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'Peace
with honor' in Iraq
An Open Letter to the American People
More
than 650 academics and former foreign policy
practitioners of all partisan stripes have
signed this open letter to the American people.
We, a nonpartisan group of foreign affairs specialists,
have joined together to call urgently for a
change of course in American foreign and national
security policy. We judge that the current
American policy centered around the war in
Iraq is the most misguided one since the Vietnam
period, one which harms the cause of the struggle
against extreme Islamist terrorists. One result
has been a great distortion in the terms of
public debate on foreign and national security
policyan emphasis on speculation instead
of facts, on mythology instead of calculation,
and on misplaced moralizing over considerations
of national interest. [1] We write to challenge
some of these distortions.
Although we applaud the Bush Administration for
its initial focus on destroying al-Qaida bases
in Afghanistan, its failure to engage sufficient
U.S. troops to capture or kill the mass of
al-Qaida fighters in the later stages of that
war was a great blunder. It is a fact that
the early shift of U.S. focus to Iraq diverted
U.S. resources, including special operations
forces and intelligence capabilities, away
from direct pursuit of the fight against the
terrorists. [2]
Many of the justifications offered by the Bush
Administration for the war in Iraq have been
proven untrue by credible studies, including
by U.S. government agencies. There is no evidence
that Iraq assisted al-Qaida, and its prewar
involvement in international terrorism was
negligible. [3] Iraqs arsenal of chemical
and biological weapons was negligible, and
its nuclear weapons program virtually nonexistent.
[4] In comparative terms, Iran is and was much
the greater sponsor of terrorism, and North
Korea and Pakistan pose much the greater risk
of nuclear proliferation to terrorists. Even
on moral grounds, the case for war was dubious:
the war itself has killed over a thousand Americans
and unknown thousands of Iraqis, and if the
threat of civil war becomes reality, ordinary
Iraqis could be even worse off than they were
under Saddam Hussein. The Administration knew
most of these facts and risks before the war,
and could have discovered the others, but instead
it played down, concealed or misrepresented
them.
Policy errors during the occupation and reconstruction
of Iraq have created a situation in Iraq worse
than it needed to be. Spurning the advice of
Army Chief of Staff General Shinseki, the Administration
committed an inadequate number of troops to
the occupation, leading to the continuing failure
to establish security in Iraq. Ignoring prewar
planning by the State Department and other
US government agencies, it created a needless
security vacuum by disbanding the Iraqi Army,
and embarked on a poorly planned and ineffective
reconstruction effort which to date has managed
to spend only a fraction of the money earmarked
for it. [5] As a result, Iraqi popular dismay
at the lack of security, jobs or reliable electric
power fuels much of the violent opposition
to the U.S. military presence, while the war
itself has drawn in terrorists from outside
Iraq.
The results of this policy have been overwhelmingly
negative for U.S. interests. [6] While the
removal of Saddam Husseins regime was
desirable, the benefit to the U.S. was small
as prewar inspections had already proven the
extreme weakness of his WMD programs, and therefore
the small size of the threat he posed. On the
negative side, the excessive U.S. focus on
Iraq led to weak and inadequate responses to
the greater challenges posed by North Koreas
and Irans nuclear programs, and diverted
resources from the economic and diplomatic
efforts needed to fight terrorism in its breeding
grounds in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and elsewhere
in the Middle East. Worse, American actions
in Iraq, including but not limited to the scandal
of Abu Ghraib, have harmed the reputation of
the U.S. in most parts of the Middle East and,
according to polls, made Osama Bin Laden more
popular in some countries than is President
Bush. This increased popularity makes it easier
for al-Qaida to raise money, attract recruits,
and carry out its terrorist operations than
would otherwise be the case.
Recognizing these negative consequences of the
Iraq war, in addition to the cost in lives
and money, we believe that a fundamental reassessment
is in order. Significant improvements are needed
in our strategy in Iraq and the implementation
of that strategy. We call urgently for an open
debate on how to achieve these ends, one informed
by attention to the facts on the ground in
Iraq, the facts of al-Qaidas methods
and strategies, and sober attention to American
interests and values.
Signed (All titles and affiliations listed
for purposes of identification only),
See
list of signatures
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] On the mythology, see Jack Snyder, Imperial
Temptations, The National Interest, Spring
2003.
[2] See, e.g., James Fallows, Bushs
Lost Year, The Atlantic, October 2004.
[3] National Commission on Terrorist Attacks,
The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report
of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks
Upon the United States, (W.W. Norton
& Co., 2004).
[4] The Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, WMD in Iraq: Evidence and Implications,
January 2004; Chaim Kaufmann, Threat
Inflation and the Failure of the Marketplace
of Ideas: The Selling of the Iraq War,
International Security vol. 29, no. 1 (Summer
2004). Weapons inspector Charles Duelfer concluded
Saddam's Iraq had no stockpiles of weapons
of mass destruction in an interview on NPRs
All Things Considered, October
6, 2004.
[5] See, e.g., James Fallows, Blind Into
Baghdad, The Atlantic, January/February
2004; Peter W. Galbraith, "Iraq: The Bungled
Transition," New York Review of Books,
September 23, 2004; David M. Edelstein, "Occupational
Hazards: Why Military Occupations Succeed or
Fail," International Security, Vol. 29,
No. 1 (Summer 2004), Robin Wright and Thomas
E. Rick, Bremer Criticizes Troop Levels
Washington Post, October 5, 2004.
[6] On negative impacts on the war on terrorism,
see Mia Bloom, Dying to Kill: The Allure of
Suicide Terrorism (New York: Columbia University
Press, forthcoming); Ivan Arreguin-Toft, Tunnel
at the End of the Light: A Critique of U.S.
Counter-Terrorist Grand Strategy, Cambridge
Review of International Affairs, vol. 15, no.
3 (2002); Robert A. Pape, The Strategic
Logic of Suicide Terrorism, American
Political Science Review 97, no. 3 (August
2003), and Dying to Kill Us, New
York Times, September 22, 2003, p. A17; Anonymous,
Imperial Hubris (Washington, DC: Brasseys,
2004). Regarding problems in Iraq itself, see
Anthony H. Cordesman, The Critical Role
of Iraqi Military, Security, and Police Forces:
Necessity, Problems, and Progress, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Third
Revised Draft: September 27, 2004 (3.1); David
Rapoport, The Fourth Wave: September
11 in the History of Terrorism, Current
History (December 2001); and Douglas Jehl,
"US Intelligence Shows Pessimism On Iraq's
Future," The New York Times, September
16, 2004, page A1.
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