Was
It Only Rumsfeld?
The
United States Needs Military Leaders Who Make Waves
By
Douglas Macgregor
Defense News
Nov. 13, 2006
<
http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?F=2336594&C=thisweek >
Iraq is disintegrating to the point where the Bush administration can no longer
conceal the truth that American ground forces are islands of impotence in a sea
of sectarian violence and civil war.
In fact, the climate of hatred against Americans cultivated by Lt. Gen. Ricardo
Sanchez and his division commanders, generals who transformed a minor insurgency
in the summer of 2003 into an Arab rebellion against the American military
presence in April 2004, has now spread to the Shiite south.
How did this happen? In his book, “Fiasco,” Tom Ricks explains that generals
steeped in a military culture that exalts masses of men and firepower used a
meat cleaver when a scalpel was needed — a strategic catastrophe from which
American policy in Iraq has never recovered.
At the center of this tragedy stands Gen. John Abizaid, presented three years
ago to the American public as the general fluent in Arabic with the perfect
military resume.
Years of sterling service in the light infantry of the peacetime garrison Army
earned Abizaid universal approval from the influential community of retired four
stars, the men who selected all of the generals commanding in Iraq since the war
began. For the Bush defense team, he seemed like the perfect choice.
Yet, when Abizaid took command in the summer of 2003, he did nothing to change
the destructive pattern of raids, checkpoints and intrusive patrols, actions
that created far more enemies among the Arabs than they killed or incarcerated.
His response to the shameful revelation of Abu Ghraib was tepid. Sanchez and his
generals escaped accountability.
When Fallujah exploded in April of 2004, providing Abizaid with a tailor-made
opportunity to dominate the enemy psychologically, Abizaid advised inaction.
Then, in the summer of 2004, in an unprecedented move, another four-star
general, George Casey, was assigned to command in Iraq, effectively giving
Abizaid political cover. Still in overall command, Abizaid could either deny
responsibility or claim credit, depending on changing conditions.
To date, other than holding seminars on Arab culture for visiting members of
Congress and the administration, it’s hard to know what decisive action
Abizaid has taken. Insisting that Americans allegedly win all the battles
despite the daily U.S. death toll, and, in 2006, that Iraq is on the verge of
civil war are patronizing statements of the obvious. What can be said of Abizaid
is that he is an intelligent, hard-working person, anxious not to offend anyone,
especially his
superiors. And therein lies the problem.
Frustrated with generals who were unable to win a single battle in the first
years of World War II, Britain’s Winston Churchill wrote angrily to the chief
of the Imperial General Staff, “We must not confine appointments to high
command to men whose careers have excited no hostile comment.” Churchill knew
his defeated generals were amiable men who made no waves. Eventually, he axed
most of them and Britain’s situation changed.
Unfortunately, during the Vietnam War, U.S. President Lyndon Johnson and Defense
Secretary Robert McNamara did not embrace Churchill’s philosophy. Taking the
generals provided by the military’s system of cronyism, Johnson and McNamara
simply elevated the most sycophantic officers to four-stars, men willing to be
media props for their civilian masters in return for further promotion and
reward in lucrative civilian jobs after retirement.
Sadly, President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld chose the
path of Johnson and McNamara, and that has made all the difference.
Tactical blunders have strategic consequences and the generals have blundered
badly in Iraq. In war, military strategy is supposed to reduce the probability
of armed conflict, to persuade those who might fight not to fight, and when
necessary, to win at the least cost in lives and treasure. In Iraq, the top
generals achieved the opposite outcome.
Democrats, celebrating their control of Congress, should be thorough and
judicious in their investigations of why the military occupation of Iraq has
gone so terribly wrong. They should question the accepted wisdom of the retired
and active four stars that flooding Muslim Arab Iraq with hundreds of thousands
of Christian Europeans in U.S. and U.K. uniform would somehow have salvaged the
disastrous decision to govern Iraq with American soldiers and Marines.
And they should embrace the critical need for military reform to establish a
professional system of general officer selection that rewards character,
competence and intelligence, not just compliance with bad ideas in return for
promotion.
But whatever the Democrats do, they should reject the current schoolboy excuse
we hear from active and retired generals that “Rumsfeld made me do it.”
By Douglas Macgregor, a retired U.S.Army colonel, decorated combat veteran
and author of books on military reform. He writes for the Straus Military Reform
Project at the Center for Defense Information,Washington.