Cowboy Bush Taunts the Enemy

mdf309468.jpgOut­ra­geous. At a brief­ing at the White House today, Pres­i­dent Bush told Iraqi mil­i­tants attack­ing and killing U.S. troops to “bring them on.
“There are some who feel like that con­di­tions are such that they can attack us there,” Bush said. “My answer is: Bring them on. We have the force nec­es­sary to deal with the sit­u­a­tion.“
Oooh! I’m sure the cowboy-in-chief’s tough-guy rhetoric plays well with his red-meat, con­ser­v­a­tive, defend-Bush-at-any-cost, mouth-breathing back­ers. Always nice to see the com­man­der in chief _invite_ attacks on his troops, who are so bad-ass that they only lose about one guy a day. But hell, who cares? Casu­alty rates like that are “mil­i­tar­ily insignif­i­cant,” right?
Throw­ing more gaso­line on the fire, Iraq’s viceroy L. Paul Bre­mer ripped the vel­vet glove from the iron fist when he was quoted thusly:

We are going to fight them and impose our will on them and we will cap­ture or… kill them until we have imposed law and order on this coun­try,” he declared at the week­end. “We dom­i­nate the scene and we will con­tinue to impose our will on this country.”

Cal­low, shal­low and heart­less are the only words to describe the increas­ingly des­per­ate rhetoric com­ing out of the White House these days. Team Bush knows they’ve now got a tiger by the tail. But there’s no one to come help them, since they did such a bang-up job on diplo­macy prior to the war.
In the midst of all this, Bush aw-shucked his way around the coun­try on a merry fundrais­ing cir­cuit, rak­ing in $22 mil­lion since June 24. He’s cam­paign­ing on his strength as commander-in-chief and his suc­cesses in the war on ter­ror.
In that same time period 16, and pos­si­bly 18, U.S. and British sol­diers came home in flag-draped coffins. Talk about blood money.
[UPDATE: When I said “pos­si­bly 18″ I was includ­ing the two wounded Army sol­diers who were injured in the attack Tues­day on their con­voy on a Bagh­dad high­way, as they seemed to be griev­ously injured. One of those wounded troops died. Also, a Marine was killed clear­ing mines. That means since Bush began his fund-raising dash tout­ing his role as commander-in-chief, I have con­firmed that 18 troops have died.]

Spinning the War — Still

Oops! Seems like sup­port for the war in Iraq is start­ing to slip. A CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll shows that pub­lic sup­port for the war is now at 56 per­cent. In April, 73 per­cent believed it was worth it to go to war in Iraq, while 23 per­cent thought it was not.
The cur­rent sup­port for the war is just about where it was in early Jan­u­ary (53 per­cent) when the White House was mak­ing its case for the cam­paign.
(Results are based on tele­phone inter­views with 1,003 national adults, aged 18+, con­ducted June 27 – 29, 2003. For results based on the total sam­ple of national adults, one can say with 95 per­cent con­fi­dence that the mar­gin of sam­pling error is 3 per­cent­age points.)
As for the weapons of mass destruc­tion, while 52 per­cent were “very con­fi­dent” in March that weapons would be found, today, only 22 per­cent are “very con­fi­dent” now. Per­haps most sig­nif­i­cantly, the reports that Amer­i­cans don’t care that Pres­i­dent Bush may have lied about WMD aren’t true. Three-quarters of the pop­u­la­tion says it mat­ters either a “great deal” (53 per­cent) or a “mod­er­ate amount” (22 per­cent”) whether Bush lied about the Iraqi arse­nal.
Gallup notes that the public’s mood is still more pos­i­tive than neg­a­tive, but it’s impos­si­ble to ignore the slump­ing num­bers. And it’s also impos­si­ble to ignore that the num­ber of peo­ple who believe Bush actu­ally _lied_ about the WMD rose from 31 per­cent “ear­lier in June” to 37 per­cent now. What’s curi­ous is why CNN buried that news (and even called it a “lit­tle dif­fer­ence”) 17 para­graphs down in its story. Hey, CNN: a 6 point move­ment in a month on an issue revolv­ing around the chief executive’s hon­esty is a *big deal.*
Also of note: Fewer than half (48 per­cent) are con­fi­dent that the U.S. will cap­ture or kill Sad­dam Hus­sein; 49 per­cent are not con­fi­dent.
Get­ting more gran­u­lar, Gallup asked the 408 adults who thought the war wasn’t worth it an open-ended ques­tion about why they felt that way. Fully 24 per­cent of them said “Fraud­u­lent claims/no weapons of mass destruction/lied to the peo­ple about them” were the reason(s) for their dis­con­tent. Another 24 per­cent said that “Noth­ing has been resolved in Iraq/waste of human lives.“
Turn­ing to the war’s sup­port­ers, 51 per­cent of those cited the need for secu­rity (30 per­cent said it was because of the need to “Pro­tect the nation/stop the threat to world secu­rity”; 13 per­cent to stop ter­ror­ism and 8 per­cent to pre­vent the pro­lif­er­a­tion of WMD.) Forty-five per­cent were less con­cerned with secu­rity (27 per­cent felt it was the need to remove Sad­dam from power and 18 per­cent felt it was to free the Iraqi peo­ple.) The 8 per­cent of the war’s sup­port­ers who men­tioned WMD as the pri­mary rea­son indi­cates that it wasn’t a big deal to the sup­port­ers — and it prob­a­bly still isn’t.
While the pub­lic becomes more and more skep­ti­cal, SecDef Don­ald Rums­feld grows more and more snippy. Rums­feld yes­ter­day wran­gled with reporters over the terms “guer­rilla war” and “quag­mire,” and said reporters had _still_ not got­ten over Viet­nam.
“There are so many car­toons where press peo­ple are say­ing ‘Is it Viet­nam yet?’ hop­ing it is, and won­der­ing if it is, and it isn’t,” Rums­feld told reporters at the Pen­ta­gon. “It’s a dif­fer­ent time, it’s a dif­fer­ent era, it’s a dif­fer­ent place.“
He then went on to blame rem­nants of the Ba’ath Party, loot­ers, released crim­i­nals and “for­eign ter­ror­ists.” (Boo!)
“We are deal­ing with those rem­nants in a force­ful fash­ion, just as we have had to deal with the rem­nants of Al Qa’ida and Tal­iban in Afghanistan and tribal areas near Pak­istan.“
Ho, ho! Truer words than he may real­ize, since the U.S. is appar­ently nego­ti­at­ing with the Tal­iban. War makes strange bed­fel­lows after all…
Any­way, Rumsfeld’s force assess­ment is no doubt par­tially cor­rect. But he’s for­get­ting (or ignor­ing) the Iraqi civil­ians miffed as all get out at the Amer­i­can occu­piers. But guerilla war? Per­ish the thought!

To char­ac­ter­ize the attacks as a guer­rilla war would be “a mis­un­der­stand­ing and a mis­com­mu­ni­ca­tion to you and to the peo­ple of the coun­try and the world,” [Rums­feld] said.
“[Hos­tile forces] are all slightly dif­fer­ent in why they are there and what they are doing. That doesn’t make it any­thing like a guer­rilla war or an orga­nized resis­tance,” he said. “It makes it like five dif­fer­ent things going on that are func­tion­ing much more like ter­ror­ists.”

Boo!, again. Of course they’re ter­ror­ists. In the Good Guy-Bad Guy world of the White House and the Pen­ta­gon, any hos­tile force that doesn’t assem­ble in large armored for­ma­tions on a fea­ture­less plain while wear­ing “Shoot Me” uni­forms is, by def­i­n­i­tion, “ter­ror­ist.“
Well, one man’s guerilla fighter is another man’s ter­ror­ist, I suppose.

Iraqi Intifada Gearing Up

The story now in Iraq is the grow­ing resis­tance to the Amer­i­can occu­pa­tion, not weapons of mass destruc­tion. As casu­alty reports con­tinue their grim drum­beat, the death toll rose to 201 Amer­i­can troops killed since the war started March 20, with the two G.I.s found dead yes­ter­day part of five troops killed since Thurs­day. In all, 24 Amer­i­can troops have died in attacks since May 1, when Pres­i­dent Bush declared the major hos­til­i­ties over. (Sixty-three have died in non-combat related acci­dents with 39 of those deaths com­ing since May 1.) George over on War­blog­ging has a good sum­mary of the recent deaths.
8390999.jpgSad­damists and crim­i­nals who cling to the spec­tre of Saddam’s return are likely fuel­ing this resis­tance. Oh, and Islamic fun­da­men­tal­ists, for­eign Arab fight­ers and Iraqi nation­al­ists, as well.
“It was pre­dictable,” said Iraqi polit­i­cal sci­en­tist Saad al-Jawwad [in the Guardian.] “To any man or any woman or any­body who’s liv­ing in despair what could he do? He has noth­ing left but to carry arms and defy the peo­ple who are here occu­py­ing his coun­try and doing noth­ing for him or his fam­ily. Where is democ­racy? Nonex­is­tent. Where is sta­bil­ity? Nonex­is­tent. Where’s elec­tric­ity? Where’s water?“
Mean­while, SecDef Don­ald Rums­feld denied the U.S. was fac­ing a guerilla insur­gency. “I don’t know that I would use the word,” he said, when asked if the occu­pa­tion was becom­ing a guer­rilla con­flict. He noted that the attacks con­sisted of 10 – 20 men, with no large for­ma­tions involved.
Uh, aren’t small, dis­or­ga­nized cadres of insur­gents, mak­ing hit-and-run harass­ment attacks kind of the def­i­n­i­tion of guer­rilla war­fare? As Strat­for points out:

The more con­cen­trated the force and the more cen­trally com­manded, the eas­ier it is to defeat. Suc­cess­ful guer­rilla move­ments are inher­ently “disorganized” — if by orga­ni­za­tion, one means a com­mand struc­ture that is vul­ner­a­ble to attack. They cer­tainly don’t aggre­gate into large units and rarely need to coor­di­nate attacks. It is the very lack of coor­di­na­tion that makes them unpre­dictable and dif­fi­cult to defend against. They adopt a basic doc­trine, such as attack­ing con­voys, pipelines and elec­tri­cal infra­struc­ture. Then small units carry out these oper­a­tions on their own initiative.

Blam­ing the attacks on crim­i­nals com­pletely glosses over the fact that the attacks, regard­less of who is mak­ing them, are inher­ently polit­i­cal acts; they are attacks on an occu­py­ing power.
Strat­for points out that if this is indeed the begin­ning stages of a guer­rilla war, regard­less of whether Rums­feld says it is or isn’t, it looks like the United States has been ill-prepared to deal with it despite last night’s launch­ing of a counter-insurgency oper­a­tion, dubbed “Sidewinder,” aimed at cap­tur­ing who­ever is behind the grow­ing attack on U.S. troops. Already, 60 peo­ple have been cap­tured as a show of force.
in Wash­ing­ton, offi­cials con­tinue to insist there’s no cen­tral com­mand to the bur­geon­ing Iraqi intifada, but troops on the ground are con­vinced it’s orga­nized. “Some­where in Diala province, some­thing hap­pens every night,” said Capt. John Wrann [in the Guardian], refer­ring to the province north­east of Bagh­dad where much of the oper­a­tion was tak­ing place. “It’s got to be a coor­di­nated thing.“
But, like so many post-war events, Oper­a­tion Sidewinder has an ad hoc feel to it. Not the oper­a­tional details, which by nature have to be devel­oped to respond to rapidly chang­ing threats, but the very need for it. One gets the dis­tinct impres­sion that the U.S. never planned at all for the pos­si­bil­ity of an insur­gency.
Rums­feld seems to be argu­ing that the lack of a com­pre­hen­sive mil­i­tary strat­egy to deal with this isn’t a prob­lem if it’s crim­i­nals and other no-goodniks mak­ing trou­ble, not guer­ril­las in the midst of Amer­i­can troops. Crim­i­nals are a prob­lem for the police and soci­ety, not the mil­i­tary — or so the think­ing at the Pen­ta­gon goes. (Which is ironic, con­sid­er­ing the cur­rent blur­ring of the lines between the crim­i­nal and the mil­i­tary jus­tice sys­tems in the United States.)
But the bot­tom line is that Rums­feld & Co. never planned for a guer­rilla war because they lis­tened too much to the Iraqi National Con­gress, which gave them ridicu­lously rosy sce­nar­ios. I seem to remem­ber a war sold as a “cakewalk” — at least accord­ing to Sharif Ali, a spokesman for the INC, said on Aug. 8, 2002.
“All of Iraq has suf­fered for many years from the oppres­sion of Sad­dam Hussein’s regime, and there is not a sin­gle per­son out there in Iraq that will fight for or defend him, and there­fore, we have full expec­ta­tions that they will turn against Sad­dam Hus­sein. And that is one mes­sage we are giv­ing the admin­is­tra­tion,” Ali told the National Press Club that day.
And not to pull an “I told you so,” but, as I wrote back on Jan. 12, 2003,

Instead of a nice, clean occu­pa­tion that results in the first Arab democ­racy … I pre­dict the United States will have years of guerilla insur­gency from nation­al­is­tic Iraqis (some of the fiercest nation­al­ism in the Arab world), the dirty job of sup­press­ing Kur­dish and Shi’ite inde­pen­dence move­ments and Sunni power grabs, the prob­lem of al Qai’da slip­ping across the bor­ders (with the help of Iran and sym­pa­thetic Saudis) into the coun­try to strike at Amer­i­can troops and med­dling in Iraq’s inter­nal affairs by Turkey, Iran, Saudi Ara­bia and Rus­sia. And don’t for­get the resent­ment in the region that will occur when the United States begins exploit­ing the Iraqi oil fields for its own purposes.

The real­ity on the ground doesn’t gibe with Rumsfeld’s beliefs, and Strat­for sums it up thusly: “Rums­feld and U.S. intel­li­gence did not expect to be fac­ing a guer­rilla war fol­low­ing the fall of Bagh­dad, and there are no coher­ent plans in place for fight­ing one. There­fore, there is no guer­rilla war.“
And if Rums­feld truly believes this — and there is a prece­dent for Rums­feld ignor­ing facts that don’t fit with what he believes — Strat­for wor­ries that the gueril­las have a mas­sive advan­tage and that Rums­feld is in fact buy­ing time while he works on Plan B, what­ever that is.
Con­cern­ing WMD — Remem­ber Those?
All this focus on the Iraqi intifada has caused the Weapons of Mass Destruc­tion, the rai­son de guerre, to fade. No one, it seems, in the United States par­tic­u­larly cares that they’ve not been found, and any scrap of evi­dence is increas­ingly lept upon with breath­less hype that starts to sound more than a lit­tle des­per­ate. The mate­ri­als men­tioned in the story found date from the before the 1991 Gulf War, when the Amer­i­cans knew Sad­dam was work­ing on nuclear weapons. The sci­en­tist who buried the bar­rel, Mahdi Shukur Obeidi, sat on this stuff for 12 years and never got the call to start up the ol’ ura­nium enrich­ment pro­gram. Why not, if Sad­dam were intent on bring­ing the civ­i­lized world to its knees and dom­i­nat­ing the Gulf?
Before this war, I was con­vinced that Sad­dam had weapons of mass destruc­tion — not nukes, but likely bio­log­i­cal and chem­i­cal arms. After all, he had them before, and used them against the Ira­ni­ans and the Kurds in 1984 – 1988 (along with the com­pli­ance if not the bless­ings of the West.) And he had plenty of oppor­tu­nity to develop them, with the United Nations weapons inspec­tors out of the coun­try since 1998.
So I thought there was some­thing there. But I didn’t think he had them in any quan­tity that ren­dered him an exis­ten­tial threat to the United States, nor did I think he would coop­er­ate with Al Qa’ida. I didn’t think the threat from iraq rose to a level that required a war, and I didn’t trust the Bush admin­is­tra­tion to fol­low through with an enlight­ened “lib­er­a­tion.“
Well, as it turns out, peo­ple who thought this way have been proven cat­a­stroph­i­cally cor­rect, with one excep­tion: It looks like there were no weapons of mass destruc­tion at all. Some evi­dence may still be found, of course, but it is increas­ingly obvi­ous that any pro­gram to be uncov­ered was nowhere near the level of devel­op­ment the White House said it was. Can any­one of rea­son­ably sound mind argue to me that weapons so well hid­den or pro­grams in a state of such abeyance could be an immi­nent threat to the United States?
So if there were no weapons, why didn’t the Iraqis say so and avoid an extremely unpleas­ant war, as for­mer chief weapons inspec­tor Hans Blix once mused? Well, actu­ally, they did. All through­out the fall and winter’s diplo­matic cage death match the Iraqis claimed they had noth­ing. And look what it got them: invaded.
War sup­port­ers usu­ally say now that happy, lib­er­ated Iraqis were the rea­son for the war and that the WMD don’t mat­ter. To which I reply: Stop chang­ing the damn sub­ject. There are obvi­ously a fair num­ber of Iraqis nei­ther happy nor par­tic­u­larly lib­er­ated, so those post-war ratio­nal­iza­tion don’t hold much water.
So if there are no weapons of mass destruc­tion and Iraqis increas­ingly nos­tal­gic for the “good ol’ days” of secu­rity, sur­veil­lance and sec­u­lar­ism are killing Amer­i­cans troops, why are we in Iraq?

Iraqi intrigue

Hm. Accord­ing to Ara​bic​News​.com, Amer­i­can pro­con­sul L. Paul Bre­mer told jour­nal­ists in Mosul that he had no inten­tion of delay­ing the for­ma­tion of an interim gov­ern­ment, as I com­mented on Sat­ur­day, and said he “does not know the source of these sto­ries.“
Hey, Paul, here’s a hint: It’s British Diplo­mat John Saw­ers, who’s _quoted_ in the story from the New York Times and The Asso­ci­ated Press.

It’s quite clear that you can­not trans­fer all pow­ers onto some interim body, because it will not have the strength or the resources to carry those respon­si­bil­i­ties out,” The Asso­ci­ated Press quoted Mr. Saw­ers as say­ing. “There was agree­ment that we should aim to have a national con­fer­ence as soon as we rea­son­ably could do so.”

So what are we to con­clude from this? That Jayson Blair is report­ing from Iraq? Or that Bre­mer is engag­ing in a lit­tle “cheat and retreat” of his own? Is he dash­ing the hopes of Iraqi oppo­si­tion fig­ures on the one hand and then deny­ing it to jour­nal­ists a cou­ple of days later? Is the Bush Admin­is­tra­tion tak­ing yet another play from Ronald Rea­gan, who once famously quipped, “My right hand didn’t know what my far right hand is doing”?
Viv­ion Vin­son, over at the excel­lent Iraq Democ­racy Watch, men­tions a Reuters report that Bre­mer has started draw­ing a dis­tinc­tion between an interim “author­ity” and an interim “gov­ern­ment,” lead­ing to deep sus­pi­cion on the part of the until-now strongly pro-American Iraqi National Con­gress.

An interim author­ity is a very vague con­cept. I am not sure that an Iraqi rep­re­sen­ta­tive would go to OPEC meet­ings (of oil export­ing coun­tries) under this setup,” Entifadh Qan­bar, a senior offi­cial in the Iraqi National Con­gress, told Reuters.
“We will con­tinue to tell him and push very hard. Any­thing of this sort will not work. The U.S. will come back and accept an interim gov­ern­ment,” Qan­bar said.
Qan­bar said the United States had repeat­edly agreed to form a sov­er­eign gov­ern­ment rather than a mere “authority”.

What’s going on here? Is this another exam­ple of the “pull it out of your ass at the last minute” plan­ning that has marked the Bush administration’s “admin­is­tra­tion” of post-Saddam Iraq so far? I have no doubt that Bre­mer and Saw­ers told the Iraqi oppo­si­tion group at a meet­ing that plans for an interim gov­ern­ment would be put off. And I still main­tain this is the least bad deci­sion to make. With all the groups in Iraq jock­ey­ing for power — Ahmad Khaf­faji, a polit­buro mem­ber of the Shi’ite Supreme Coun­cil for the Islamic Rev­o­lu­tion in Iraq (SCIRI), accused Wash­ing­ton of break­ing its promises to set up a sov­er­eign Iraqi gov­ern­ment and warned darkly of civil dis­obe­di­ence if the Amer­i­cans don’t “ful­fill their promises” — turning Iraq over to a gov­ern­ment before it’s ready would be a recipe for civil war. This, obvi­ously, would be the worst of all sit­u­a­tions and the United States would be in a quag­mire prac­ti­cally alone.
This puts the U.S. in a bit of a pickle. If it hands over the reigns of gov­ern­ment too quickly, it’s civil war (prob­a­bly.) If it holds on to them, it’s a colo­nial power in a region with long and painful mem­o­ries of colo­nial­ism. Run­ning Iraq like an oily fief­dom is not likely to engen­der coop­er­a­tion from reluc­tant allies. And make no mis­take: They _are_ reluc­tant. The sum total of troops con­tributed by allies other than Britain and Aus­tralia can be mea­sured in the hun­dreds — their num­bers look like bowl­ing scores at U.N. league night.
Fur­ther com­pli­cat­ing mat­ters are, of course, the Kurds, par­tic­u­larly Jalal Barzani’s Talabani’s Patri­otic Union of Kur­dis­tan. The PUK is already nego­ti­at­ing deals with Turk­ish (!) oil com­pa­nies Pet Oil and Gen­eral Energy to develop the oil fields around Taq­taq near Kirkuk. (Iraq War Reader has a good take on this.) As Micah Sifry muses:

All this may fore­shadow a col­li­sion between the United States and the Kurds of north­ern Iraq over who will con­trol the country’s rich­est oil fields. Hope­fully, some of the jour­nal­ists who have dis­tin­guished them­selves on the Kur­dish beat, like Charles Glass, Patrick Cock­burn and Tim Judah (whose arti­cle on the Kurds graces our book), will shed more light on this soon.

With the delay of an interim gov­ern­ment, a pos­si­ble dis­pute with the Kurds — and Turkey? — in the future, the United States’ work in Iraq is cut out for it.
*CORRECTION May 29, 2003*
I misiden­ti­fied Jalal Tal­a­bani in the pre­ced­ing para­graph. It has since been corrected.

U.S., Britain put off Iraqi self-rule “indefinitely”

In a move seem­ingly designed to infu­ri­ate Euro­peans and oth­ers sus­pi­cious of the motives of the United States in Iraq, the U.S. and Britain have told the Iraqi oppo­si­tions that plans to put in place an interim gov­ern­ment led by the oppo­si­tion groups have been put on hold “indef­i­nitely.“
As _The New York Times_ reports, Amer­i­can pro­con­sul L. Paul Bre­mer and British diplo­mat John Saw­ers told Iraqi polit­i­cal fig­ures “that the allies pre­ferred to revert to the con­cept of cre­at­ing an ‘interim authority’ — not a pro­vi­sional gov­ern­ment — so that Iraqis could assist them by cre­at­ing a con­sti­tu­tion for Iraq, revamp­ing the edu­ca­tional sys­tem and devis­ing a plan for future demo­c­ra­tic elec­tions.“
Believe it or not, this is prob­a­bly the best idea the Coali­tion has had since it decided to turn Iraq into the 51st state. Iraqis don’t want democ­racy right now. Well, they do, actu­ally, but they want secu­rity a whole lot more. And they want eco­nomic devel­op­ment. Hemin Sul­tan, one of my trans­la­tors in Arbil, told me that given a choice between democ­racy and jobs, the Iraqi peo­ple would take jobs. And he’s a Kurd in the rel­a­tively pros­per­ous part of the coun­try! There’s no wide­spread loot­ing in Iraqi Kur­dis­tan, nor are there rov­ing mili­tias claim­ing turf and threat­en­ing to turn that part of the coun­try into a 21st cen­tury Lebanon.
This also sends the reas­sur­ing sig­nal to the region that the United States is in this for a longer haul than some imag­ined. It’s exactly the oppo­site what hap­pened in Afghanistan, in which Amer­ica was so anx­ious to hand over power to the loya jirga and Afghanistan’s “gov­ern­ment” that poor Harmid Karzai has been reduced to being the Mayor of some parts of Kabul instead of the pres­i­dent of his coun­try.
This is a cru­cial sig­nal to send, for if there’s one thing Iraq’s neigh­bors want to see _less_ than an extended U.S. pres­ence in Iraq is a too hasty retreat that leaves the coun­try shat­tered and refugees pour­ing into Syria, Jor­dan, Iran, Saudi Ara­bia, Kuwait and Turkey. It will also send a mes­sage to the Kurds, so they don’t get the idea they can lever­age their newly ascen­dent posi­tion in Iraq to wring _de facto_ inde­pen­dence from a weak interim gov­ern­ment.
The story reports that Iraqi oppo­si­tion fig­ures (it doesn’t men­tion names) are “dis­ap­pointed” over the United States’ rever­sal.

Oppo­si­tion lead­ers were “very respect­ful” to Mr. Bre­mer and Mr. Saw­ers, a par­tic­i­pant said, “but I think every­one was also pretty force­ful about the need to have full sov­er­eignty for the Iraqis.” A ques­tion they kept pos­ing, he added, was, “Do you want to run this place, or should we?” …
Today’s deci­sion was a dis­ap­point­ment for the for­mer oppo­si­tion forces and their sup­port­ers in the Pen­ta­gon and the Con­gress, where offi­cials had been press­ing for an early turnover of sov­er­eign power to a gov­ern­ment formed by the oppo­si­tion groups.

Also of note is that this deci­sion is a vic­tory for Colin Powell’s State Depart­ment, which has been fight­ing a not-very-private war of its own with the Pen­ta­gon and Defense Sec­re­tary Rums­feld. State has _never_ trusted INC head Ahmed Cha­l­abi, who is wanted in Jor­dan for fraud in con­nec­tion to the col­lapse of Petra Bank. State has never liked the idea of turn­ing Iraq quickly over to the frac­tious oppo­si­tion, know­ing full well it and not the Pen­ta­gon ulti­mately would be the depart­ment that would have to clean up what­ever messes Cha­l­abi and his cronies would leave.
This is sec­ond such vic­tory by the State Depart­ment recently in this internecine war in the Bush admin­is­tra­tion. The first was the appoint­ment of Bre­mer, who, while report­ing to Rums­feld, is a State Depart­ment man, hav­ing spent 23 years in the diplo­matic corps before retir­ing as a diplomat-at-large for counter-terrorism in 1989.
(I hinted at some­thing like this back in Feb­ru­ary, and while I was out­raged then, I have to reluc­tantly admit that this is prob­a­bly the best solu­tion at the moment. Secu­rity must come first. Only by build­ing the foun­da­tions of a civil soci­ety can democ­racy have a hope of with­stand­ing the buf­fets of the region’s pol­i­tics, and that foun­da­tion can’t be laid in a coun­try dom­i­nated by mili­tias, rap­ing, pil­lag­ing and the prob­a­ble plun­der of the nation’s trea­sury by a cabal of cor­rupt exiles lead­ing an impo­tent interim gov­ern­ment.)
It will be inter­est­ing to see what the reac­tion will be from the neo­cons and other hawks at the Pen­ta­gon — includ­ing vice pres­i­dent Dick Cheney — who sup­ported Cha­l­abi and the Iraqi oppo­si­tion through­out the 1990s. It will be even more inter­est­ing if Bre­mer can keep the United States’ eyes on the ball and still in the game.
*Adden­dum*
I’m sure sev­eral read­ers have already pointed this out in the com­ments — I haven’t read them yet; I will! — but the obvi­ous and bet­ter solu­tion would be to turn Iraq over to the United Nations to be gov­erned as a trust, sort of like Kosovo. This would have the added ben­e­fit of encour­ag­ing more coun­tries to send peace­keep­ing troops, some­thing few are doing now. This, how­ever, would require the Bush admin­is­tra­tion to do the Right Thing, which it has proven remark­ably adept at avoid­ing. And since wait­ing on the White House to come around to that point of view will lead to a lot of Iraqis being killed as the coun­try falls into chaos, what is the bet­ter choice? I’m not advo­cat­ing Bremer’s “Shoot the Loot­ers on Sight” pol­icy, but secu­rity, order and basic ser­vices must be estab­lished first and fore­most before a crony-filled, pup­pet gov­ern­ment is established.