and made a big mess... then he says 'Oh, I have to go now'.
No he has to clean things up."
viii) American preoccupation with Iraq would help the Taliban and al-Qaeda
to recover a position in Afghanistan (see 4. below).
ix) With Saddam removed, infiltration of, and internal extremist pressures
on, Saudi Arabian society would be facilitated. And instability in Iraq, or even
a move to some kind of Western style democracy ill-tailored to the region could
help destabilise the Saudi oligarchy - a principal aim of al-Qaeda. Extremist
pressures, even attacks, are indeed now affecting Saudi Arabia, but whether the
Saudi regal oligarchy can respond effectively will largely depend on success in
establishing a stable Iraqi government.
x) With the Americans in Iraq, an al-Qaeda-fanned Iraqi "struggle against
occupation" would all but certainly become united with the Palestinians' second
intifada against Israeli occupation. The two occupation regimes would in turn
fan anti-American and anti-Jewish sentiment throughout the Islamic world and
beyond - preparing the ground for al-Qaeda recruitment (See below 3).
xi) A rush to "unilateral" war and its likely aftermath must inevitably
greatly increase anti-American sentiment, and loss of confidence in the US even
among its friends. The Bush Administration would
risk squandering world sympathy won after 9.11 and make much more difficult
and less effective international cooperation in rooting out al-Qaeda throughout
the world.
xii) War and occupation of Iraq would do much to sharpen confrontation
between the Islamic world and the secular and Christian West.
In the autumn of 2002, accepting much of the above, a DIA memo warned that
a post-war Iraq would be "highly complex and driven by political and religious
factions”. The US occupiers would be "hard pressed to keep the lid on... Saddam
might decide to fight on, and there would be an influx of Islamic fighters". In
February 2003, with war imminent, then US Army Chief of Staff General Eric
Shinseki, basing himself on this and similar US official assessments, told
Congress that the occupation forces would need to be far larger than the forces
committed in the war itself. Aware of these dangers, a State Department analysis
warned that a "liberal democracy would be difficult to achieve" in Iraq.
(But on 26 February 2003, President Bush nevertheless confidently repeated
his claim that bringing "democracy" to Iraq would help "democratise" the other
Arab countries - apparently oblivious of the immense difficulties he faced -
difficulties he has since been obliged to recognise).
Despite the above, Bush Administration hawkish "spin" gave the impression
that Saddam had been in some way involved in "9.11". A belief, polls suggested,
that in June 2003 was still held by 71% of Americans, who therefore expressed
their conviction that going to war had been right. (This was just before
President Bush himself, correcting Vice President Cheney, declared that there
was is fact no evidence of any such link).
The UK though, did not attempt to link Saddam with al-Qaeda. In February
2003, during the Security Council's prewar discussions, British Intelligence
warned, "al-Qaeda is the greatest threat, and that threat will be heightened by
an attack on Iraq".
The CIA was of course, always well aware of the gulf between Saddam and
al-Qaeda. In November 2003, rather late in the day, CIA sources expressed
surprise that al-Qaeda and Ba'athists were cooperating in terrorism in Iraq,
because "the two are ideological enemies".
President Putin accurately summed up the occupation situation (as reported
on 6 Oct 2003): "The invasion of Iraq has created a new terrorist haven where
one did not exist previously" adding that Saddam "struggled against
fundamentalists and either put them in jail or exiled them... the new coalition
faces two enemies at once - the remains of Saddam and the
fundamentalists."
2. NORTH KOREA AN IMMINENT DANGER, NOT IRAQ:
After the passage nem con of Security Council Resolution 1441 returning the
United Nations inspectors to Iraq, almost all expert opinion agreed that Saddam
Hussein was effectively "back in his box". This would be the more certain if the
French suggestion of greatly increasing the number of inspectors was accepted,
while at the same time maintaining the military threat.
By February 2003 it was already apparent from IAEA inspections on the
ground and aerial surveillance that Iraq was far from producing nuclear weapons.
Most experts agreed that Saddam probably had stocks of chemical and biological
weapons which might well be used on a battlefield, but lacked the means to
deliver them effectively against US or British targets. A CIA assessment in
October 2002 thus appeared correct: "Saddam Hussein poses little threat and is
only likely to attack the US if attacked first". The risk of Iraq giving Weapons
of Mass Destruction (WMD) to al-Qaeda was minimal - though this was a major
reason Presdent Bush gave for going so precipitately to war.
(From the ongoing Kelly enquiry in the UK it is now clear that the British
claim that Iraq could deploy WMD within 45 minutes referred only to battlefield
chemical and possibly biological weapons. Experts doubted even that claim).
In these circumstances - as many observers had feared at least since the
latter '90s and certainly by February 2003 - North Korea was far the most
serious threat to world peace given its advanced nuclear and missile
capabilities and unpredictable governance. Even Iran was a greater threat than
Iraq.
Experts on North Korea warned that an attack on Iraq would detract
attention from North Korea (and Iran). Committing in Iraq, US forces, US funds,
and above all US prestige was to commit them in the wrong place to the
considerable advantage of North Korea.
They also pointed out that an American "unilateral" attack on Iraq could
well prompt even greater intransigence by North Korea (and perhaps also Iran) in
forwarding its nuclear capabilities - partly because of genuinely increased
fears of American intentions toward members of the "Axis of Evil", and partly to
take advantage of US preoccupation with Iraq.
They deplored President Bush's linking of disparate North Korea with Iraq
and Iran as members of this "axis" and were alarmed by his astonishingly
undiplomatic remark "I hate Kim Jong Il" - the "Dear Leader" with semi-divine
status. That could only make more difficult the task of North Korean negotiators
in relations with Americans.
They argued that North Korea was not Iraq where America could risk going it
alone. The only way to deal with this unpredictable state where taking any
military action could provoke a second disastrous Korean war, was by delicate
multilateral diplomacy and the coordination of pressures, involving not just the
US, but China, Japan, South Korea, and Russia as well as other interested
powers.
They concluded that the same simplistic and insensitive unilateralism which
was driving Mr. Bush into a rush to war in Iraq, had already in some degree
prejudiced an international approach to North Korea (and to Iran).
This has proved the case even though the Bush Administration, under great
pressure not least from its traditional allies as well as because of its severe
occupation problems in Iraq, has wisely begun to make an about turn from uni- to
multi-lateralism in its confrontation with North Korea. This is seen by many as
reflecting a dawning realisation by President Bush that he has too heavily
relied on the "neocon hawks" with whom he chose to surround himself. Late though
it is in the day, Mr. Bush now seems rather more ready to listen to Secretary of
State Colin Powell and the State Department experts - at least over this
greatest and most immediate threat of all.
3. ISRAEL/PALESTINE: TO BE DEALT WITH BEFORE IRAQ:
Observers of al-Qaeda and Islam warned that, while Osama bin Laden and
al-Qaeda have their own extremist ideology and maximalist strategic ends not
shared by the bulk of their misled admirers, they derive most of their popular
support from Arab and world wide Islamic resentment of, even hatred of, the
United States, for its almost unquestioning support of Israel and its lack of
sympathy for legitimate Palestinian aspirations.
This has been and remains the primary fuel for al-Qaeda recruitment and the
acceptance by many young Muslims of the need for terrorism not only in
Israel/Palestine, but world-wide. Indeed American acquiescence in destruction
within the Palestinian Authority's area (not only of lives and property but of
hope) - shown daily on TV - has lost America friends, even in Europe.
Well before "9.11" there was much expert agreement that America must take
the lead in immediately nipping the "Second Intifada" in the bud. The more death
and destruction on both sides in the escalating vicious circle of revenge and
counter revenge, the more difficult it would be to negotiate any settlement.
Hatred lasts a lifetime - and maybe much longer. Given the unsatisfactory nature
of both Mr. Sharon and President Arafat as leaders for peace, several of those
who knew the problem began to conclude (particularly after the failure of
President Clinton's 2000 peace initiative), that a solution, broadly on the
lines all but accepted, would have somehow to be foisted on the two parties by
the "quartet" (the US, the UN, Europe, & Russia).
After "9.11" it became imperative to cure the Israel/Palestine purulent
running sore which assisted al-Qaeda by infecting not just the Middle East and
Western relations with the Islamic world, but - given the oil dimension - the
entire international body politic. Many pointed out that a "unilateral" attack
on Iraq, without some prior convincing demonstration of serious US intent to
deal impartially with Israel/Palestine, would result in a linking of Palestine
with Iraq and al-Qaeda. They warned that the Palestine problem would become
intimately connected with the war on international terrorism - as has indeed
happened.
Prewar there was hope that even a credible threat by the "quartet", backed
by a large section of the international community, to impose a Palestinian
solution might be sufficient without the actual use of force (intervention being
limited to deployment of UN peacekeepers). Many Israelis, Palestinians, and
American Jews began to see some such option as the only way to peace. But such a
solution would be impossible to achieve without the determined leadership of an
American President. And, politically, only a President at the beginning of his
term, or towards the end of his eight years, could afford to stand back from pro
Israeli hard-liners and take such a controversial lead.
But President Bush started his presidency as a "minimalist" internationally
and from the outset publicly turned his back on the Israel/Palestine problem.
Even when converted to intervention by "9.11" and gearing up for war with Iraq,
his Administration continued to give it minimum attention. After the war, facing
near chaos in Iraq, Mr. Bush launched an attempt to save the "Road Map". But, as
almost all observers predicted, coming after, not before, his attack on Iraq,
the President's initiative soon became moribund. As of now it seems that Mr.
Bush has all but thrown away his own and America's prestige when this was most
needed.
The Iraq war was indeed waged against the backdrop of ever worse carnage in
Israel/Palestine - provoking ever greater Muslim disgust as the US continued to
support more or less whatever Prime Minister Sharon's Israel did: Mr. Bush
harshly condemning Palestinian terrorism with only mild reprimands to Israel and
its "state terrorism".
President Bush's initial mistake of lumping all terrorism together with
al-Qaeda international terrorism, has backfired. Palestinian terrorists are
increasingly returning to the old aim of destroying Israel, instead of limiting
themselves to the fight for a Palestinian state. To al-Qaeda's satisfaction,
this is costing the Palestinians much of the support they had won in Europe and
Russia.
Just as the lumping together of three quite different states in the "Axis
of Evil" exacerbated relations with all of them at once - although diplomacy
strives to separate potential enemies and deal with one at a time - so Mr.
Bush's declaration of war against all terrorism has meant taking on, as well as
al-Qaeda, all national terrorist groups (several of whom are widely perceived as
"freedom fighters") and thereby pushing many of them into the arms of al-Qaeda.
Every terrorist situation reflects or is fuelled by real or perceived injustice:
each must be dealt with separately.
When is a rebellion terrorism, and when does it become a civil war? When is
an uprising a rebellion, and when is it an attempt to escape subjugation and
tyranny? There is much hypocrisy which is clouding the issues. States have
armies and police; those they oppress have only guerrilla or terror as a weapon
(unless Gandhi-like civil disobedience is an option). The United States was born
from guerrilla war. Israel was born from terrorism. The US famously backed Osama
bin Laden along with other Islamic terrorists against the Soviet occupiers of
Afghanistan.
As over the years so many have so frequently pointed out, to the civilian
victim there is little difference between being blown up by a terrorist and
being blown up in an air attack - or being run over by an Israeli tank. In World
War II there was much hope of wrecking enemy morale by bombing civilians. We who
were there saw mass civilian casualties in Vietnam: and more American atrocities
like My Lay are even now being resurrected. Even with "smart" weapons, the US
appears to have killed substantially more "innocent civilians" in Iraq and
Afghanistan than al-Qaeda killed on "9.11": it does not keep statistics of
civilian deaths.
The truth, of course, is that all through history almost all states and
almost all the oppressed who rise up in arms have used just about any means,
however horrible, to gain their ends. War and terrorism are equally appalling:
surely neither should ever be resorted to except in extremis. This of course is
why, as mentioned at the beginning of this note, it is so vital for mankind to
advance, however circumspectly, on the multilateral, not the unilateral, path
espoused by the Bush Administration.
Hypocrisy prevents us from recognising the "beam" in our own eye - so
making us incapable of understanding our enemies: the first requirement when
making war or negotiating peace. (There is no space here to consider that one
big question for the developed world: "why do they hate us so much?").
4. AFGHANISTAN - PERILOUSLY UNFINISHED BUSINESS:
By the spring of 2002 there were many warnings that the security situation
was deteriorating and that there was evidence of returning Taliban and its
al-Qaeda's terrorist cadres. The US had won what was very generally regarded as
a justified war. But the coalition so successfully formed to deal with
Afghanistan was losing the peace - there were complaints that the US was again
abandoning Afghanistan as it had done after the defeat of the Soviet Union. Much
more money was needed to achieve wider security and for reconstruction and
winning popular support through raising the living standards of ordinary
Afghans. But for other countries to contribute more troops, expertise, and
treasure, the United State had to take the lead.
All with knowledge of Afghanistan agreed that enduring coalition success
there was essential for world-wide success against al-Qaeda. And that it would
be folly to invade Iraq and so take on the far greater challenge - even in the
best possible scenario - of occupying Iraq. Afghanistan required of the order of
$10bn and by mid 2003 it had not even got $1bn, while the occupation of Iraq is
now costing some 4bn a month - exclusive of reconstruction.
Prewar estimates of the cost of an Iraq war, plus the costs of occupation
and reconstruction, exceeded $100bn and there were warnings that even this was
likely to be a serious under-estimate. The Bush Administration is currently
seeking some $87bn. Recently, only some $1.2bn was considered sufficient for
Afghanistan. Clearly not enough to cause Afghans to back the Kabul government as
the bringer of gifts and a better life.
The pre-Iraq war warnings have proved justified. The Iraq war has - to
Taliban and al-Qaeda advantage - indeed distracted attention from priority
Afghanistan, and diverted money and security resources to Iraq. This has put in
jeopardy Afghanistan's future as a stable and reliable member of the
international community. The countries forming the coalition concerning
Afghanistan could - given the will - have made the crucial difference. But the
countries the US is now wooing to find $36bn for Iraq could hardly make all the
difference financially when it comes to funding Iraq. And the pledges for Iraq
are swallowing potential funds for Afghanistan. The worse the security situation
in Iraq, the worse the outlook for Afghanistan.
5. SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION 1441 - THE MISSED OPPORTUNITY TO AVOID OR AT
LEAST POSTPONE WAR:
The Iraq crisis produced two major surprises which very few foresaw:
First: Saddam's readiness to accept war with America rather than reveal his
limited, (or even perhaps non-existent WMD). This remains a mystery. Some
suggest that Saddam deliberately sacrificed his country to enable him to stage a
come-back after a forced withdrawal of a US which found the costs of occupation
in life and treasure too high. This is not impossible - he seems to have
arranged a remarkably secure hide-out for himself and he released his most
dangerous criminals before the war started. Others suggest Saddam accepted war
believing he could not long survive were the world and his own people to learn
that he had little or none of the WMD which he brandished to inspire fear in the
Iraqi people and in his neighbours and the world at large. Still others suggest
that(like Mr. Bush who famously declared he relies on his staff for objective
news) Saddam was surrounded by sycophants, so did not know the truth about his
predicament.
Second: Mr. Blair's insistence on being rushed into war by President Bush.
And this after what most observers believe was his and Mr. Powell's (and the
French Foreign Minister M. de Villepin's) extraordinary and unexpected victory
in securing the passage of Security Council Resolution 1441 of 8 November 2002
which returned the United Nations inspectors to Iraq. As stated above, almost
all observers and most governments believed that the return of the inspectors
effectively "put Saddam back in his box" - so providing several months respite
after which it would be possible to reassess the Iraq threat.
Unlike Mr. Bush, a foreign affairs debutant, who reportedly prefers to rely
almost entirely on advice from his coterie of "super hawk" advisers, Mr. Blair
is exceptionally intelligent, able, and very well informed. He must surely have
known of most at least of the warnings that so many distinguished experts - as
well as serving government officials - urged upon him and his government. His
decision to go into an unapproved war with Mr. Bush was described as "reckless"
by a member of his cabinet, Clare Short, who eventually resigned. As it is, much
of the British Army is stuck in Iraq pending America's pleasure - running up a
bill of some £5m a day - nearly £2bn a year. Britain, like the US is
over-stretched, financially as well as militarily, with no exit in sight.
We were among the many who believed that after the Resolution 1441
diplomatic victory for which he had fought so hard, Mr. Blair would side with
those many governments and experts who urged forcefully
that the inspectors should be given reasonable time to complete their work,
and that he would inform Mr. Bush that the UK could not join in an unapproved
attack until this had happened.
Had he done so, Mr. Blair's own prestige in the world as well as in the UK,
and the UK's standing among nations, must have been immensely enhanced. And,
very possibly, Mr. Bush would indeed have delayed his attack - especially when
polls were suggesting that a majority of Americans were against a war without
Britain.
No one can foresee what such a delay would have brought. But it is quite
possible that under such greatly increased pressure from all sides, further
evolution would have begun in Iraqi politics and society. At any rate it is
probable that war could have been delayed until after some progress both on
North Korea, and Israel/Palestine, and that any attack deemed necessary would
have had United Nations authorization. History teaches that evolution is always
better than revolution - and patience almost always to be preferred over
precipitate action.
Mr. Blair's explanation for going along with the so obviously
over-impatient US President, was that the American alliance had to come before
all else. As he is reported to have put it to his one time Foreign Secretary,
Robin Cook, the only member of his cabinet who resigned before the war: "We must
steer close to America. If we don't we shall lose our influence to shape what
they do". Yet this was surely the prime occasion on which to attempt to stop the
US from taking action so obviously potentially disastrous not only for itself,
but for the UK - and indeed, the world. As several remarked at the time - the
duty of a true ally is to tell you when you are wrong. Which is what America
told Britain (France and Israel too) over the 1967 Suez campaign, obliging a
retreat.
This is all the more extraordinary in that Britain has no national interest
in Iraq not shared by most other major nations. President Bush, though, did and
does have a strategic vision for the United States in the Arab world - however
mistaken it may be. According to this, America needs to be in Iraq, geographical centre of Middle East, not only to get Iraq again producing
oil and so reducing United States oil dependence on Saudi Arabia - put in
question by "9.11", but also to forward Mr. Bush's highly controversial plan to
use a new "democratic" Iraq that the US is to create, to act as a beacon for
other Arab countries in a general move towards democracy instead of declining
still further into a kind of Islamic decadence where al-Qaeda increasingly
appeals to the young. His critics have pointed out that there were other ways of
far less expensively and far more acceptably approaching this aim without
risking the ever unpredictable violence of war.
6. THE REMOVAL OF SADDAM'S TYRANNY NOT A CASUS BELLI:
Mr Blair, following Mr. Bush who all along claimed that the odious nature
of Saddam's regime in itself justified war, also now claims that the Iraq war
was justified because it ended Saddam's bloody reign.
Mr. Powell remarked after the war "I think a case could be made that human
rights abuses were sufficient grounds for war even if no banned weapons are
found." But why, it is asked, Iraq? There are several regimes as cruel as
Saddam's - North Korea's certainly. And, as is often remarked, such "police
action" must have broad international approval, or it is "vigilante": a
dangerous precedent that other countries can cite.
That this fall back justification for war was never at the forefront in
American and British thinking, is strongly suggested by the fact that there was
no plan after victory quickly to obtain evidence of these abuses with the
assistance of international experts. Mass graves were left unprotected to be
searched by relatives for missing persons; witness and written evidence was not
systematically recorded. Claims that Saddam killed some 300,000 of his own
people may never now be substantiated or corrected. This negligence is
extraordinary, even if no claim had been made that these abuses alone justified
the war. We saw how a whole movement arose denying or minimising Hitler's
genocide of Jews - now we risk seeing future whitewashing of Saddam's tyranny.
Meanwhile a great many of the most pacific and compassionate people in
Britain and America, many of whom opposed the war (as in the unprecedented
million man anti-war march through London) appear for the moment to have
accepted this fall back justification.
As some observers warned before the war, the mere removal of Saddam would
not justify the war
because in fact it would hold up, not advance the gradual international
move towards accepting that some regimes are so repellent, so cruel and
oblivious of Human Rights, and so prejudicial to regional or world harmony that
they should be overthrown by widely approved international action.
This is a relatively new concept, because the basis for peace has for long
been dependent on sovereign states respecting each other's sovereign
inviolability no matter what they do within their own borders. Obviously any
change in this doctrine, so much needed in our new interdependent world, cannot
be applied to the big states - no matter how odious events like Stalin's vast
purges, or Mao's murderous "Cultural Revolution". But it is slowly being applied
to smaller states whether by multilateral diplomatic and other pressure, or by a
group of interested nations using force - as NATO did against Milosevic's rump
Yugoslavia in order to rescue Kosovans and finally to put an end to Serbia's
aggression. The widely approved British intervention in the chaotic conditions
in Sierra Leone is another example.
For for this new doctrine to take firmer root it is essential that no one
country act without such prior wide approval and preferably not without a
Security Council resolution.
In fact the overthrow of Saddam has set back this much needed evolution. It
has so overstretched the United States both militarily and financially that it
is unlikely that it or other states will any time soon be keen to join in even
much needed military stabilisation actions. This summer's US military
intervention in Liberia, whose principal protector has always been the US -
although all but unanimously called for not least by the Sierra Leonians
themselves - was reluctant, tardy, and minimal.
But the Bush Administration is, to its credit, at last showing some welcome
interest in developing international cooperation in dealing with this
challenging problem of tyrannies, genocides, and civil wars - short of military
action. Notably Mr. Powell is playing a major role in trying to end the civil
wars in the Sudan and Sri Lanka.
The danger is that, by falling back on the removal of what one UK minister
described as a "bloody, brutal and murderous tyranny" as an excuse to justify
war, Mr. Bush, despite his "neocon" hawkishness, will be supported politically
by well-meaning doves in America. And that Mr. Blair too, will escape the
criticism he deserves from the kindly anti-war masses in the UK.
7. UNACCEPTABLE RISK OF THE US REVEALING THE LIMITS OF ITS MILITARY AND
FINANCIAL POWER:
Prewar, military observers warned that an occupation of Iraq would require
far more troops than the slimmed down invasion forces required by the Rumsfeld
doctrine. As mentioned above, this was echoed by the then US Army Chief of Staff
- but his words went unheeded. As one expert warned "America's military strength
risks being squandered on a non-urgent war."
The US Army thus risked finding itself overstretched in Iraq and America's
Achilles heel exposed to enemies and friends alike. Paul Krugman in the New York
Times pointed out last July "The myth of US overwhelming military might is being
revealed in Iraq". Now a "leaked" memo from Mr. Rumsfeld reveals him as saying,
"It is pretty clear that the Coalition can win in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it
will be a long hard slog". The Administration can no longer hide the unpalatable
fact that right now the security situation is steadily worsening in Iraq.
Although US spends $400bn a year on defence - more than all other major
military powers combined - so much is spent on technological weapons and their
development and the personnel needed to organise and control this, that there is
a shortage of "boots on the ground". Of the US 33 combat brigades, 1/3 are in
the gulf area. (Only some 7% of forces in Iraq are not American). Replacing them
with fresh forces on normal tours of duty clashes with obligations in
Afghanistan, Europe, South Korea and elsewhere - let alone allowing for the
unforeseeable.
The deficit of "boots" and the prolongation of their tours of duty, have
led to falling morale in the army in Iraq, morale already set-back by finding
the much heralded welcome from the Iraqis short lived, and that front line
troops are required to fight a guerrilla war and carry out police duties for
which they are not trained. They know that, contrary to what their leaders say,
the Iraq adventure has set back, not advanced, the war on terror - and that in
fact Iraq was not the immediate threat to the US that they had been told was the
reason for asking their considerable sacrifices. Not a few resent their Supreme
Commander for his rush to war which put them in full battle dress into an Iraqi
summer with temperatures often even exceeding 40 C. Yet morale is what counts
among the men who actually have to fight.
The Administration is extremely anxious to avoid having to make good the
deficit of "boots" by reinstating conscription - but so far it has found no
country, apart from the UK - to deliver much more than token forces. And the
Iraq experience, with its effect on morale, makes it harder to recruit a
volunteer army.
US military power - excluding nuclear weapons - is based on swift
intervention using high technology followed by speedy disengagement, leaving it
other services to follow through their victories. But those other services,
civil and military including linguists, trained to perform policing and in field
intelligence duties are grossly inadequate. Any early success in Iraq therefore
depended on massive aid from the UN and allies with Middle East and Arabic
capabilities. But Mr. Bush had alienated the big powers who
doubted the need for a precipitate war in March, and he had charged the UN
with irrelevance if it did not authorise an attack on his timetable.
Even Britain has become sufficiently concerned about America's military
wisdom and its overstretched position, coupled with its diminishing interest in
Europe, to make a move towards a separate European military capability. As its
laboured response to the Bosnian and Kosovo crises showed, NATO is hardly
reliable except in the case of major war - because not only the US but every
other member can veto. And if some intervention is needed as in Macedonia, how
can an America help which is overstretched militarily? The trumpeted capability
to fight two wars simultaneously has been revealed as a hollow boast.
Financial warnings:
Just as United States' military vulnerability has been shown up in Iraq, so has the hole in Uncle Sam's supposedly bottomless pockets. There was plenty of warning: in the latter half of 2002 both financial and military experts repeatedly questioned as clearly unrealistic official estimates ranging from some $60bn to at worst some 100bn as the cost of the war and occupation - the reconstruction of Iraq was supposedly to be paid from oil revenues. Many questioned the outlook for future US budgets after Mr. Bush pushed through his sizeable tax cuts mainly for the more affluent. With substantial deficits predicted, how could the US also afford an expensive war? By July 2003, the actual cost of the military occupation was reported to be running at some $4bn a month.
Just as United States' military vulnerability has been shown up in Iraq, so has the hole in Uncle Sam's supposedly bottomless pockets. There was plenty of warning: in the latter half of 2002 both financial and military experts repeatedly questioned as clearly unrealistic official estimates ranging from some $60bn to at worst some 100bn as the cost of the war and occupation - the reconstruction of Iraq was supposedly to be paid from oil revenues. Many questioned the outlook for future US budgets after Mr. Bush pushed through his sizeable tax cuts mainly for the more affluent. With substantial deficits predicted, how could the US also afford an expensive war? By July 2003, the actual cost of the military occupation was reported to be running at some $4bn a month.
At the same time independent oil experts warned that, even without allowing
for sabotage either by Saddam or during an occupation, Iraqi petroleum
infrastructure was so run down that it would take years, not months, to achieve
an export capacity sufficient to begin significantly defraying the costs of
reconstruction.
Oil exports have been bedevilled not only by years of neglect, but by
terrorist attacks on pipelines. It is likely to be at least two years before
Iraqi oil sales provide significant funding for reconstruction.
Congress - after much questioning and some balking - is expected to approve
an extra $87bn for Iraq.
But it is now estimated that the total cost of reconstruction will be of
the order of $200bn over 10 years - hopefully much of this will be met from oil
exports as this period progresses.
Further, Security Council Resolution 1483 recognising the occupation,
entails the occupying powers bearing responsibility for Iraq's estimated $359bn
of debt.
The Congressional Budget Office puts the US budget deficit at $480bn with a
projected deficit of $401bn for 2004. Instead of an expected budget surplus to
2013 of $891bn, a deficit of $1.4trn is estimated (and this only if President
Bush's famous tax cuts prove to be temporary - otherwise a $3trn deficit can be
expected over the ten years to 2013).
Yet not only California, but many other State budgets are currently in
deficit and needing Federal support. And there is urgent need for renewal of the
US own infrastructure. Bob Herbert in the New York Times in September is far
from alone in complaining that "money should have been spent on US
infrastructure instead of on this ill-advised war". Also squandered by Mr. Bush
was the healthy budget position that he was bequeathed.
As mentioned above, the US has just sought, with only modest success, $36bn
from the international community for the reconstruction of Iraq after pledging
$20bn itself. Given the well-founded objections of many states to President's
Bush's insistence to rush to war, it seems the US can expect little more than
token payments similar to the token provision of troops by states anxious to
show their pro-American orientation in their particular circumstances.
The immense US budget and balance of trade deficits, at present supported
by massive inflows of funds from China and many other countries could, if
confidence were lost, lead many to seek a haven in Euros. Some oil producers
could sell oil for Euros. Such moves could destabilise the existing financial
order with grave consequences - not only for the US.
The myth of America's endless wealth is being debunked for al-Qaeda and the
rest of the world tosee.
8.LACK OF POST-VICTORY PLANNING; EXIT STRATEGY; DANGER OF INABILITY TO
DISENGAGE: SPECTRE OF "VIETNAM":
a) Lack of planning:
Towards the end of 2002 experts were pointing out
that while there was much publicised detailed planning for a quick and
successful war in Iraq, there appeared to be a dangerous lack of any detailed
planning for the aftermath of victory. Yet a swift well-planned takeover
from the defeated Ba'ath regime, and a well thought out plan for the transfer of
power to an Iraqi government, was essential for a short and acceptable
occupation.
Vital questions were: what provisional Iraqi authority in such a divided
nation would be broadly acceptable to most Iraqis? What kind of constitution
would be best for so divided a society as Iraq's? Who would write it? How then
to organise elections? And even more immediately, what to do about the Iraqi
army, police, civil service, and intelligence services? Simply disbanding them
would court disaster - armed men and leading cadres would be unemployed and so
fodder for extremism. But how were these institutions to be "de-Ba'athified" -
perhaps on the lines of de-Nazification in Germany? How many linguists,
Arabists, and other experts could be mobilised? The answers would determine how
best to maintain security and public services.
The consensus was that a smooth takeover and successful reconstruction of
Iraq would be far easier were any war to be approved by the Security Council and
the UN and a large number of interested countries - including Iraq's Arab
neighbours - willing to provide expertise. If America went it alone a great many
Iraqi's would conclude that they were not there just to overthrow Saddam and
"liberate them", but to take possession of Iraq's vast oil reserves to the
advantage of US big business. A view that could only be heightened by the Bush
Administration's far from transparent method of awarding main contracts for
Iraq's reconstruction to such firms as Halliburton and Bechtel with close
relations with the White House.
Had the war been a United Nations operation with the US responsible for the
military, but with civilian security and reconstruction in UN hands, Iraqi
perceptions could have been very different. (Even though the UN is not loved by
many Iraqis because regarded - largely mistakenly - as responsible for the
suffering and deprivation of many thanks to the sanctions imposed after the
first Gulf War).
This stress on the need for extensive and detailed planning for a takeover
was ignored - a Pentagon official, reflecting top thinking, claimed that few
plans could be made until after victory, when it would be possible to see the
situation on the ground.
The chaotic situation after the fall of Baghdad, and the failure quickly to
restore security and move to repair public services, notably water and
electricity, was made much worse a) not only by failing to make adequate plans
and provide the resources to carry them out without delay, but also b) because,
as the war was not approved, the technical, linguistic, and other expertise that
the UN and other states could provide was not available.
The Iraqi army, faced with defeat, largely melted away with its light
weapons. Disbanded soldiers became unemployed. An ideal background for
recruitment for terrorism. Although the US made a major effort to find WMD
(though rejecting the UN Inspectors' expertise) in order to "justify" the war,
surprising little was done to find all Iraq's stocks of conventional weapons.
These are now being used to attack not only the US forces, but much else.
In May 2003 the US Administrator in Iraq, Mr. Paul Bremer, formally
disbanded the Iraqi army, only to admit later that this had been a mistake. As
Mr. Mowffaq Al-Rubaie of the Iraq Governing Council put it: "Unemployment is
nurturing terrorism".
In sum, there is no need to relate the disaster that ensued, which has led
to such a degree of insecurity and terrorist acts as gravely to prejudice a
return to normal life and a swift move towards reconstruction. Although, trying
to conceal its embarrassment, the Bush Administration has done a welcome U turn
returning to the UN and seeking international assistance, insecurity on the
ground is so bad that the UN, voluntary agencies, and businesses attempting to
organise reconstruction have been attacked and have had greatly to reduce their
people on the ground for fear of attack.
The Ba'athists and al-Qaeda supporters - whether coordinating their efforts
or acting separately (and there appears to be lamentably little intelligence
about this) - are currently proving increasingly effective in attacking any
organisation trying to help Iraq. Their aim is chaos.
b) Lack of exit strategy, the spectre of Vietnam:
This failure to plan
for occupation and reconstruction meant also an inability to estimate the time
it would take to handover to an Iraqi Government and so to end the occupation.
When, prewar, the media raised the possibility of a "Vietnam" situation and the
French warned that terrorists do not need jungles but can operate in densely
populated areas surrounded by desert as in Algeria, the Bush Administration
played down these fears.
But with the difficulties of arranging a political handover in a secure
environment, and with the likelihood of reconstruction being delayed by
insecurity and running into half a decade or more, the problem of exiting Iraq
leaving a friendly stable government behind is now worrying both the Pentagon
and the State Department - and surely also Mr. Karl Rove and his assistants
planning the President's re-election campaign in 2004.
Those organising the indiscriminate violence in Iraq are counting on
causing enough American casualties to bring about about an American retreat, as
in Vietnam, the Lebanon, and Somalia - and to deter involvement by any other
body such as the UN: a victory for al-Qaeda. The stakes are very high. America
must stay the course and pay the price of the Bush Administration's rush to war.
9. MEAGRE INTELLIGENCE
All of us with intelligence experience know how vital it is to confirm
information from electronic and aerial surveillance with "humint" - information
from observers or spies on the ground. But equally all of us know from the
experience of the Cold War how difficult it is to run spies with good access in
ruthless totalitarian countries. As regards Iraq a great gap emerged when the
international community failed to react to Saddam Hussein's expulsion of the UN
inspectors. The British and American intelligence and security services, the
electronic intercept services, and allied and foreign intelligence organisations
well knew that by 2002 intelligence on Iraq was outdated or meagre and that much
of it might be incorrect.
In September 2002 Prime Minister Blair remarked: "We haven't the faintest
idea what has been going on for the last four years", adding that all that was
known was that there was an attempt to rebuild weapons programmes.
Subsequent releases by the British and American governments - notably
including the British so called "dodgy dossier" in early February 2003 were
recognised by intelligence experts to be "scraping the barrel" in an attempt to
show that Iraq possessed WMD which presented an immediate threat to world peace.
Indeed the Inspectors were able to show that some items provided by US
intelligence were not correct. Even Mr. Powell's speech to the Security Council
was regarded as surprisingly unconvincing.
The result so far of the Kelly enquiry in the UK has served to heighten the
suspicion that meagre intelligence was "spun" by 10 Downing Street in an attempt
to bolster the case for war. It appears that intelligence chiefs were told that
not North Korea nor Iran, but Iraq presented the biggest threat. It was
evidently not easy for intelligence professionals to set out their true
assessments based on the little available.
In the United States, after viewing the secret intelligence available, the
House of Representatives Intelligence Committee decried the prewar intelligence
on Iraq as "circumstantial, fragmentary, and outdated" adding that the Committee
had seen nothing to suggest that there were significant items too delicate to be
released to the Inspectors and the Security Council - as the Administration had
suggested there were in the weeks leading up to war.
This "humint" failure has continued in post-war Iraq. Although the US
officially suggests that the terrorists (or guerrillas) it faces are
increasingly well organised and centrally directed, it has also admitted that
local intelligence remains sparse. This reflects the cultural and linguistic
barriers that the US faces. Again, these problems would have been far easier to
overcome had the war had international approval. There would have been Iraqis,
Arabists, and Arabic experts available from many sources.
10. DAMAGE TO UN, NATO; RELATIONS WITH EUROPE, RUSSIA & CHINA;
EXACERBATION OF RESENTMENT AMONG MODERATE MUSLIMS:
It is hardly necessary to mention the very many prewar warnings about the
damage which must inevitably be done to America's international interests, that
were made in the months before the US and the UK went to war on 20 March 2003,
by politicians, pundits, and the media. Even the American and British
governments largely accepted that an attack on Iraq, not approved by the
Security Council, risked causing serious and even possibly irreparable damage to
the United Nations, NATO, the EU, and to American relations with many countries,
including Germany and the three other permanent members of the Security Council.
The Bush Administration then exacerbated this situation by condemning the
countries that opposed the Iraq adventure. The President himself declared that
the UN risked becoming irrelevant if it did not approve his intended attack on
Iraq. As the war began the Bush Administration even talked of punishing the
countries, like France and Germany, that had dared oppose the US.
Yet it was these countries, as it turned out, that proved to have been in
the right not only juridically but in correctly foreseeing what would result
from the folly of a rush to war. (That they also had less worthy ulterior
motives is of course true, but so did the United States. Only Britain had no
real national interest in Iraq).
Much is now being made by both the US and these countries that the
disagreement over going to war is behind them and that their relations with the
US are fully repaired. But neither the governments nor their peoples have
forgotten how they were blamed for being right - and that the Bush
Administration' so hyped up antipathy that, in the case of France, some
Americans absurdly began calling French fries "freedom fries"! It is safe to say
that virtually no country has failed to draw far reaching conclusions about what
confidence can be placed in the wisdom of the present United States' leadership.
Indeed, it is reassuring that in many (especially the developed) countries, it
is Mr. Bush and his Administration that are so disliked and mistrusted - not
America itself nor its people.
Then there is the combined effect of present American policy over Iraq and
Israel/Palestine in the Muslim world: while this has not proved as immediately
disastrous as some pundits feared - for there was a fear uncontrollable riots in
Egypt - the gulf between Muslims in general and the West has been much widened.
Antipathy to America is now a major problem - just one example in mid 2002 polls
suggested that 61% of Indonesians had a favourable view of the US. This is
reported to have fallen to 15%. It now much harder for moderate Muslims to take
a pro-Western, let alone a pro-American, stand as many used to except over
Israel: a big plus for al-Qaeda without any new action against the US. It has
simply taken advantage of US mistakes. The "9.11" attacks are continuing to work
just fine as a detonator to shift the world al-Qaeda's way.
11. DISTRACTION FROM DEALING WITH PRESSING NEED FOR ACTION ON THE
ENVIRONMENT:
Last but far from least, for humanity faces possible extinction if nothing
is done with a sense of urgency, were the complaints from a number of
environmentalists that a war in Iraq would inevitably distract the world's
attention from the gravity of the environmental crisis. For governments - faced
with one all consuming challenge - can hardly deal with any other very large
problem, no matter how urgent.
Because of Mr. Bush's refusal to take a lead, or indeed any serious part in
resolving these environmental challenges, the other countries most concerned had
the extraordinarily difficult task of attempting to go ahead with the
ratification of the Kyoto Protocol without the US. Although woefully inadequate,
Kyoto's application would be a first small step towards going ahead with
international environmental protection until a new American Administration is
persuaded to, or is shamed into, leading the way - as biggest polluter as well
as only superpower - to supersede Kyoto and its defects, and to take a lead
towards some far more effective environmental protection.
WHAT CONCLUSIONS CAN BE DRAWN FROM THIS CATALOGUE OF WARNINGS THAT HAVE
PROVED JUSTIFIED?
In April 2003 we were among those who predicted that the Bush
Administration would quite soon be forced, by its inability to handle alone the
situation in Iraq, to return to a greater degree of multilateralism.
President Bush has in fact shown considerable ability to adapt to meet
crises. Starting off as a determined "minimalist" in international matters,
after "9.11" he refrained from launching action against Afghanistan until he had
wisely gathered wide international support.
He then became a "maximalist" internationally - but a unilateral
"maximalist" with plans for America to go it alone if need be - notably over
Iraq and Israel/Palestine.
Realising that Iraq's stabilisation and reconstruction were proving too
much even for the United States, Mr. Bush is now returning to at least a degree
of multilateralism.
But getting the US out of Iraq leaving behind a satisfactory government
requires delicate and sensitive diplomacy with many countries. It is good news
that neocom ideologues like Vice President Cheney and Secretary of Defence
Rumsfeld at the moment appear to have lost some influence to the more pragmatic
Secretary of State, Mr. Powell, and National Security Adviser, Miss Rice. But
they too, are compromised by their positions in the past. So can the Bush
Administration so shift its basic outlook as to recover the confidence of Iraqis
and the outside world which is essential for an acceptable outcome?
That appears unlikely even should Mr. Bush prove right in believing that
the present increasingly damaging attacks are the last throes of the moribund
Ba'ath regime. Some members of the Governing Council and some religious -
including Christian - leaders believe, to the contrary, that the violence is
primarily due to foreign al-Qaeda supporters who have teamed up with Saddam's
dispossessed Sunnis.
Many, if not most, Western observers on the ground assess that M. de
Villepin and former Secretary of State Mrs. Albright are correct in believing
that i) only the Iraqi army, police, and intelligence - stood down by the US
after its victory - can deal with the insecurity (criminal as well as terrorist)
which is making all but impossible the reconstruction of the country, and ii)
that for better morale and a new
start, some form of hand over of sovereignty must be quickly arranged.
For psychologically it is essential that the Iraqis perceive the attacks as
on them and their future and not primarily against the occupation. Public
opinion would then rally firmly behind "their" forces of order. If, as it seems,
this is correct, then can the Bush Administration - even if it completes its U
turn - encourage the Iraqis to make the great effort and sacrifices
required?
Of course, much depends on the terrorists: if they "overkill" Iraqis and
wreck all hope of economic recovery, the population could unite against them,
and with good Iraqi leadership, they would find themselves deprived of the
ambivalent environment in which they are now "swimming". With the resulting
improvement in Iraqi intelligence, the tide could then turn against
them.
Fortunately
i) whatever responsible governments privately think of Mr.
Bush, they all appreciate that it is in their interest and in the interest of
the world that Iraq should be stabilised.
ii) other countries are now taking the lead from Mr. Bush's struggling America. China and the other neighbouring powers are pressuring America as well as North Korea in the attempt to oblige the North Koreans to keep the Korean peninsular free of nuclear weapons. Britain, France, and Germany are doing the same in an attempt to block Iranian nuclear ambitions. There is even concerted pressure, without America, on Russia to ratify the Kyoto Protocol and to relaunch environmental programs while waiting for "Administration change" - and a change of heart - in the United States.
ii) other countries are now taking the lead from Mr. Bush's struggling America. China and the other neighbouring powers are pressuring America as well as North Korea in the attempt to oblige the North Koreans to keep the Korean peninsular free of nuclear weapons. Britain, France, and Germany are doing the same in an attempt to block Iranian nuclear ambitions. There is even concerted pressure, without America, on Russia to ratify the Kyoto Protocol and to relaunch environmental programs while waiting for "Administration change" - and a change of heart - in the United States.
WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
The indictment is long and convincing: there were warnings galore - many of
them simple common sense. As one distinguished correspondent said of the
experts' efforts, "We did our best, but no one would listen". President Bush's
(and Prime Minister Blair's) insistence on rushing to war with Iraq was indeed a
"world blunder."
In just a few months on Mr. Bush's watch, the United States' has lost much
of:
i) the confidence, even of its closest allies, in the wisdom of its foreign
policy;
ii) the fear and respect for its military might - and its ability to
intervene anywhere in the world;
iii) its ability to finance its international policies;
iv) the former broad world-wide approval of governments and peoples - and
much of the sympathy it had after "9.11".
Far more seriously it has:
v) played into the hands of its enemies, and compromised its campaign against international terrorism. What President Bush presented as a walkover is already evoking the nightmare of defeat.
v) played into the hands of its enemies, and compromised its campaign against international terrorism. What President Bush presented as a walkover is already evoking the nightmare of defeat.
President Bush's simplistic and emotional use of the word "evil" and his
perception of people as "good guys" (of President Putin approvingly, "I was able
to get a sense of his soul") or "bad guys" (of those held in limbo in Guantanamo
untried, "these are bad men") has been particularly damaging to the US and its
friends. It lumps nations and individuals on one side of the fence or the other.
It is "crusade" talk - all too closely reflecting the "jihad" extremism whipped
up by bin Laden. It ignores the fact that all states, and indeed all
individuals, have done what moralists would call evil: it is just a question of
degree. It hampers negotiation. It is not the language of reason and toleration
which alone can enable civilisations, religions, and peoples to share this
planet.
More than one respected politician has suggested to us privately (rightly
or wrongly) that Mr. Bush and Mr. Blair share something of such a black and
white vision of the world based on "reborn Christian" theology. Some accounts
suggest that, since Mr. Bush "was saved" at least from alchoholism, he is indeed
motivated by such beliefs when making political decisions.
This too, reflects something of al-Qaeda's identification of politics with
religion. Yet the hope of the non-Islamic world must be that tens of millions of
moderate Muslims, who do not like theocracy but prefer to keep politics, law,
and religion separate in the state apparatus, will prevail over the extremists.
This is a delicate and difficult subject because political and religious power
were, from the beginning, united in Islam. But it must be remembered that over
several centuries Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christianity - and later
Protestantism - were closely bound up with the state and Christendom's politics,
despite their founder's dictum, "My kingdom is not of this world". Sadly,
President Bush appears to have extraordinarily little comprehension of this
complexity although he is running a "war" against Islamic
terrorism.
In sum - the passage of Security Council Resolution 1441 in November 2002
may, as time goes on, prove to have marked the zenith of American power.
Historians may see the folly of the rush to war with Iraq as the beginning of
the end of a century of American predominance, just as the botching of the 2nd
Boer War (1899/1902) exposed the limits of British power, leading to the end of
Britain's century of predominance. It is possible that there may now be no
second American century. If not, it was not al-Qaeda that switched the points
for world history - it was President Bush and the discredited ideologues on whom
he relies.
So it has to be doubtful if Mr. Bush - no matter how genuine his nascent
conversion to multi-lateralism may prove as election year 2004 approaches - can
foster success in Iraq. His mismanagement of the international struggle against
al-Qaeda dismays governments. The US Advisory Group on Public Diplomacy for the
Arab and Muslim World finds that, "Hostility towards America has reached
shocking levels." This soaring anti-Americanism is far more anti-Bush than
anti-America. Mr. Bush is seen as a growing part of the problem, and a
diminishing part of the solution. Is it not in the interest of the world that he
should go, and be replaced with someone more capable of "clearing up the mess"?
Even if the situation continues to worsen, the US seems unlikely to withdraw
from Iraq before November 2004. But, even if the corner is turned, many fear
that a second term for Mr. Bush could bring a real defeat not just for the US
but for the rest of us.
Responsible governments and senior statesmen do not talk about such things.
Perceived interference in elections in other countries is almost always
counter-productive. But, from what one can gather unattributedly, the consensus
is that Mr. Bush (and the ‘Project for a New American Century’ "neocon hawks"
surrounding him, seeking an American run ‘unipolar world’ bought about through
‘Iraq’ putting the US in control of the Middle East) must go if there is to be a
better chance of extricating the US from Iraq with a degree of success. That
requires a fresh face and a fresh start.
America's allies, even those the Bush Administration has most disparaged,
want to see the US recover from this widespread anti-Americanism, and again be
an effective and wise leader in tackling the great problems of WMD and
international terrorism; over-population, globalisation and gross
mal-distribution of wealth; disease; and the environment. A new US president
must lead the world to the era of international oooperation made possible by
the end of the Cold War.
This means that it is most important that the world's experts who warned so
accurately of the risks over Iraq, and the world's media, will prove able this
time round to gain a hearing among the electorate of the United States.
What is so disturbing is the failure so far of the Democratic Party, even
after winning a majority of votes in the 2000 election, to produce and rally
behind a leader of at least the calibre of Mr. Al Gore - so much respected for
his good sense and expertise in international affairs. Democracy can only
survive if there is an effective opposition. And, as already noted, the
Democratic Party (like the British Conservative Party) failed to be that in
2002.
Unless events go far worse for Mr. Bush - as we must fervently hope they
will not - he will be the Republican candidate. So, whether we approve of some
of their Party's policies or not, we whose welfare largely depends on the
American presidency, must surely hope that the Democrats will - as they have in
the past - rise to the challenge of producing a strong and enlightened
president. A person in this hour of the world's need capable of restoring the
fortunes of the United States before further damage is done. A person brave
enough and competent enough to ensure that the essentials of Mr. Bush's "Mission
Accomplished" - a stable, responsible Iraq - are truly accomplished with Iraqi
and
international support. A person not in bondage to the vagaries of the
opinion polls.
[8 November, 2003 ends
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