The Last War and the Next One
Descending into Madness in Iraq -- and Beyond
by Tom Engelhardt
The last war won't end, but in the Pentagon they're already arguing about the next one.
Let's start with that "last war" and see if we can get things straight. Just over five years ago, American troops entered Baghdad in battle mode, felling the Sunni-dominated government of dictator Saddam Hussein and declaring Iraq "liberated." In the wake of the city's fall, after widespread looting, the new American administrators dismantled the remains of Saddam's government in its hollowed out, trashed ministries; disassembled the Sunni-dominated Baathist Party which had ruled Iraq since the 1960s, sending its members home with news that there was no coming back; dismantled Saddam's 400,000 man army; and began to denationalize the economy. Soon, an insurgency of outraged Sunnis was raging against the American occupation.
Tomgram: Endless War
After initially resisting democratic elections, American
occupation administrators finally gave in to the will of the leading
Shiite clergyman, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, and agreed to sponsor
them. In January 2005, these brought religious parties representing a
long-oppressed Shiite majority to power, parties which had largely been
in exile in neighboring Shiite Iran for years.
Now, skip a few
years, and U.S. troops have once again entered Baghdad in battle mode.
This time, they've been moving into the vast Sadr City Shiite slum
"suburb" of eastern Baghdad, which houses perhaps two-and-a-half
million closely packed inhabitants. If free-standing, Sadr City would
be the second largest city in Iraq after the capital. This time, the
forces facing American troops haven't put down their weapons, packed
up, and gone home. This time, no one is talking about "liberation," or
"freedom," or "democracy." In fact, no one is talking about much of
anything.
And no longer is the U.S. attacking Sunnis. In the
wake of the President's 2007 surge, the U.S. military is now officially
allied with 90,000 Sunnis of the so-called Awakening Movement, mainly
former insurgents, many of them undoubtedly once linked to the Baathist
government U.S. forces overthrew in 2003. Meanwhile, American troops
are fighting the Shiite militia of Muqtada al-Sadr, a cleric who seems
now to be living in Iran, but whose spokesman in Najaf recently
bitterly denounced that country for "seeking to share with the U.S. in
influence over Iraq." And they are fighting the Sadrist Mahdi Army
militia in the name of an Iraqi government dominated by another Shiite
militia, the Badr Corps of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, whose
ties to Iran are even closer.
Ten thousand Badr Corps militia
members were being inducted into the Iraqi army (just as the government
of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki was demanding that the Mahdi Army
militia disarm). This week, an official delegation from that
government, which only recently received Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad with high honors in Baghdad, took off for Tehran at
American bidding to present "evidence" that the Iranians are arming
their Sadrist enemies.
At the heart of this intra-sectarian
struggle may be the fear that, in upcoming provincial elections, the
Sadrists, increasingly popular for their resistance to the American
occupation, might actually win. For the last few weeks, American troops
have been moving deeper into Sadr City, implanting the reluctant
security forces of the Maliki government 500-600 meters ahead of them.
This is called "standing them up," "part of a strategy to build up the
capability of the Iraqi security forces by letting them operate
semi-autonomously of the American troops." It's clear, however, that,
if Maliki's military were behind them, many might well disappear. (A
number have already either put down their weapons, fled, or gone over
to the Sadrists.)
How the Reverse Body Count Came -- and Went
The
fighting in the heavily populated urban slums of Sadr City has been
fierce, murderous, and destructive. It has quieted most of the talk
about the "lowering of casualties" and of "violence" that was the
singular hallmark of the surge year in Iraq. Though never commented
upon, that remarkable year-long emphasis on the ever lessening number
of corpses actually represented the return, in perversely reverse form,
of the Vietnam era "body count."
In a guerrilla war situation
in which there was no obvious territory to be taken and no clear way to
establish what our previous Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, once
called the "metrics" of victory or success, it was natural, as happened
in Vietnam, to begin to count. If you couldn't conquer a city or a
country, then there was a certain logic to the thought that victory
would come if, one by one, you could "obliterate" -- to use a word
suddenly back in the news -- the enemy.
As the Vietnam
conflict dragged on, however, as the counting of bodies continued and
victory never materialized, that war gained the look of slaughter, and
the body count (announced every day at a military press conference in
Saigon that reporters labeled "the five o'clock follies") came to be
seen by increasing numbers of Americans as evidence of atrocity. It
became the symbol of the descent into madness in Indochina. No wonder
the Bush administration, imagining itself once again capturing
territory, carefully organized its Iraq War so that it would lack such
official counting. (The President later described the process this way:
"We have made a conscious effort not to be a body-count team.")
With
the coming of the surge strategy in 2007, frustration over the
President's unaccomplished mission and his constant talk of victory
meant that some other "metric," some other "benchmark," for success had
to be established, and it proved to be the reverse body count. Over the
last year, in fact, just about the only measure of success regularly
trumpeted in the mainstream media has been that lowering of the death
count. In reverse form, however, it still held some of the same dangers
for the administration as its Vietnamese cousin.
As of April,
bodies, in ever rising numbers, American and Iraqi, have been forcing
their way back into the news as symbols not of success, but of failure.
More than 1,000 Iraqis have, by semi-official estimate, died just in
the last month (and experts know that these monstrous monthly totals of
Iraqi dead are usually dramatic undercounts). Four hundred Iraqis,
reportedly only 10% militia fighters, are estimated to have died in the
onslaught on Sadr City alone.
American soldiers are also dying
in and around Baghdad in elevated numbers. U.S. military spokesmen
claim that none of this represents a weakening of the post-surge
security situation. As Lieutenant General Carter Ham, Joint Staff
director for operations at the Pentagon, put the matter: "While it is
sad to see an increase in casualties, I don't think it is necessarily
indicative of a major change in the operating environment. When the
level of fighting increases, then sadly the number of casualties does
tend to rise." This is, of course, unmitigated nonsense.
In
April, of the 51 American deaths in Iraq, more than twenty evidently
took place in the ongoing battle for Sadr City or greater Baghdad.
Among them were young men from Portland, Mesquite, Buchanan Dam, and
Fresno (Texas), Billings (Montana), Fountain (Colorado), Bakersfield
(California), Mount Airy (North Carolina), and Zephyrhills (Florida) --
all thousands of miles from home. And many of them have died under the
circumstances most feared by American commanders (and thought for a
time to have been avoided) before the invasion of Iraq -- in block to
block, house to house fighting in the warren of streets in one of this
planet's many slum cities.
For the Iraqis of Sadr City, of
course, this is a living hell. ("Sadr City right now is like a city of
ghosts," Abu Haider al-Bahadili, a Mahdi Army fighter told Amit R.
Paley of the Washington Post. "It has turned from a city into a field
of battle.") As in all colonial wars, all wars on the peripheries, the
"natives" always die in staggeringly higher numbers than the far better
armed occupation or expeditionary forces.
This is no less true
now, especially since the U.S. military has wheeled in its Abrams
tanks, brought out its 200-pound guided rockets, and called in air
power in a major way. Planes, helicopters, and Hellfire-missile-armed
drones are now all regularly firing into the heavily populated urban
neighborhoods of the east Baghdad slum.
As Tina Susman of the Los
Angeles Times wrote recently,
- "With many of Sadr City's main roads
peppered with roadside bombs and its side streets too narrow for U.S.
tanks or other heavy vehicles to navigate, U.S. forces often call in
airstrikes or use guided rockets to hit their targets."
Buried
in a number of news stories from Sadr City are reports in which attacks
on "insurgents," "criminals," or "known criminal elements" (now Shiite,
not Sunni) destroy whole buildings, even rows of buildings, even in one
case recently damaging a hospital and destroying ambulances. Every day
now, civilians die and children are pulled from the rubble. This is
brutal indeed.
And it no longer makes any particular sense,
even by the standards of the Bush administration; nor, in the
post-surge atmosphere, is anybody trying to make much sense of it. That
rising body count has, after all, taken away the last metric by which
to measure "success" in Iraq. Even the small explanations (and, these
days, those are just about the only ones left) seem increasingly
bizarre. Take, for instance, the convoluted explanation of who exactly
is responsible for the devastation in Sadr City. Here's how military
spokesman Lt. Col. Steve Stover put it recently:
- "'The
sole burden of responsibility lies on the shoulders of the militants
who care nothing for the Iraqi people…' He said the militiamen
purposely attack from buildings and alleyways in densely populated
areas, hoping to protect themselves by hiding among civilians. 'What
does that say about the enemy?... He is heartless and evil.'"
Mind
you, this comes from the representative of a military that now claims
to grasp the true nature of counterinsurgency warfare (and so of a
guerrilla war); and you're talking about a militia largely from Sadr
City, fighting "a war of survival" for its own families, its own
people, against foreign soldiers who have hopped continents to attack
them. The Sadrist militiamen are defending their homes and, of course,
with Predator drones and American helicopters constantly over their
neighborhoods, it's quite obvious what would happen to them if they
"came out and fought" like typical good-hearted types. They would
simply be blown away. (Out of curiosity, what descriptive adjectives
would Lt. Col. Stover use to capture the style of fighting of the
Predator pilots who "fly" their drones from an air base outside of Las
Vegas?)
By the way, the last time such street fighting was
seen, in the first six months of 2007, the U.S. military was clearing
insurgents ("al-Qaeda") out of Sunni neighborhoods of the capital,
which were then being further cleansed by Shiite militias (including
the Sadrists).
So, to sum up, let me see if I have this
straight: The Bush administration liberated Iraq in order to send U.S.
troops against a ragtag militia that has nothing whatsoever to do with
Saddam Hussein's former government (and many of whose members were, in
fact, oppressed by it, as were its leaders) in the name of another
group of Iraqis, who have long been backed by Iran, and… uh…
Hmmm, let's try that again… or, like the Bush administration, let's not and pretend we did.
In
the meantime, the U.S. military has tried to partially "seal off" Sadr
City and, in the neighborhoods that they have partially occupied with
their attendant Iraqi troops, they are building the usual vast,
concrete walls, cordoning off the area. This is being done, so American
spokespeople say, to keep the Sadrist militia fighters out and to clear
the way for government hearts-and-minds "reconstruction" projects that
everyone knows are unlikely to happen.
Soon enough, if the
previous pattern in Sunni neighborhoods is applied, they and/or their
Iraqi cohorts will start going door to door doing weapons searches. As
a result, the American and Iraqi prisons now supposedly being
substantially emptied -- part of a program of "national reconciliation"
-- of many of the tens of thousands of Sunni prisoners swept up in
raids in Sunni neighborhoods, are likely to be refilled with Shiite
prisoners swept up in a similar way. Call it grim irony -- or call it a
meaningless nightmare from which no one can awaken. Just don't claim it
makes much sense.
As in Vietnam, so four decades later, we are
observing a full-scale descent into madness and, undoubtedly, into
atrocity. At least in 2003, American troops were heading for Baghdad.
They thought they had a goal, a city to take. Now, they are heading for
nowhere, for the heart of a slum city which they cannot hold in a
guerrilla war where the taking of territory and the occupying of
neighborhoods is essentially beside the point. They are heading for
oblivion, while trying to win hearts and minds by shooting missiles
into homes and enclosing people in giant walls which break families and
communities apart, while destroying livelihoods.
Oh, and while we're at it, welcome to "the next war," the war in the slum cities of the planet.
"There Are No Exit Strategies"
Remember
when the globe's imperial policeman, its New Rome, was going to wield
its unsurpassed military power by moving from country to country, using
lightning strikes and shock-and-awe tactics? We're talking about the
now-unimaginably distant past of perhaps 2002-2003. Afghanistan had
been "liberated" in a matter of weeks; "regime change" in Iraq was
going to be a "cakewalk," and it would be followed by the reordering of
what the neoconservatives liked to refer to as "the Greater Middle
East." No one who mattered was talking about protracted guerrilla
warfare; nor was there anything being said about counterinsurgency
(nor, as in the Powell Doctrine, about exits either). The U.S. military
was going to go into Iraq fast and hard, be victorious in short order,
and then, of course, we would stay. We would, in fact, be welcomed with
open arms by natives so eternally grateful that they would practically
beg us to garrison their countries.
Every one of those
assumptions about the new American way of war was absurd, even then. At
the very least, the problem should have been obvious once American
generals reached Baghdad and sat down at a marble table in one of
Saddam Hussein's overwrought palaces, grinning for a victory snapshot
-- without any evidence of a defeated enemy on the other side of the
table to sign a set of surrender documents. If this were a normal
campaign and an obvious imperial triumph, then where was the other
side? Where were those we had defeated? The next thing you knew, the
Americans were printing up packs of cards with the faces of most of
Saddam's missing cronies on them.
Well, that was then. By now,
fierce versions of guerrilla war have migrated to the narrow streets of
the poorest districts of Baghdad and, in Afghanistan, are moving ever
closer to the Afghan capital, Kabul. And even though the "last war" in
Iraq won't end (so that troops can be transferred to the even older war
in Afghanistan that is, now, spiraling out of control), inside the
Pentagon some are thinking not about how to get out, but about how to
get in. They are pondering "the next war."
With that in mind,
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates recently gave two sharp-edged
speeches, one at Maxwell-Gunter Air Force Base, the other at West
Point, each expressing his frustration with the slowness of the armed
services to adapt to a counterinsurgency planet and to plan for the
next war.
Now, there's obviously nothing illogical about a
country's military preparing for future wars. That's what it's there
for and every country has the right to defend itself. But it's a
different matter when you're preparing for future "wars of choice"
(which used to be called wars of aggression) -- for the next war(s) on
what our secretary of defense now calls the "the 21st century's global
commons." By that, he means not just planet Earth in its entirety, but
"space and cyberspace" as well. For the American military, it turns
out, planning for a future "defense" of the United States means
planning for planet-wide, over-the-horizon counterinsurgency. It will,
of course, be done better, with a military that, as Gates put it, will
no longer be "a smaller version of the Fulda Gap force." (It was at the
Fulda Gap, a German plain, that the U.S. military once expected to meet
Soviet forces invading Europe in full-scale battle.)
So the
secretary of defense is calling for more foreign-language training, a
better "expeditionary culture," and more nation building -- you know,
all that "hearts and minds" stuff. In essence, he accepts that the
future of American war will, indeed, be in the Sadr Cities and Afghan
backlands of the planet; or, as he says, that "the asymmetric
battlefields of the 21st century" will be "the dominant combat
environment in the decades to come." And the American response will be
high-tech indeed -- all those unmanned aerial vehicles that he can't
stop talking about.
Gates describes our war-fighting future in
this way: "What has been called the 'Long War' [i.e. Bush's War on
Terror, including the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq] is likely to be
many years of persistent, engaged combat all around the world in
differing degrees of size and intensity. This generational campaign
cannot be wished away or put on a timetable. There are no exit
strategies."
"There are no exit strategies." That's a line to
roll around on your tongue for a while. It's a fancy way of saying that
the U.S. military is likely to be in one, two, many Sadr Cities for a
long time to come. This is Gates's ultimate insight as secretary of
defense, and his response is to urge the military to plan for more and
better of the same. For this we give the Pentagon almost a trillion
dollars a year.
The irony is that, in both speeches, Gates
praises outside-the-box thinking in the military and calls upon the
armed services to "think unconventionally." Yet his own thoughts
couldn't be more conventional, imperial, or potentially disastrous. Put
in a nutshell: If the mission is heading into madness, then double the
mission. Bring in yet more of those drones whose missiles are already
so popular in Sadr City. This is brilliantly prosaic thinking, based on
the assumption that the "global commons" should be ours and that the
"next war" will be ours, and the one after that, and so on.
But
I wouldn't bet on it. John McCain got a lot of flak for saying that, as
far as he was concerned, American troops could stay in Iraq for "100
years... as long as Americans are not being injured, harmed or killed."
Our present secretary of defense, a "realist" in an administration of
bizarre dreamers and inept gamblers, has just cast his vote for more
and better Sadr Cities. In a Pentagon version of an old Maoist slogan:
Let a hundred slum guerrilla struggles bloom!
It's a recipe
for being bogged down in such wars for 100 years -- with the piles of
dead rising ever higher. No wonder some of the top military brass, whom
he criticizes for their bureaucratic inertia, have been unenthusiastic.
They don't want to spend the rest of their careers fighting hopeless
wars in Sadr City or its equivalent. Who would?
The rest of us
should feel the same way. Every time you hear the phrase "the next war"
-- and journalists already love it -- you should wince. It means
endless war, eternal war, and it's the path to madness.
Vietnam…
Iraq… Afghanistan… Don't we already have enough examples of American
counterinsurgency operations under our belt? The American people
evidently think so. For some time now, significant majorities have
wanted out of Baghdad, out of Iraq. All the way out. In a major survey
just released by the influential journal Foreign Affairs, similar
majorities have, in essence, "voted" for demilitarizing U.S. foreign
policy. In their responses, they offer quite a different approach to
how the United States should operate in the world. According to
journalist Jim Lobe, 69% of respondents believe "the U.S. government
should put more emphasis on diplomatic and economic foreign policy
tools in fighting terrorism," not "military efforts." (Sixty-five
percent believe the U.S. should withdraw all its troops from Iraq
either "immediately" or "over the next twelve months.") But, of course,
no one who matters listens to them.
And yet, the path to Sadr
City is one that even an imperialist should want to turn back from.
It's the road to Hell and it's paved with the worst of intentions.
Tom
Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the
co-founder of the American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory
Culture (University of Massachusetts Press), has been updated in a
newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's crash-and-burn
sequel in Iraq.
[Note of thanks: Essays like this are only
possible because I can draw on the spadework of other websites,
especially, in this case (as in so many others), of Juan Cole's
Informed Comment, Antiwar.com, Paul Woodward's The War in Context, and
Cursor.org.]
Copyright 2008 Tom Engelhardt
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