Commentary:
Looking for the exit
By Arnaud de Borchgrave
UPI Editor at Large
Published 4/29/2004
12:38 PM
WASHINGTON, April 29 (UPI) -- If it wasn't a quagmire, it was
certainly quagmiry. And the first prominent retired general to break
ranks with President Bush's Iraq war policy was a Republican who once
headed the National Security Agency and also served as a deputy National
Security Adviser. Gen. William E. Odom, a fluent Russian speaker who
teaches at Georgetown and Yale, told the Wall Street Journal's John
Harwood staying the course in Iraq is untenable.
It was hard to disagree with Odom's description of Mr. Bush's vision
of reordering the Middle East by building a democracy in Iraq as a
pipedream. His prescription: Remove U.S. forces "from that shattered
country as rapidly as possible." Odom says bluntly, "we have failed,"
and "the issue is how high a price we're going to pay - less, by getting
out sooner, or more, by getting out later."
At best, Iraq will emerge from the current geopolitical earthquake as
"a highly illiberal democracy, inspired by Islamic culture, extremely
hostile to the West and probably quite willing to fund terrorist
organizations," Odom explained. If that wasn't enough to erode support
for the war, Odom added, "The ability of Islamist militants to use Iraq
as a beachhead for attacks against American interests elsewhere may
increase."
Odom, who heads the pro-Republican Hudson Institute, also sees the
sum total of what the U.S. occupation of Iraq has achieved is "the
radicalization of Saudi Arabia and probably Egypt, too. And the longer
we stay in Iraq, the more isolated America will become."
The retired four-star's proposed solution is for the United Nations
and the European allies to take charge of political and security
arrangements. This formal request from the United States, says Odom,
should be accompanied by a unilateral declaration that U.S. forces are
leaving even if no one else agrees to come in.
The Journal's John Hardwood in his Capital Journal column asks which
sounds more credible - Gen. Odom's gloomy forecast or Mr. Bush's
prediction of success? He does not tell us which way he's leaning. But a
company-size bevy of retired U.S. generals and admirals were in constant
touch this week with a volunteer drafter putting the final touches to a
"tough condemnation" of the Bush administration's Middle Eastern policy.
The Council of Foreign Relations organized a conference call-in for
its members with Gen. Odom. A score of former U.S. ambassadors who had
served in the Middle East were also discussing how to join their voices
to Britain's 52 former ambassadors, high commissioners and governors who
wrote to Tony Blair to accuse him of scuttling peace efforts between
Israel and Palestinians. The British diplomats also took Mr. Blair to
task for policies "doomed to failure" in Iraq.
One of the British co-signers was Paul Bergne, who until recently was
the prime minister's personal envoy to Afghanistan.
It was the first time in living memory that such a large group of
former envoys to the Middle East had acted as a group to denounce the
government's foreign policy, They said they spoke for many serving
diplomats as well.
The retired American ambassadors were as one in warning President
Bush that discarding the Road Map to peace in the Middle East and
substituting a plan that leaves Palestinians with no hope for a viable
state is tantamount to declaring war on moderation - and jeopardizing
U.S. interests all over the Middle East.
Total alignment on Prime Minister Sharon's anti-Palestinian strategy
has turned even moderate Muslims against the United States. Egypt's
President Hosni Mubarak said hatred of the United States had never
reached such depths.
When Mr. Bush suddenly dropped longstanding U.S. opposition to Jewish
settlements on the West Bank, rooted as they were in U.N. resolutions,
Israeli settlers could not believe their luck. Sharon conceded Gaza,
where 7,500 Jewish settlers had no future among 1.3 million
Palestinians, but in return obtained U.S. blessings for permanent
Israeli habitation in large swaths of what was to be a Palestinian
state. Even illegal hilltop settlements concluded they were now safe
from removal and immediately began erecting permanent structures to
replace mobile homes. A tiny, isolated community atop a hill near Nablus,
where 14 families live in 20 homes on wheels, had already laid the
foundations for permanent structures.
No sooner had the White House's red light flashed green than the once
surreptitious, crawling annexation of the West Bank resumed in the open.
Jewish West Bank settlers were jubilant, while Palestinians were adrift
in the Slough of Despond. With the Right of Return for Palestinians also
off the table, and no viable state of their own on the West Bank,
extremist organizations will have no problem recruiting more jihadis
(holy warriors) and merging terrorist operations with the underground
resistance in Iraq,
Arab opinion has been inflamed to the point where Palestine and Iraq
are now two fronts in the war against what Charles de Gaulle used to
call "the Anglo-Saxons." Osama bin Laden is probably thinking he's some
kind of strategic genius.
In Iraq, quite apart from Fallujah and Najaf, the U.S. occupation,
according to the latest Gallup polls, has turned most of the population
against America. In Baghdad, only 13 percent now believe the invasion
and regime change it accomplished was morally justifiable. Only
one-third of Iraqis believe the occupation is doing more good than harm,
and a majority favor an immediate U.S. troop withdrawal while conceding
this could put them in greater danger. Odom presumably has his finger on
the same pulse.
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