War, Meet the 2008 Campaign
Published: January 20, 2008, NYTimes
FOR the past year, I have led a double existence, dividing my time between military reporting assignments in Iraq and tracking the campaign debate in the
Those were parallel universes, in which the discussion of the taxing road ahead and potential fall-back options were often so divergent that the generals and the politicians seemed not to be talking about the same war.
The American officers I met were hardly of one mind on how to proceed in Iraq, but they were grappling with decisions on how to try to stabilize a traumatized country with a hard-headed sense that although there have been significant gains, a long and difficult job still lies ahead — a core assumption that has frequently been missing on the campaign trail.
The politicians, on the other hand, seemed more intent on addressing public impatience with an open-ended commitment in Iraq, either by promising prompt withdrawal (the Democrats) or by suggesting that victory may be near (the Republicans).
Anthony Cordesman, a military specialist at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who regularly visits
“The Democrats talk about this as if the only problem is to withdraw and the difference is over how quickly to do it.”
“Unless you are suppressing insurgents the way the Romans did — creating a desert and calling it peace — it typically can take the better part of a decade or more,” said Andrew Krepinevich, a military expert at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.
“The paradox,” he added, “is that counterinsurgency requires convincing the Iraqis of our staying power. At the same time, the American people view success in terms of how quickly we can pull out.”
The politicians are suggesting they can produce faster results. But the candidates who have lambasted President Bush for failing to ask the tough questions about what might happen the day after Saddam Hussein was swept from power often don’t fully address hard questions about what might happen the day after the American military gets out.
Senator Hillary Clinton has advocated that the
Senator Barack Obama has pledged to withdraw combat forces, but perhaps not counterterrorism units or trainers, within 16 months of taking office. Mindful of the risk that such a wholesale withdrawal might lead to an escalation in sectarian killings, he has said that he would be prepared to send American troops back into
And fighting their way back into
John Edwards has said he would remove all troops from
But that raises the issue of whether such a force could respond in a timely way to terrorist threats from such a distance, and without the sort of intelligence that is gathered through regular interaction with Iraqi civilians.
An argument that Mr. Edwards and other Democratic candidates have made is that the withdrawal of American combat troops will force Iraqi political leaders to make the hard decisions on political reconciliation that they can otherwise avoid if the American military keeps propping them up. But if the Iraqis know that American forces are on their way out regardless of what they do, would they be more likely to respond by overcoming their differences or by preparing for the sectarian blood bath that might follow?
Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican who argued that the
Looking at the second possibility, some analysts like Stephen Biddle, a military expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, say they believe that security might, arguably, be maintained by arranging for Sunni volunteers to protect their home areas while assigning American and other foreign troops to police a Bosnia-style cease-fire. But such suggestions seem to be debated more by the experts than the candidates.
Rudolph Giuliani, Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee have discussed
In the meantime, some senior officers seem utterly puzzled by the debate at home. “The one thing that befuddles is I have not heard any candidate describe what their short and long term goals are for Iraq, how it fits into their regional goals for the Middle East and transnational terrorism,” said the American officer. “Is their goal just to withdraw troops as fast as possible?”
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