The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Dissent in the Bunker
By John Barry and Evan Thomas
Newsweek
© December 15, 2003
Page 36
Newt Gingrich, a quiet Rumsfeld confidant, thinks the U.S.
went ‘off a cliff’ in Iraq. A NEWSWEEK exclusive 'Americans
can't win in Iraq," says Gingrich. 'Only Iraqis can win in
Iraq.'
The military has been hitting hard lately in Iraq, using
overwhelming firepower to kill the enemy in operations with
videogame names like Iron Hammer and Ivy Cyclone II. But
behind the scenes, some military experts, including high-ranking
officers in U.S. Special Forces (Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs
and the like), are beginning to complain that America’s strategy
in Iraq is wrongheaded.
"This is what Westmoreland was doing in Vietnam," says a top
Special Forces commander, referring to the firepower-heavy
tactics favored by the military’s senior commander in Vietnam,
Gen. William Westmoreland, who lost sight of America’s essential
mission in that lost war: winning the hearts and minds of the
people.
One center of private concerns with America’s Iraq strategy is
the Defense Policy Board, a collection of outside experts -
mostly heavyweight conservatives - who regularly consult with
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Disquiet in this quarter
is particularly significant, since the DPB pushed from the
outset for the invasion of Iraq. Last week one of the more
colorful and outspoken members of the group, former House
speaker Newt Gingrich, went public with his worries and ideas
in an interview with NEWSWEEK. He was careful to say that he
does not speak about the board’s deliberations "on or off
the record," but he proceeded to hold forth in his insightful,
if mildly bombastic, way about the shortcomings of administration
policy in Iraq.
Sitting in his office in downtown Washington, Gingrich searched
on his computer for the Web site of the Coalition Provisional
Authority, set up in Baghdad to oversee the reconstruction and
democratization of Iraq. "I’m told over there that CPA stands
for ‘Can’t Produce Anything’," says Gingrich. "Home page of
the New Iraq," he quotes. Then: "The opening quote is, of
course, by [CPA chief Paul] Bremer. Next quote is by Bush.
Next quote is by U.S. Ambassador Steve Mann." He scrolls
down. "Now this is a big breakthrough. They do have the new
Iraqi ambassador to the U.S. On the front page. That is a
breakthrough," he repeats, adding, sotto voce, "I have been
beating the crap out of them for two weeks on this." His
basic point: where are the Iraqi faces in the New Iraq?
"Americans can’t win in Iraq," he says. "Only Iraqis can
win in Iraq."
Gingrich argues that the administration has been putting far
too much emphasis on a military solution and slighting the
political element. "The real key here is not how many enemy
do I kill. The real key is how many allies do I grow," he
says. "And that is a very important metric that they just
don’t get." He contends that the civilian-run CPA is fairly
isolated and powerless, hunkered down inside its bunker in
Baghdad. The military has the money and the daily contact
with the locals. But it’s using the same tactics in a guerrilla
struggle that led to defeat in Vietnam.
"The Army’s reaction to Vietnam was not to think about it," he
says. Rather than absorb the lessons of counterinsurgency,
Gingrich says, the Army adopted "a deliberate strategy of
amnesia because people didn’t want to ever do it again." The
Army rebuilt a superb fighting force for waging a conventional
war. "I am very proud of what [Operation Iraqi Freedom commander
Gen.] Tommy Franks did - up to the moment of deciding how to
transfer power to the Iraqis. Then," said Gingrich, "we go off
a cliff."
In essence, the Americans never did transfer power. They
disbanded the Iraqi Army and the government, realized that
was a mistake, and quickly tried to cobble together an Iraqi
police force and military. But the Iraqis in uniform today are
seen by too many Iraqi citizens as American collaborators.
Gingrich faults the Americans for not quickly establishing
some sort of Iraqi government, however imperfect. "The idea
that we are going to have a corruption-free, pristine, League
of Women Voters government in Iraq on Tuesday is beyond
naivete," he scoffs. "It is a self-destructive fantasy."
(The White House insists that it is paying close attention
to local politics and has speeded up the timetable to turn
over power to the Iraqis.)
The rumor mill in the Pentagon suggests that Bush’s "exit
strategy" is to get American troops coming home in waves by
next November’s election. Obliquely, Gingrich indicates that
would be a huge mistake. The guerrillas cannot be allowed to
believe that they only have to outlast the Americans to win.
"The only exit strategy is victory," Gingrich says. But not
by brute American force. "We are not the enforcers. We are
the reinforcers," says Gingrich. "The distinction between
these two words is central to the next year in Iraq." Gingrich’s
voice rang with his customary certainty. Hard to know if
Rumsfeld and Bush are listening.
© 2003 Newsweek, Inc.
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