[Mb-civic] THOUGHTFUL AND GREAT: Our Dangerous,
Growing Divide - Michael O'Hanlon - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Nov 28 04:19:34 PST 2005
Our Dangerous, Growing Divide
By Michael O'Hanlon
Monday, November 28, 2005; A21
In recent months a civil-military divide has emerged in the United
States over the war in Iraq. Unlike much of the Iraq debate between
Democrats and Republicans, it is over the present and the future rather
than the past. Increasingly, civilians worry that the war is being lost,
or at least not won. But the military appears as confident as ever of
ultimate victory. This difference of opinion does not amount to a crisis
in national resolve, and it will not radically affect our Iraq policy in
the short term. But it is insidious and dangerous nonetheless. To the
extent possible, the gap should be closed.
In fact, objective realities in Iraq suggest that the military is too
optimistic -- but also that the public and the strategic community are
becoming too fatalistic. Neither of these outlooks should be left
unchecked. To the extent that military planners see Iraq through a rosy
prism, they may not favor making policy changes when they should. And if
we somehow lose in Iraq, the military may collectively blame the
national media and the American body politic for a defeat that occurred
on the streets of Iraq. On the other hand, if the public becomes too
negative about the war, calls for a premature departure could grow
louder and louder -- and have a real policy effect, if not through
George Bush directly then through Congress.
The military's enthusiasm about the course of the war may be natural
among those four-star officers in leadership positions, for it has
largely become their war. Their careers have become so intertwined with
the campaign in Iraq that truly independent analysis may be difficult.
But it is striking that most lower-ranking officers seem to share the
irrepressible optimism of their superiors. In talking with at least 50
officers this year, I have met no more than a handful expressing any
real doubt about the basic course of the war.
Contrast that with the rest of the country. The polls are clear; the
American public is deeply worried and increasingly pessimistic. The
numbers are not (yet) abysmal; 30 to 40 percent still seem bullish on
trends in Iraq. But even among those who strongly support the Bush
administration, doubts are emerging. Among defense and Middle East
analysts, my own informal survey suggests at least as negative an
overall outlook, with decidedly more pessimism than optimism. Even among
centrists who supported the war or saw the case for it, optimism is now
hard to find. Many expect things to get worse, even much worse, in the
coming months and years.
Members of both camps have plenty of evidence to support their view. But
the risk is that each group is starting to selectively ignore
information that does not fit with its increasingly firm conceptions
about how things are going.
For example, military leaders (and many Bush administration officials)
point to some good news on the economic front: growing gross domestic
product, bustle on the streets, creation of small businesses, adequate
availability of most household fuels, gradually improving national
infrastructure for water and sewage, more children in school, more
Internet usage, and lots more telephone service. They also note the
gradual improvement in Iraqi security forces, with 30,000 or more now
capable of largely independent operations. And they rightly observe the
remarkable progress made in drafting the Iraqi constitution. A can-do
military officer aware of such information, and also tactically
succeeding day in and day out in finding and killing insurgents, is
likely to see a trajectory toward victory.
But is that really what is happening? Growing GDP is good for those with
access to the twin golden rivers flowing through Iraq -- not the Tigris
and Euphrates, but oil revenue and foreign aid. The rest of the economy
is, on the whole, weak. Unemployment remains in the 30 to 40 percent
range, and the psychologically most critical type of infrastructure --
electricity -- has barely improved since Saddam Hussein fell. Iraqi
security forces are getting better, but they are also losing more than
200 men a month to the insurgency. Civilian casualties in Iraq from the
war are as high as ever; combine that with the region's highest crime
rates, and Iraq has clearly become a much more violent society since
Hussein fell. Tactically, the resistance appears to be outmaneuvering
the best military in the world in its use of improvised explosive
devices. And politically, every move forward toward greater Sunni Arab
participation in the political process seems to be accompanied by at
least one step back.
In the short term, of course, this civil-military divide matters only so
much. The Bush administration has great political leeway in how it
prosecutes the Iraq war. Officers in the field are not so stubborn as to
resist smart changes in policy when the need becomes obvious. And on the
other side of things, even those members of Congress and the public who
think we are stuck in stalemate generally oppose radical alternatives to
present policy.
But the dangers of a growing divide are real. In a year we will have a
new Congress, and if the public has become fatalistic about Iraq by
then, Congress may assert itself in demanding rapid moves toward
complete withdrawal -- be they prudent or not. By contrast, if military
officers see the good news more than the bad, they may feel increasingly
cut off from the rest of the country. They may fail to understand why
their recruiting efforts are not always appreciated by parents. They may
be too reluctant to change tactics away from overly muscular combat
operations that have accorded insufficient emphasis to protecting the
Iraqi population. They may not feel enough urgency about advocating
changes in policy that are needed there -- like much better protection
for Iraqi security forces, which remain badly under-armored, and a jobs
program to directly target the high unemployment rate.
Penetrating and respectful civil-military debates are difficult to
conduct, especially in a time of war. But we need one now.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/27/AR2005112700941.html
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