Ray Close was CIA Station Chief for Saudi
Arabia. .
Guest Commentary: Ray Close on 'The Real
Meaning of Fallujah'
Guest Commentary
Ray Close
' The proposed plan to turn over control of the
Fallujah security situation to an Iraqi force under
the command of four retired generals is much
more significant than might at first be apparent.
On the strategic level, with regard to overall
American policy in Iraq, it represents a defeat for
those who have contended all along that the
insurgency is being carried on by a small group
of thugs who do not enjoy widespread support
within the Iraqi population at large. Today
Donald Rumsfeld is explaining that he is merely
acceding to the recommendations of local
American military commanders that this
compromise arrangement be substituted for the
original plan for an all-out assault ---- weakly
shifting from himself to them the responsibility
for this sudden abandonment of both tough
tactics and tough rhetoric. This represents a
humiliating defeat for those who have argued
that the United States had no choice but to
"pacify" Fallujah, arrest the insurgents,
confiscate their weapons, and reestablish the
authority of the American military occupation
forces. The new plan would accomplish none of
those explicit and uncompromising assertions
made repeatedly over the past few weeks by the
president himself, by US military commanders
in the field, and (please note) by politicians in
the United States of BOTH PARTIES.
Strangely, George W. Bush does not seem
willing yet to acknowledge this obvious defeat
for his policies. One cannot attribute this merely
to bad advice from his mentors, unless one is to
believe that the neocons have a complete
monopoly on all in-put to his mental processes.
That is not a credible explanation. It seems
more likely that his stubborn adherence to
simplistic explanations of all anti-American
sentiments and actions is another sign of his
worrisome inability to comprehend the
subtleties of this and other similar international
challenges falling within the broad title of "the
war on terror". Perhaps his intellectual mind-set
("there is no common ground between freedom
and terrorism") simply makes it impossible for
him to see the world as anything other than a
zero-sum conflict between good and evil. That is
very troubling quality, especially in the leader of
a superpower.
Another conclusion one may draw from events
of the past few days is that the general US
strategy for dealing with Iraq, which has been
based on predictions and recommendations of
the neocon cabal in Washington (especially
Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle) is becoming
exposed at last as the disaster that informed
analysts always knew it would become. As the
neocons become more and more discredited,
the political currency of their chief Iraqi protege,
Ahmed Chalabi, sinks rapidly in value. Hence
the efforts of the neocon faction to discredit the
United Nations and its principal representative
for Iraqi affairs, Lakhdar Brahimi, whose
ascendancy they recognize as an obvious
measure of their own failure.
This morning, I heard the Iraqi foreign minister
vehemently protesting the characterization of the
four Iraqi generals in Fallujah by the American
media as "former Saddam Hussein generals."
They are, he insisted very adamantly, IRAQI
generals, not "SADDAM" generals. His
message seemed very clear. He was saying to
all Americans: "We can handle this ourselves,
damn it! We may not have your numbers or your
firepower, and we may not yet be adequately
trained. But if YOU try to pacify Fallujah and the
rest of Iraq by brute force, you will make this
country impossible for ANYONE to govern, and
that means that when you eventually leave Iraq,
(God willing!), you will leave us in an even worse
mess than we were in before you arrived. So let
us do it by ourselves, please, for better or for
worse. "
I take all of this as additional strong evidence
supporting the points that I made last week,
before the new compromise solution in Fallujah
was proposed:
1. The political personalities around whom
Lakhdar Brahimi and the United Nations will
build a transitional governing authority in Iraq
after 30 June (whoever they may be; it doesn't
matter) have already privately abandoned any
expectation that the United States military will be
an appropriate or an effective force on which to
rely for the establishment of unity and stability in
the country; where there is no such expectation,
there can no longer be any real trust, and where
there is a lack of trust, there will inevitably be
conflict, first political, soon violent;
2. The leadership group on which Lakhdar
Brahimi bestows "legitimacy" on 30 June will
have the intention (perhaps not publicly
expressed at first) of vesting complete
responsibility for military and security
decision-making to a strictly IRAQI command
authority just as quickly as possible; in the short
term, this may seem virtually impossible
because of insufficient resources, but it has
become the clear objective of even the most
moderate and reasonable Iraqis of the
leadership class; the political imperative of
independence may very well trump the obviously
high short-term risks of chaos; the Iraqi people
place a very high value on stability, and rightly
so, but the force of national self-determination
can become irresistible in an atmosphere of
foreign occupation, and reason is sometimes
the loser in that contest. Ask the Hungarians in
1956. Ask the Palestinians today
3. This means that the US Army will probably be
obliged to leave Iraq before Bush, Rumsfeld &
Company are prepared to manage the retreat
as if it were a triumphant event for freedom; the
Americans will therefore be seen by the rest of
the world, and particularly the Muslim world, in
much the same light as were the Israelis when
they departed from Southern Lebanon ---as a
frustrated and defeated occupation force
expelled by victorious nationalists; this will
make many Americans who supported the
"liberation" of Iraq extremely angry and resentful;
the British and other members of the glorious
"coalition of the willing" will effectively have to
make the best of a bad situation --- if they
haven't wisely removed themselves from the
scene in the meanwhile;
4. All of which makes the probabilities of chaos
and civil war in Iraq next year even higher than
we pessimists have been predicting. (UNLESS
the "expulsion" of the American "occupiers"
serves to unify Iraqis and restore their sense of
national unity and common purpose; my fear is
that this would be only a temporary triumph at
best; historic divisions and rivalries would very
soon resurface, and chaos would pick up where
it left off.) "
Ray Close is the former CIA Station Chief for
Saudi Arabia.
B
Baerwald
(view)
Ray Close was CIA Station Chief for Saudi
Arabia. .
Guest Commentary: Ray Close on 'The Real
Meaning of Fallujah'
Guest Commentary
Ray Close
' The proposed plan to turn over control of the
Fallujah security situation to an Iraqi force under
the command of four retired generals is much
more significant than might at first be apparent.
On the strategic level, with regard to overall
American policy in Iraq, it represents a defeat for
those who have contended all along that the
insurgency is being carried on by a small group
of thugs who do not enjoy widespread support
within the Iraqi population at large. Today
Donald Rumsfeld is explaining that he is merely
acceding to the recommendations of local
American military commanders that this
compromise arrangement be substituted for the
original plan for an all-out assault ---- weakly
shifting from himself to them the responsibility
for this sudden abandonment of both tough
tactics and tough rhetoric. This represents a
humiliating defeat for those who have argued
that the United States had no choice but to
"pacify" Fallujah, arrest the insurgents,
confiscate their weapons, and reestablish the
authority of the American military occupation
forces. The new plan would accomplish none of
those explicit and uncompromising assertions
made repeatedly over the past few weeks by the
president himself, by US military commanders
in the field, and (please note) by politicians in
the United States of BOTH PARTIES.
Strangely, George W. Bush does not seem
willing yet to acknowledge this obvious defeat
for his policies. One cannot attribute this merely
to bad advice from his mentors, unless one is to
believe that the neocons have a complete
monopoly on all in-put to his mental processes.
That is not a credible explanation. It seems
more likely that his stubborn adherence to
simplistic explanations of all anti-American
sentiments and actions is another sign of his
worrisome inability to comprehend the
subtleties of this and other similar international
challenges falling within the broad title of "the
war on terror". Perhaps his intellectual mind-set
("there is no common ground between freedom
and terrorism") simply makes it impossible for
him to see the world as anything other than a
zero-sum conflict between good and evil. That is
very troubling quality, especially in the leader of
a superpower.
Another conclusion one may draw from events
of the past few days is that the general US
strategy for dealing with Iraq, which has been
based on predictions and recommendations of
the neocon cabal in Washington (especially
Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle) is becoming
exposed at last as the disaster that informed
analysts always knew it would become. As the
neocons become more and more discredited,
the political currency of their chief Iraqi protege,
Ahmed Chalabi, sinks rapidly in value. Hence
the efforts of the neocon faction to discredit the
United Nations and its principal representative
for Iraqi affairs, Lakhdar Brahimi, whose
ascendancy they recognize as an obvious
measure of their own failure.
This morning, I heard the Iraqi foreign minister
vehemently protesting the characterization of the
four Iraqi generals in Fallujah by the American
media as "former Saddam Hussein generals."
They are, he insisted very adamantly, IRAQI
generals, not "SADDAM" generals. His
message seemed very clear. He was saying to
all Americans: "We can handle this ourselves,
damn it! We may not have your numbers or your
firepower, and we may not yet be adequately
trained. But if YOU try to pacify Fallujah and the
rest of Iraq by brute force, you will make this
country impossible for ANYONE to govern, and
that means that when you eventually leave Iraq,
(God willing!), you will leave us in an even worse
mess than we were in before you arrived. So let
us do it by ourselves, please, for better or for
worse. "
I take all of this as additional strong evidence
supporting the points that I made last week,
before the new compromise solution in Fallujah
was proposed:
1. The political personalities around whom
Lakhdar Brahimi and the United Nations will
build a transitional governing authority in Iraq
after 30 June (whoever they may be; it doesn't
matter) have already privately abandoned any
expectation that the United States military will be
an appropriate or an effective force on which to
rely for the establishment of unity and stability in
the country; where there is no such expectation,
there can no longer be any real trust, and where
there is a lack of trust, there will inevitably be
conflict, first political, soon violent;
2. The leadership group on which Lakhdar
Brahimi bestows "legitimacy" on 30 June will
have the intention (perhaps not publicly
expressed at first) of vesting complete
responsibility for military and security
decision-making to a strictly IRAQI command
authority just as quickly as possible; in the short
term, this may seem virtually impossible
because of insufficient resources, but it has
become the clear objective of even the most
moderate and reasonable Iraqis of the
leadership class; the political imperative of
independence may very well trump the obviously
high short-term risks of chaos; the Iraqi people
place a very high value on stability, and rightly
so, but the force of national self-determination
can become irresistible in an atmosphere of
foreign occupation, and reason is sometimes
the loser in that contest. Ask the Hungarians in
1956. Ask the Palestinians today
3. This means that the US Army will probably be
obliged to leave Iraq before Bush, Rumsfeld &
Company are prepared to manage the retreat
as if it were a triumphant event for freedom; the
Americans will therefore be seen by the rest of
the world, and particularly the Muslim world, in
much the same light as were the Israelis when
they departed from Southern Lebanon ---as a
frustrated and defeated occupation force
expelled by victorious nationalists; this will
make many Americans who supported the
"liberation" of Iraq extremely angry and resentful;
the British and other members of the glorious
"coalition of the willing" will effectively have to
make the best of a bad situation --- if they
haven't wisely removed themselves from the
scene in the meanwhile;
4. All of which makes the probabilities of chaos
and civil war in Iraq next year even higher than
we pessimists have been predicting. (UNLESS
the "expulsion" of the American "occupiers"
serves to unify Iraqis and restore their sense of
national unity and common purpose; my fear is
that this would be only a temporary triumph at
best; historic divisions and rivalries would very
soon resurface, and chaos would pick up where
it left off.) "
Ray Close is the former CIA Station Chief for
Saudi Arabia.
