A Social History of the Surge
I want to weigh in as a social historian of Iraq on the controversy over whether the "surge" "worked." The NYT notes:
'Mr. McCain bristled in an interview with the “CBS Evening News” on Tuesday when asked about Mr. Obama’s contention that while the added troops had helped reduce violence in Iraq, other factors had helped, including the Sunni Awakening movement, in which thousands of Sunnis were enlisted to patrol neighborhoods and fight the insurgency, and the Iraqi government’s crackdown on Shiite militias.
“I don’t know how you respond to something that is such a false depiction of what actually happened,” Mr. McCain told Katie Couric, noting that the Awakening movement began in Anbar Province when a Sunni sheik teamed up with Sean MacFarland, a colonel who commanded an Army brigade there.
“Because of the surge we were able to go out and protect that sheik and others,” Mr. McCain said. “And it began the Anbar Awakening. I mean, that’s just a matter of history.”
The Obama campaign was quick to note that the Anbar Awakening began in the fall of 2006, several months before President Bush even announced the troop escalation strategy, which became known as the surge. (No less an authority than Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq, testified before Congress this spring that the Awakening “started before the surge, but then was very much enabled by the surge.”)
And Democrats noted that the sheik who helped form the Awakening, Abdul Sattar Buzaigh al-Rishawi, was assassinated in September 2007, after the troop escalation began.
The National Security Network, a liberal foreign policy group, called Mr. McCain’s explanation of the surge’s history “completely wrong.”
But several foreign policy analysts said that if Mr. McCain got the chronology wrong, his broader point — that the troop escalation was crucial for the Awakening movement to succeed and spread — was right. “I would say McCain is three-quarters right in this debate,” said Michael E. O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. '
The problem with this debate is that it has few Iraqis in it.
It is also open to charges of logical fallacy. The only evidence presented for the thesis that the "surge" "worked" is that Iraqi deaths from political violence have declined in recent months from all-time highs in the second half of 2006 and the first half of 2007. (That apocalyptic violence was set off by the bombing of the Askariya shrine in Samarra in February of 2006, which helped provoke a Sunni-Shiite civil war.) What few political achievements are attributed to the troop escalation are too laughable to command real respect.
Proponents are awfully hard to pin down on what the "surge" consisted of or when it began. It seems to me to refer to the troop escalation that began in February, 2007. But now the technique of bribing Sunni Arab former insurgents to fight radical Sunni vigilantes is being rolled into the "surge" by politicians such as John McCain. But attempts to pay off the Sunnis to quiet down began months before the troop escalation and had a dramatic effect in al-Anbar Province long before any extra US troops were sent to al-Anbar (nor were very many extra troops ever sent there). I will disallow it. The "surge" is the troop escalation beginning winter of 2007. The bribing of insurgents to come into the cold could have been pursued without a significant troop escalation, and was.
Aside from defining what proponents mean by the "surge," all kinds of things are claimed for it that are not in evidence. The assertion depends on a possible logical fallacy: post hoc ergo propter hoc. If event X comes after event Y, it is natural to suspect that Y caused X. But it would often be a false assumption. Thus, actress Sharon Stone alleged that the recent earthquake in China was caused by China's crackdown on Tibetan protesters. That is just superstition, and callous superstition at that. It is a good illustration, however, of the very logical fallacy to which I am referring.
For the first six months of the troop escalation, high rates of violence continued unabated. That is suspicious. What exactly were US troops doing differently last September than they were doing in May, such that there was such a big change? The answer to that question is simply not clear. Note that the troop escalation only brought US force strength up to what it had been in late 2005. In a country of 27 million, 30,000 extra US troops are highly unlikely to have had a really major impact, when they had not before.
As best I can piece it together, what actually seems to have happened was that the escalation troops began by disarming the Sunni Arabs in Baghdad. Once these Sunnis were left helpless, the Shiite militias came in at night and ethnically cleansed them. Shaab district near Adhamiya had been a mixed neighborhood. It ended up with almost no Sunnis. Baghdad in the course of 2007 went from 65% Shiite to at least 75% Shiite and maybe more. My thesis would be that the US inadvertently allowed the chasing of hundreds of thousands of Sunni Arabs out of Baghdad (and many of them had to go all the way to Syria for refuge). Rates of violence declined once the ethnic cleansing was far advanced, just because there were fewer mixed neighborhoods. Newsrack was among the first to make this argument, though I was tracking the ethnic cleansing at my blog throughout 2007. See also Karen DeYoung of the Washington Post on this issue.
This MNF graph courtesy of Think Progress makes the point:
As Think Progress quoted CNN correspondent Michael Ware:
' The sectarian cleansing of Baghdad has been — albeit tragic — one of the key elements to the drop in sectarian violence in the capital. […] It’s a very simple concept: Baghdad has been divided; segregated into Sunni and Shia enclaves. The days of mixed neighborhoods are gone. […] If anyone is telling you that the cleansing of Baghdad has not contributed to the fall in violence, then they either simply do not understand Baghdad or they are lying to you.'
Of course, Gen. Petraeus took courageous and effective steps to try to stop bombings in markets and so forth. But I am skeptical that most of these techniques had macro effects. Big population movements because of militia ethnic cleansing are more likely to account for big changes in social statistics.
The way in which the escalation troops did help establish Awakening Councils is that when they got wise to the Shiite ethnic cleansing program, the US began supporting these Sunni militias, thus forestalling further expulsions.
The Shiitization of Baghdad was thus a significant cause of falling casualty rates. But it is another war waiting to happen, when the Sunnis come back to find Shiite militiamen in their living rooms.
In al-Anbar Province, among the more violent in Iraq in earlier years, the bribing of former Sunni guerrillas to join US-sponsored Awakening Councils had a big calming effect. This technique could have been used much earlier than 2006, indeed, could have been deployed from 2003, and might have forestalled large numbers of deaths. Condi Rice forbade US military officers from dealing in this way with the Sunnis for fear of alienating US Shiite allies such as Ahmad Chalabi. The technique was independent of the troop escalation. Indeed, it depended on there not being much of a troop escalation in that province. Had large numbers of US soldiers been committed to simply fight the Sunnis or engage in search and destroy missions, they would have stirred up and reinforced the guerrilla movement. There were typically only 10,000 US troops in al-Anbar before 2007 as I recollect (It has a population of a million and a half or so). If the number of US troops went up to 14,000, that cannot possibly have made the difference.
The Mahdi Army militia of Sayyid Muqtada al-Sadr concluded a cease-fire with US and Iraqi troops in September of 2007. Since the US had inadvertently enabled the transformation of Baghdad into a largely Shiite city, a prime aim of the Mahdi Army, they could afford to stand down. Moreover, they were being beaten militarily by the Badr Corps militia of the pro-Iranian Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and by Iraqi security forces, in Karbala, Diwaniya and elsewhere. It was prudent for them to stand down. Their doing so much reduced civilian deaths.
Badr reassertion in Basra was also important, and ultimately received backing this spring from PM Nuri al-Maliki. There were few coalition troops in Basra, mainly British, and most were moved out to the airport, so the troop escalation was obviously irrelevant to improvements in Basra. Now PM Gordon Brown seems to be signalling that most British troops will come home in 2009.
The vast increase in Iraqi oil revenues in recent years, and the cancellation of much foreign debt, has made the central government more powerful vis-a-vis the society. Al-Maliki can afford to pay, train and equip many more police and soldiers. An Iraq with an unencumbered $75 billion in oil income begins to look more like Kuwait, and to be able to afford to buy off various constituencies. It is a different game than an Iraq with $33 bn. in revenues, much of it pre-committed to debt servicing.
Senator McCain was wrong to say that US or Iraqi casualty rates were unprecedentedly low in May.
Most American commentators are so focused on the relative fall in casualties that they do not stop to consider how high the rates of violence remain. Kudos to Steve Chapman for telling it like it is.
I'd suggest some comparisons. The Sri Lankan civil war between Sinhalese and Tamils has killed an average of 233 persons a month since 1983 and is considered one of the world's major ongoing trouble spots. That is half the average monthly casualties in Iraq recently. In 2007, the conflict in Afghanistan killed an average of 550 persons a month. That is about the rate recently according to official statistics for Iraq. The death rate in 2006-2007 in Somalia was probably about 300 a month, or about half this year's average monthsly rate in Iraq. Does anybody think Afghanistan or Somalia is calm? Thirty years of North Ireland troubles left about 3,000 dead, a toll still racked up in Iraq every five months on average.
All the talk of casualty rates, of course, is to some extent beside the point. The announced purpose of the troop escalation was to create secure conditions in which political compromises could be achieved.
In spring of 2007, Iraq had a national unity government. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's cabinet had members in it from the Shiite Islamic Virtue Party, the Sadr Movement, the secular Iraqi National list of Iyad Allawi, the Sunni Iraqi Accord Front, the Kurdistan Alliance, and the two Shiite core partners, the Islamic Mission (Da'wa) Party and the Islami Supreme Council of Iraq.
Al-Maliki lost his national unity government in summer, 2007, just as casualties began to decline. The Islamic Virtue Party, the Sadrists, and the Iraqi National List are all still in the opposition. The Islamic Mission Party of al-Maliki has split, and he appears to remain in control of the smaller remnant. So although the Sunni IAF has agreed to rejoin the government, al-Maliki's ability to promote national reconciliation is actually much reduced now from 14 months ago.
There has been very little reconciliation between Sunni and Shiite. The new de-Baathification law which ostensibly aimed at improving the condition of Sunnis who had worked in the former regime was loudly denounced by the very ex-Baathists who would be affected by it. In any case, the measure has languished in oblivion and no effort has been made to implement it. Depending on how it is implemented it could easily lead to large numbers of Sunnis being fired from government ministries, and so might make things worse.
An important step was the holding of new provincial elections. Since the Sunni Arabs boycotted the last ones in Jan., 2005, their provinces have not had representative governments and in some, Shiite and Kurdish officials have wielded power over the majority Sunnis Arabs! Attempts to hold the provincial elections this fall have so far run aground on the shoals of ethnic conflict. Thus, the Shiite parties wanted to use ayatollahs' pictures in their campaigns, against the wishes of the other parties. It isn't clear what parliament will decide about that. More important is the question of whether provincial elections will be held in the disputed Kirkuk Province, which the Kurds want to annex. That dispute has caused (Kurdish) President Jalal Talabani to veto the enabling legislation for the provincial elections, which may set them back months or indefinitely.
There is also no oil law, essential to allow foreign investment in developing new fields.
So did the "surge" "work"?
The troop escalation in and of itself was probably not that consequential. That the troops were used in new ways by Gen. Petraeus was more important. But their main effect was ironic. They calmed Baghdad down by accidentally turning it into a Shiite city, as Shiite as Isfahan or Tehran, and thus a terrain on which the Sunni Arab guerrilla movement could not hope to fight effectively.
It is Obama who has the better argument in this debate, not Senator McCain, who knows almost nothing about Iraq and Iraqis, and overestimates what can be expected of 30,000 US troops in an enormous, complex country.
But the problem for McCain is that it does not matter very much for policy who is right in this debate. Security in Iraq is demonstrably improved, for whatever reason, and the Iraqis want the US out. If things are better, what is the rationale for keeping US troops in Iraq?
Labels: Iraq
23 Comments:
It seems to me that the main product of the surge has been to convince Washington that there is nothing more that can be done militarily, and thus eased the US towards withdrawal. Call it victory or whatever suits, if the US withdraws.
When the balance sheet is drawn up by the new administration - impossible under the old - the heavy cost is going to be a big negative, and alternatives are going to be sought.
Yes, I know the old meme, endlessly repeated on the web, that neither Obama nor anyone else in Washington is planning to withdraw from Iraq entirely. That is true. However Obama's idea is completely unrealistic, head in the clouds stuff. Non-Kurdish Iraqi public opinion has now completely swung against occupation. There is no possibility now of a small stable garrison, as Obama imagines. The two options are either war, with the garrison you have now, or withdrawal, 100% withdrawal.
Frankly I doubt that the United States can afford to continue paying the costs of the war as now. We are already into the realms of Spain throwing away its American treasure on wars in the Low Countries in the 16th century.
Of course, we may get McCain, too sclerotic, and too surrounded by neo-Cons, but even there there will be a balance-sheet on the Iraq war, and to a degree it will say the same thing. And the surge will still have moved the US in the direction of withdrawal.
Let's for a moment contemplate the unimaginable: that the Cheney White House wanted chaos in Iraq.
In retrospect, how does one explain the carte blanche for looting, the dissolution of the Iraq Army, the on a rampage destruction of Iraqi social and government institutions and infrastructure?
If Iraq had emerged as a viable polity, shortly after the fall of Saddam, the Coalition would have completed its task according to the U.N. resolution sanctioning its post-invasion presence in Iraq.
By actively promoting the period of instability, Cheney ensured a continued presence, and the kind of lack of transparency that permitted the U.S. to construct enormous military bases and complexes throughout Iraq - all aimed at a long-term presence in the region.
We all know why.
Your final question points up the absurdity of the position McCain, Cheney and others are finding themselves in: they would like to remain in Iraq - accountable to no one - and therefore cannot have too great a sucess with their "surge."
Which is why there's all this sabre rattling as to Iran, in order to justify a continued presence, even when Iraq is capable of managing its own affairs.
I just returned from my third trip to Iraq in 18 months. I was on Taji at the beginning of the surge, returned in the summer of 07, and just returned from Baghdad.
I think Juan Cole has it right.
In the winter of 07 the surge had barely begun. Outside of Anbar there was no "awakening" and our troops patrolled from large bases. By the summer, more troops had moved off the base and onto smaller installations. Local allies, now called Sons of Iraq, were being recruited. Violence was high.
My impression this time around is that violence against our troops is substantially lower. One factor is that we find the large majority of IEDs, through better tactics and/or tips. However, violence against Iraqi security forces is quite high. They are a softer target and become a more valuable target as we get ready to leave.
In my opinion, the last 12 months has seen a transformation in the security situation that has not been accompanied by a political/social transformation. The idea that we could, in (pick it) a year, a decade, a century, re-make Iraq in our image is so dumb that it defies description.
I think that one of the reason for the over-emphasis of the troop escalation as "The Surge" rather than the other things as the "New Strategy" has to do with propaganda value.
Imagine, if you might, if a Democratic candidate for President in 2006 had advocated that the U.S. start paying off and working with the militias which had been attacking our own troops?
You could hear the howlings of treason accusations by right wingers if you were standing on the dark side of the moon.
However, by constantly emphasizing and re-iterating the troops the troops the troops the surge YOU WILL ADMIT THE SURGE IS WORKING the administration not only diverted momentum in 2006 from any substantive change in the U.S.' Iraq occupation policy, but apparently got away with what would have gotten anyone else accused of betrayal of those troops.
The constant emphasis and repetition of the troop escalation has mainly to do with (1) transforming any 2006 / 2007 pushing to get out of Iraq into a supposedly troop-hating attempt to ruin Iraq; and (2) getting people not to notice the other things done by the U.S. on the ground there, such as paying off and working with the militias which had been targeting Iraqis and the U.S. forces.
Again, this is not about rational argument, but about propaganda needs, and usually the incentives are pretty clear on what to do.
First off, I'd like to thank you for your basic description and explanation of the facts on the ground post "surge". I always understood that claims of its success were fundamentally and intentionally misleading, but the complexity of the factions' interaction made it difficult to counter the Administration's and its cheerleader's slogans and talking points. So again, thank you, Mr. Cole.
I'd been searching for just such a lucid outline of the facts for a while now, and frankly was counting on you, above others, to furnish it.
However, I must take issue with you and many others on the point of whether the "surge" has succeeded. IMHO, the Surge was never intended as a military or political initiative. It was and is purely a propaganda play, and as such has "succeeded" quite well.
Based on the now continuously repeated drumbeat of the slogan of "the surge has succeeded", which mainstream Democrats now parrot, and supported by the out of context fact of a narrowly defined reduction of violence in specific areas distorted as a broad assertion, the Surge's central objectives have been met: Americans are accepting the false premise that general conditions are improving, they are coming to believe that our far-seeing Leaders were wise and correct in "persevering", war dissenters were wrong in giving up when "victory" was just around the corner, the "change in course" in military strategy equals wisdom, and all the other highly-effective propaganda we've heard over the last few months.
As a propaganda play, it has effectively removed Iraq and its wider implications as the top concern of Americans, and dampened domestic public outrage. To the extent possible, it has also stemmed some of the deterioration of the Republican brand going into the Fall elections.
And the Democrats are also satisfied with the ploy's effectiveness and the cover it provides, given their complicity with the Iraq war in particular, and the USA's overall imperial overreach in general.
As always, the nation in general, and I in particular owe you our gratitude and thanks for your courageous journalism.
Isn't there a follow-on point here that if the "Surge" has been so successful, it's time to bring those troops home?
Thank you, Juan, for a complete and well argued recap that brings clarity to the surge effectiveness debate. Keeping focused on the next steps is most important.
Seems like the so called Surge was actually a Purge, and unintentionally successful.
Two points about this.
1. The "surge" of US troops offset the departure of other Coalition troops. As overall numbers did not change, this should be called "the redeployment."
2. The debate about the surge -- and the effectiveness of our COIN efforts -- will have long-term consequences beyond Iraq. If we were the prime movers and COIN theories successful, then we will likely get involved in other foreign lands, fighting in other civil wars. COIN will become a major function of our military, a role requiring foreign interventions.
That will mean that our military is no longer a defensive force even in theory.
Professor Cole addresses "The Surge Question" as social history. I will try to cobble together a quick alternative view as a student of political violence.
The way to understand American policy in Iraq is to use a distinction once employed by Franz Schurmann to analyze Communist regimes. On one hand, you have the "red" or ideological side. On the other, you have the "expert" side, which Americans would call "professional." It is important to remember that ideologues are not the same thing as idealists, being more willing to let the ends justify any means.
Very briefly, the first phase of the occupation has to do with the neocon ("red") ideologues acting like they have free reign to impose their worldview. The American military strives for a minimalist profile, building bases, running convoys, and keeping US casualties low. Soldiers know that they do not have the numbers or the authority to do more, and they fear the pressure from Washington to engage in war crimes. Civilian experts in the area, language, and type of conflict are virtually not allowed to serve in Iraq, because the neocons control every aspect but the military.
The turning point is the wave of revelations about Abu Ghraib prison. Washington and the neocons are thrown into confusion, Iraqi resistance grows and becomes cooperative across sectoral lines, but the US military is able to undertake court martials that close the neocon war crime agenda out of its ranks. Massive use of American force in several cities brings temporary calm, but Sunni forces destroy a Shia mosque, sectoral fighting goes wild, and extremist Sunni elements overplay their hand, becoming viciously oppressive wherever they hold sway.
Back in Washington, a neocon think tank comes up with the idea of a surge. If only we give the military the troops they should have had all along, everything will change. Implicitly, the idea is to let the experts do their job, then go back to imposing imperial rule. The military grabs the opening to promote a counterinsurgency approach. Key to that effort is participation of military forces and civilian PRT's in the administrative and political life of Iraq. This approach has already been "test driven" in Iraq by maverick colonels and generals, leading to the connections that eventually become the Sunni "Awakening."
Importantly, the military is able to get the US embassy under the control of a long term Middle East expert. Petraeus and Crocker share office space, and PRT teams are strengthened and given a greater role. With more troops, better doctrine, and relative freedom from neocon interference on the ground, a web of alliances, barriers, and ceasefires brings the situation into better control. In Baghdad, Shia advantages within the police give them the ability to cleanse parts of the city before all the walls and patrols take hold. Sunni of the "al Qaeda" brand take major losses in the provinces.
Now we have a situation in which none of the hoped for political progress has taken hold, and the US is the key partner in a huge array of very local political arrangements. All of the alliances, ceasefires, and accepted barriers depend on one political predicate: the US is in Iraq on a temporary basis. We will leave. None of our partners or pacts would hold if were dictating instead of negotiating. We can pay people to cooperate, but they would be playing a double game already if they did not think we will leave without their fighting us.
The neocon agenda reappears in the SOFA negotiations. Having let the experts do their jobs, the "reds" try to sail in and compell the Iraqis to re-submit to an imperial relationship. However, the Iraqi military and police have seen some improvement and Maliki uses them to show the Sunni he will fight other Shia, attacking the Mehdi Army of Sadr. Then he leaks the terms of US demands on SOFA and gathers nationalist and international support for digging in his heals against us. He succeeds in blocking the imperial agenda, building nationalist credentials as he does.
As we stand now, Iraqi politics are aligned along two basic vectors. First, most elements (including Sadr) cooperate with the US on the ground, and through us, they cooperate with each other (not without reservations and fears, of course). Second,Iraqis are increasingly able to unite in their oppostion to the US agenda out of Washgington. As Iraqis find some common ground in demanding our exit, we find two possibilities. We can leave and legitimately call it success, letting what comes next be up to the Iraqis. Otherwise, we can stay and fight everybody.
So, "success" of the Surge is real if you understand that counterinsugency can work, and our goal is to help build an Iraq we can leave. The Surge is not yet a success if you understand it as a ploy to mire Iraq and the US in an imperial relationship.
Ironically, when advocates speak to an American political audience, the rhetoric is exactly the opposite of the facts. Those who want us to leave are stuck in their determination to claim the Surge has failed. They think they need this because they want to frame leaving as the imperialists failing and "giving up." In fact, we can leave because the Surge worked well enough for us to escape the curse of empire. Meanwhile, those who want us to stay claim the Surge has worked, even though it will not really have succeeded by their standards unless we betray everything that the Surge has achieved on the ground.
With apologies for the shortcomings of writing before my second cup of coffee, this is how I see it. In the spirit of open intellectual debate, I will forego anonymity.
Scott Corey
I came to the same conclusion you did, I noticed an increase in conservative media pundits trying to re-define what the word "surge" meant. I posted those thoughts starting at:
http://tinyurl.com/al-franken-2008-07-23 .
Further investigation led me to the inventor of the term (Fred Kagan at the AEI), a PDF that they produced that mentions the surge numerous times (but does not mention any instance of "surge" as being the abbreviation of "counter-insurgency"... indeed, the document even defines the surge of troops, indicating surge as being like a wave).
I put all my findings, including a link to your article, at:
http://tinyurl.com/DKosDiary-2008-07-24
Kudos to Mr Corey!
A synthesis of Dr Cole and Mr Corey's analyses works for me, and would seem confirmed by al-Maliki's declaration of victory over al-Qaeda in Iraq and the militias made in the Der Spiegel interview. Add to that the new withdrawal strategy okayed by US Imperial planners which is in harmony with overwhelming Iraqi desires, and we are left with Dr Cole's question at the end of his blog entry: "If things are better, what is the rationale for keeping US troops in Iraq?"
The only logical rationale I can think of that could be sold to the US, Iraqi, and global communities--and accepted by US Imperial interests--is to provide security for the massive program of reparation-financed reconstruction of the Iraqi nation, which would of course include the rehabilitation of the Iraqi petrochemical and oil extraction industries, and which would thus somewhat salvage the primary reason for the Iraqi Holocaust's escalation--control of Iraqi oil.
imho, The great historical irony of “The Surge” is that had it instead been “The Withdrawal”, or “The Redeployment” then espoused by the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group, and so (and still) desired by 2:1 of the American electorate at that time: the "results" would have been the same by any measure or metric of "success" now being cited by Mr. McCain, et al American neocon faux news pundits and revisionist, ‘think-tank’ historians.
Though I have great respect for your reckoning, so elegantly displayed here today, Professor ~ personally, I find myself following the money, that is to say “The Surge in Kapital” rather than "troop levels" ~ thus we become aware of an alternative timeline revealed by the ramping-up of payrolls and payouts ~ as being the main engine of historical change, apparent. . .
. . .as I see the "increase in troops" as being, for the most part simply an increase in de facto passive spectators of this history; their presence, itself, rather than their relative mass being the relevant artifact; iow, I do not see the American Occupation Forces as being offensively (or even effectively) purpose-driven, or even aware, themselves of being any intentional agents of change during The Iraqi Shi'ite -v- Sunni Civil War, other than "as the Adminstrators of IRAQ" they were, then the culturally ignorant enablers of this holocaust.
The American troops were then, and remain today imho entirely self-absorbed, (in the act of self-preservation), in an entirely defensive posture. Indeed, the Americans' COIN = the Counter-Insurgency strategy is, as practiced by General Petraeus simply a shallow euphemism for SELF-DEFENSE = counter-resistance movement efforts by Military Occupation Forces to minimize their own KIA, (but not necessarily our WIA, or non-combatant civilian sacrifice), n'est-ce pas?
That is why I see the revisionist Historians' "success of The Surge" narrative as ironic: because truth be told, the mass of American Occupation Forces is largely irrelevant w.r.t. the fact of their presence : their simply being Over There, in the wrong place, at the wrong time, and for all the wrong reasons, to begin with.
Valuable and interesting comments Samuel, Thank You.
They [the Iraqi forces] are a softer target and become a more valuable target as we get ready to leave.
I think this is precisely why the republicans are reluctant to start shipping troops out of there and they keep finding reasons to put off even discussing specific dates [ Iraqi forces aren't quite ready to take charge ].
Even though the Americans have had undeniable military success against the guerrillas in the last six months or so, and Samuel can correct me if I'm wrong here, that fact can be attributed as much to paying baksheesh to hostile elements inside Iraq as it can to improved U.S. military strategy and tactics. Dr Cole mentions this in his piece and Army Colonel (ret.) Douglas Macgregor, for one example has been reminding us of this fact for well over a year. The Establishment media don't like talking about payoffs. It's distasteful and contrary to the Mom and Apple Pie image the American Establishment has of itself.
I suspect that the militias have been laying low and will re-emerge and resume their turf battles once the Americans begin to substantially withdraw. McCain and his people recognise that possibility so they're stalling any discussion of removing troops since that may invite a quite violent situation again. If street battles erupt anew McCain and company will find it difficult to maintain their pretence and mantra of "the surge is working."
By the way, Baghdadis are is still suffering from electricity and fresh water shortages, as well as woefully inadequate waste disposal services that are far worse than they experienced under the regime of Saddam Hussein.
While McCain has obviously been spewing nonsense -or having such covered up by the mass media- Obama hasn't been forthright about the 'surge' either as evidenced by his interview with Katie Couric where she asked him 3 times whether the 'surge' had worked and all he would say is U.S. troops contributed to the reduction in violence.
No mention of Iraqi 'benchmarks', no mention of ethnic cleansing, no mention of lack of 'reconciliation'.
And the 'elephant in the room' no one seems to be mentioning is the troops that will be called 'needed' as a force to defend the embassy.
From Bush's speech "The most urgent priority for success in Iraq is security, especially in Baghdad. Eighty percent of Iraq's sectarian violence occurs within 30 miles of the capital. This violence is splitting Baghdad into sectarian enclaves, and shaking the confidence of all Iraqis. Only Iraqis can end the sectarian violence and secure their people. And their government has put forward an aggressive plan to do it. -from http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/01/20070110-7.html
'Violence splitting Baghdad into sectarian enclaves' pretty much says it all; end the 'enclaves' if one wants 'peace'.
On Jan. 3 of this year, news reports indicated that the Iraqi Government had barely met 3 of the 18 'benchmarks' that the surge was supposed to give them the time to implement.
Yet we still have supposed debate-despite no progress on the other 15- about whether the 'surge' has worked.
I guess the lack respect the U.S. public has for either the Executive Branch or the Legislative branch works both ways because the U.S. public is being treated like they are idiots.
And for but another example of how little the U.S. public is being informed see here:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1004143.html
and know that NO mass media or 'left wing' blog is carrying this story. And that the Likud oriented newspaper 'Jerusalem Post' is now trying to spin this as a 'internal dispute among three generals'.
Excellent 2007 analysis, maps, discussion, links from Prof Cole. Thx to Cid and Irregardless, for explorations of info-war goals and political violence.
"Surge" is the analogue to "escalation" of my youth. Can we look forward to "surge-gate" hearings on the non-negotiated payoff of islamo-terrorist Sunni and Shiite militias? War is hell on the language.
Re whether there was a surge: Gen Keane (ret) is often credited with helping Kagan / Team AEI sell the 2007 tactics to the Cheney WH. Keane disavows 'surge', in favor of 'counteroffensive'. He notes that the slow buildup that Petraeus and Army staff implemented in fits and starts thru June 2007 was not the program he advocated in 2006. Keane retired with 4 stars and honor intact in 2003. He is a straight-talker, relative to straussian neocons like the Kagans.
Cole cites Petraeus as testifying under oath that the important Awakening and JAM truces (payoffs?) preceded the 2007 troop buildup. The redeployment-dispersal of our troops from large US FOB garrisons, and the parsing of Baghdad neighborhoods behind 12 ft concrete barriers had also begun in late 2006, under Gen.Odierno. Odierno's tactical re-engagement in the raging civil war in Baghdad was well underway, before the 'surge' brigades ramped up for major urban combat in Spring-Summer 07.
Re the 2007-8 balloon in troop levels. The numbers were mostly created and sustained by the 3 month extension (12 to 15 months) that SecDef Gates implemented in March 07, not by the PR 'surge'. The arithmetic is simple and compelling. The average monthly troop rotation was (and is) approx. 10,000/mo. Home rotations were almost completely halted for three months, so inbound troops swelled the deployment total by 30K in June 07. QED. (Some of the extended units were caught in major April 08 fighting in Sadr City, and extended troops that deployed before this Spring will still be serving 15 month tours when George goes back to Crawford.)
The technical details of unit rotation, attrition, combat brigade vs support troops, should not misinform or obscure the fact that we did not (and do not) have a surge-able reserve. Certainly not multiple brigades. Not then for Iraq, and not now for Afghanistan. Simply maintaining the force in Iraq-Afghanistan, or building a larger force, will be done thru stop-loss, and/or further deployment extensions.
I have to disagree with Prof Cole on his broadly reasonable point that a 30K surge is not enough to tip a balance in a country of 25M. The strategic center has always been Baghdad, even when the fighting was for Ramadi and Fallujah. The insertion of four out of five new combat brigades into the Battle for Baghdad seems enough to help force separation of combatants along the river/Green Zone axis. That's gross over-simplification, but the complex battles for the neighborhoods were and are shaped by the capital river and canal geography. Sunni-West vs Shiite-East.
So was the 'surge' successful? Was the thing that was not a surge, that tactically started concurrent with the '06 US mid-terms, that was mostly an accommodation with the Sunni and Shiite militias, was 'it' a 'success'? It would seem that the infowarriors have placed a surge arrow wherever there are good things to point to, and called it a bulls-eye.
Cole says the US political goals of early 2007, for sectarian accommodation, have not been achieved. The maps show Baghdad arrested in a fairly advanced stage of ethnic cleansing. Frightened and embittered, squatters and dispossessed are still armed against the sectarian survivors on the other side of 12 foot high concrete fortifications. If Beruit is a guide, there are many scenes to play before the third Baghdad act is finished. In this tragic game of occupation, destabilization and withdrawal, are we modeled as the Isrealis? Hardly a bulls-eye.
But the political-military changes in Baghdad do seem pretty significant, and possibly durable. Sunni and JAM militias are no longer squared off and killing each others families. Both are more focused on the Maliki-Hakim forces as the future enemy. Maliki's shift to rely on the ISCI-Badr dominated Shiite army, has also reduced the Baghdad role of the Kurd-Pesh serving in IA uniforms (but not under the Iraqi flag when at home). Unfortunately, that frees up the Kurds for the renewed fighting in the North, where eventually, they will be faced off against Baghdad's Arab troops
Viewed from an Iranian perspective, the surge period has brought them increased influence as arbitrators in the intra-shiite and shiite-kurd conflicts. Hard to claim a US bullseye, when Maliki, Talibani, Hakims etc go running for the E. border to get party deals ratified, and Ahmadinejad comes motoring thru Baghdad on state visits. Thru the most belicose Quds faction of the IRG, Khameini's gov't exerts dealmaker status, down to a regional and local level in important cities and religious centers. And does so without the liability and expense of constantly re-arming their proxies and allies in a perpetual shooting war.
It will be interesting to see whether Team Obama can sell a complicated narrative that will compete with the simple Bush-McCain chant of "the surge worked". And it may not matter. I think the voters get the general point better than the 'news analysts'. This war for cheap oil has worked out very badly for our oil-addicted country.
It appears that McCain and others are adopting the Bushesque habit of butchering the English language. While "insurgency" (and counter-insurgency) does relate to "surge" etymologically, an insurgent is metaphorically "rising up" like a wave against an existing civil authority. Insurgents don't necessarily rise or stand up literally or physically; after all, some insurgents (and counter-insurgents) fire their weapons lying down! On the other hand, the "surge" as we have pursued in Iraq is like a wave in a different manner - an allusion to the sweeping forward movement of the wave or waves, the inexorable nature of such waves.
Thus, the "surge" has no relationship to a "counter-insurgency" any more than it relates to an "insurgency". While either efforts might move in "surges", they might also be described by other metaphors, like a "hail" of bullets, a "flurry" of attackers, etc.
Prof C, if you want to make crazy assertions like saying that the Chinese earthquake was NOT caused by divine wrath at the crackdown in Tibet, I think you had better be able to prove it! LOL
IMHO the "Surge" was always just a PR exercise, just like the war itself (its a PR war and the real "enemy" is the US public). The war had been going so bad for so long that even Bush's media hacks had to start admitting it. Phase One of damage control was setting up the Iraq Study Group, and we all remember how long we had to WAIT for their report.
Phase Two is what we call "the surge" - Bush defied the ISG and actually increased troop numbers. This gave the media something to talk about: "courageous, bold decision" etc and another excuse to WAIT and see what happened.
The token increase in troop numbers was never going to have a real influence on the ground, so a lot of other actions and negotations took place (as detailed by Prof C) to ensure Bush could claim this move as a success.
Now, again, of course, we all have to WAIT until the next Prez comes in before anything can happen. Bush's PR tricks have seen him stay in Iraq till the end of his administration. Mission Accomplished!
Much of the "success" of the surge appears to be based on boots-on-the-ground USA-Iraqi efforts to establish a consistent system of baricades and checkpoints under a central national force to control traffic (and thereby violence)in Baghdad were long long long overdue. These are measures that SHOULD have been instituted as temporary "emergency measures" at the time of the invasion, legitimate post-coup security.
Violence appears to be on the rise in Fallujah, despite the fact these and even more restrictive measures have been in place for several years now.
Last I heard, quality of life in Fallujah reports painted a picture of very threadbare economic foundation and no jobs and under-equipped and understaffed hospitals. How long a civilian population can/will tolerate such measures (particularly from their "own" government) and whether any sort of sustainable economic growth can flourish under such restrictive measures remains to be seen. Whether the drop in violence can survive over time or some significant hand-off to the Iraqi army remains to be seen. The threat of "air support" in "support" AMERICAN troops must be seen as a terrible deterrent.
Yes, those Iraqi refugees have real property claims that will require redress and who -- in the meantime -- will need to be housed and fed. The improved oil revenue can likely buy some peace ... possibly for quite a while... but ALL the underlying problems appear unaddressed.
The check points and barricade have the potential become stockades and prison walls, keeping the world out and the targeted population prisoner.
The clock has run out on all that "institutional progress" TeamBush has been demanding for the last 3 years. National legislative elections are due NEXT YEAR. I think "waiting us out" is well underway, although that can be abandoned at any time. I think the Iraqi politicians understand quiet is their best bet while waiting to see what the new team brings to the table.
Your quotes from the McCain interview are entirely correct, but there is something you are missing - CBS CUT the McCain response you quote, that's right, McCain's error and his ad hominem attack on Obama were never broadcast. CBS posted the full interview online, but refused to show McCain at his worst, raging on in error.
Dailykos has the tape and this comment:
CBS News Said What?
by BarbinMD
Thu Jul 24, 2008 at 07:18:28 AM PDT
Responding to criticism for their unprofessional and unethical editing of a Katie Couric interview with John McCain, CBS News Senior Vice President Paul Friedman said:
The report was edited under extreme time constraints and one piece of tape was put in the wrong order. Fortunately, this did not in any way distort what Senator McCain was saying.
Clearly, Mr. Friedman is either stupid or a liar. Roll the tape:
Perhaps Mr. Friedman can explain how replacing McCain's incorrect claim about when the "Anbar Awakening" began and his mocking of Obama for not knowing this "matter of history," with a contemptible attack on Obama's patriotism didn't distort what McCain said.
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/7/24/101828/568/301/556016
Professor Cole,
Thank you for debunking the 'Surge is working' meme the oh-so-balanced media and the GOP keeps repeating.
My first inkling of what the 'Surge' was were some postings
by Zeyad on Healing Iraq showing
rather sinister 'Sons of Iraq' riding in a Humvee with US troops.
I wonder what US superpatriots would think if they knew that that brilliant policy was to hire the same Iraqis who had been blowing up US troops just a few weeks before.
I don't blame the US military for bowing to the obvious, nor am I one to revel in this national humiliation but for McCain to praise it to the skies proves he simply doesn't understand what has occured.
Iraq violence is down somewhat thank God, we need not celebrate the 'myth'.
Yet I'm afraid this 'myth' is becoming yet new 'stab in the back' legend for the Right by their spin machine. So reluctantly I'm afraid we MUST counter that spin and reveal the real situation.
McCain states that following Obama's advice about the Surge would have lead us to lose the war. But if we had followed Obama's advice in the first place, the war would never have occurred. McCain is a dumb little demagogue.
Why cite Newsrack when you can cite the blogger he cites as the first to cover this topic?
http://unbossed.com/index.php?itemid=1721
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