"The Worst Mistake in American
History"
Why Remember Iraq?
by PHILIP GIRALDI
Most
Americans would prefer to forget that we are approaching the first anniversary
of the expulsion of U.S. military forces from Iraq. The Republican Party, which
rallied behind George W. Bush to invade the country and occupy it, has suffered
from a short memory relating to that misbegotten war even as it agitates for
new and similar military interventions.
Much of the silence on the
subject is certainly due to the fact that most Democrats and nearly all the
media were also on board, though perhaps for reasons that did not completely
coincide with the Bush neocons’ imperial vision. And after the war began and
the occupation took on its misbegotten form under Jerry Bremer, Dan Senor, and
a host of neocon acolytes brought on board to reshape the country, the saga ran
on and on. As Iraq broke down into its constituent parts due to Bremer’s inept
proconsulship, a development that might normally lead to a rethink of the
entire project, Pentagon-based neoconservatives instead regrouped, doubled down
and contrived the 2007 “surge” to fix things. That the surge was a poorly
conceived and executed military dead end and a complete failure to do anything
but deepen the divisions within Iraq seemed irrelevant, political partisanship
inevitably rushing in to interpret it as a success to provide cover for the
foolish politicians, generals and bureaucrats in Washington who had conceived
it. As recently as the Republican presidential debates earlier this year the
“surge” in Iraq was cited by
several candidates as a litmus test for those who believe in the “right kind”
of foreign policy. Those who did not believe in the myth of the surge as a
subset of American Exceptionalism
were outside the pale, most notably Representative Ron Paul.
Iraq, correctly labeled the
“worst mistake in American history,” has to be remembered because of what it
should have taught about Washington’s false perception of the U.S. vis-a-vis
the rest of the world. One of America’s poorest secretaries of state of all
time, Madeleine Albright, once said that
the U.S. is the only “necessary nation” because it “sees far.” She could have
added that it sees far though it frequently doesn’t understand what it is
seeing, but that would have required some introspection on her part. Albright’s
ignorance and hubris have unfortunately been embraced and even expanded upon by
her equally clueless successors and the presidencies that they represented.
Iraq should be an antidote to such thinking, a prime lesson in what is wrong
with the United States when its blunders its way overseas as the
self-proclaimed arbiter of the destinies of billions of people.
Everyone
but the “realist” and largely traditional conservative and libertarian minority
that opposed the Iraq venture from day one has turned out to be dead wrong
about the war and many continued to be wrong even when the U.S. military was
eventually forced to leave the country by the Baghdad government. The Iraq war
was born from a series of lies.
were a couple of principled resignations from the State
Department, almost everyone in the bureaucracy went along with the fraud.
Digging deeper there were other uncited reasons for going to war
and some led back to Israel and its lobby. All of the most passionate
cheerleaders for war were also passionate about protecting Israel. Iraq’s
Saddam Hussein had been paying moneyto the families of
Palestinians killed by Israel and there was a perception that he was a
potential military threat. When the U.S. took over control in Baghdad one of
the first projects to
be considered was a pipeline to move Iraqi oil to the Israeli port of Haifa.
Fast forward eight years, to the end of the U.S. military
presence. The neocons continued to see a strategic objective in the shambles
that they had made. In an op-ed in
the Washington Post on the impending U.S. departure from Iraq one
year ago, neocons Kimberly and Fred Kagan delusionally entertained five
“American core interests” in the region. They were: that Iraq should continue
to be one unified state; that there should be no al-Qaeda on its soil; that
Baghdad abides by its international responsibilities; that Iraq should contain
Iran; and that the al-Maliki government should accept U.S. “commitment” to the
region. As the Kagans are first and foremost apologists for Israel, it should
be observed that Iraq’s “international responsibilities” would be understood as
referring to the expectation that Baghdad not be hostile to Tel Aviv.
But
looking back a bit, in 2003 Iraq was a good deal more unified and stable than
it is today; there was no al-Qaeda or other terrorist presence; Saddam
generally abided by a sanctions regime imposed by the U.N.; and Iraq was the
principal Arab frontline state restraining Iran’s ambitions. Then, as now, the
U.S. was clearly “committed” to the region through the overwhelming presence of
its armed forces and one should add parenthetically that Iraq in no way
threatened the United States, or anyone else. It was precisely the U.S. invasion
that dismantled the Iraqi nation state, introduced al-Qaeda to the country,
wrecked the nation’s economy, and
brought into power a group of Shi’a leaders who are anti-democratic and adhere
much closer to Tehran and Syria than to Washington. Nor are they very friendly
to Israel, quite the contrary, and there is no oil pipeline. So none of the
“core interests” sought by the United States as defined by neocon doctrine have
actually been achieved, or, rather, they have actually been reversed due to the
invasion and occupation by the United States arranged and carried out by the
Pentagon neoconservatives.
And then there is the cost. The U.S. lost nearly
5,000 soldiers killed plus 35,000 more wounded while the documented Iraqi dead number more than 110,000, though the
actual total is almost certainly much, much higher, perhaps exceeding
one million. Ancient Christian communities in Iraq have all but disappeared.
Columbia economist Joseph Stiglitz has estimated that
the total cost of the war will be in the $5 trillion plus range when all the
bills are finally paid. The U.S. economy has suffered grave and possibly fatal
damage as a result of a war that need not have taken place.
The lesson to be learned from Iraq is actually quite simple.
Military intervention in a foreign land unless a genuine vital interest is at
stake is a fool’s errand due to the unforeseen consequences that develop from
any war. And when intervention is actually necessary (hard to imagine what
those circumstances would be) it must have an exit strategy that starts almost
immediately. Remembering the government chicanery that led to the events of
2003 through 2011 means that the lies that are currently being floated to
justify regime change in both Syria and Iran by the same neocons who produced
the Iraq debacle should be treated with extreme skepticism and summarily
rejected. Iraq also provides the insights that enable one to judge the
Afghanistan enterprise for what it really is: a failure now just as it will be
five years from now at far greater cost in lives and treasure for Afghans and
Americans alike. If the United States cannot learn from the experience of Iraq
it is doomed to repeatedly fail in similar endeavors until the last soldier
comes home in a body bag and the last dollar is spent, leaving behind an empty
treasury and an impoverished American people.
Philip Giraldi is the executive
director of the Council for the
National Interest and a recognized authority on international
security and counterterrorism issues. He is a former CIA counter-terrorism
specialist and military intelligence officer who served eighteen years overseas
in Turkey, Italy, Germany, and Spain. He was Chief of Base in Barcelona from
1989 to 1992 designated as the Agency’s senior officer for Olympic Games
support.
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