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Sneak Preview: Iraq and the Evolution of American Strategy

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01.02.2008 at 02:42am

Sneak Preview: Iraq and the Evolution of American Strategy by Dr. Steven Metz.

Preface

Writing a book is an adventure. To begin with, it is a toy and an amusement; then it becomes a mistress, and then it becomes a master, and then a tyrant. The last phase is that just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude, you kill the monster, and fling him out to the public.

— Winston Churchill

Like most Americans, I thought little about Iraq before the summer of 1990. Having spent my entire adult life teaching and writing about national security I could not, of course, ignore it entirely. I knew a horrific war took place there in the 1980s but its most intense images were of slaughtered Iranian youth, not the bluster of mustachioed Iraqi generals. Like most Americans, I was perplexed that a regime like the one in Teheran, inured to suffering and driven to barbarity by religious fervor, could exist in the modern world. It was so out of place, almost surreal, an echo of a different time. As a student of the Third World, though, I found Saddam Hussein lamentably familiar and, in Hannah Arendt’s word, “banal.” I knew of many more like him, from Mobutu to Ceausescu. They littered the world. But even this perception—as wrong as it turned out to be–was only a passing thought. I remained immersed in other regions, other issues, other problems. Iraq was peripheral, best left for Middle East experts (which I am not).

Then for the second time in a decade, Iraq invaded a neighboring state, bullying its way to the attention of the world. As Operation Desert Storm unfolded, I was on the faculty of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. Not only did CNN make the war unusually vivid—I remember working in my garage, listening to play-by-play combat coverage on the radio as if it were a sporting event—the fact that some of my former students and current friends were in harm’s way also made it personal. For a few months, at least, Iraq mattered greatly to me. But afterwards, it faded again. I returned to other projects.

As another major war between the United States and Iraq approached in the late winter of 2003, I joined a study team from the U.S. Army War College. Our mission was to enter Iraq as soon as possible after combat subsided and undertake an initial strategic assessment. For a career academic, being issued military gear, fitted for uniforms (to the extent that the word “fitted” applies to the way the Army issues clothing), trained on chemical protection equipment, and inoculated against anthrax and a slew of other nasty things was strange but exciting. Our team established a base in Kuwait then made five trips into Iraq. It was electrifying to see the country that had so dominated the headlines for the previous year, experience the immediate aftermath of a major war, and talk to military leaders and soldiers from both sides while their memories were fresh. The sight of exhausted U.S. soldiers, the jumble of feelings from relief to smoldering hatred on the part of Iraqis, nights spent in looted palaces, high-speed drives through liberated (or conquered) cities with absolutely no public order or security, and, in general, traversing a landscape littered with the detritus of war, much still smoking, was something few scholars experience.

My role in the study team was to analyze what was then called the “post-conflict” period. This was an afterthought to our project, added by a senior Army general after approving the study. Little did he or anyone else know that there would be more conflict in the “post-conflict” period than in the conventional war. As events in Iraq unfolded, the complexity of the project exploded beyond control. I worked frenetically just to keep abreast of breaking developments. My office filled with notes, articles, maps, briefing slides, reports, and transcripts. I could not finalize the report. Each draft was obsolete before I could distribute it.

Still, this was the right issue for me at the right time: I was one of a handful of scholars or analysts who studied insurgency and counterinsurgency during the previous decade. This served me well as the insurgency in Iraq grew. But the idea that that I would spend a few months on the Iraq project and then return to my normal research and management concerns collapsed under the onslaught of events. Iraq became my life. From the spring of 2003 until now I have worked on it nearly full time, collecting tens of thousands of pages of material. Clearly it was time to capture this in a comprehensive format.

Dozens of books and hundred of articles have been written about America’s conflict with Iraq, the bulk since 2003. These cover a range of topics from policymaking to military tactics. But almost all share one feature: they concentrate on what the conflict has done to Iraq rather than what it has done to America. That realization inspired this book. The conflict with Iraq has changed us. A part of what we are, how we see the world, and how we define our role in the global security environment was born in this conflict. We must understand how and why. We must know whether Iraq has changed us for better or worse. We must use Iraq as a portal for introspection, use it to learn about the American approach to strategy. As such, it has much to offer.

I will undertake this in six primary chapters. The first, entitled “Ascent of an Enemy,” will examine how Iraq became a threat to the United States and thus a strategic paradigm. The second is “The Test of Battle.” It will cover Operation Desert Storm and the struggle of the first Bush Administration to overcome the Vietnam syndrome and adjust the role that armed force plays in American strategy. This phase of the conflict demonstrated that the American military, honed through a decade of reform and improvement, was an effective tool of strategy, at least to the degree that the American strategic culture and zeitgeist would allow. This combination of effectiveness and constraints led to a strategy which could generate battlefield success but not ultimate strategic victory.

The third chapter, called “Containment and Transformation,” will assess American strategy toward Iraq and the process of military “transformation” between the two major wars. The “revolution in military affairs” plays a starring role here as the notion of quick and low cost applications of military force was deified. But as Saddam Hussein’s stubbornness demonstrated, this construct had severe limitations. The fourth—”Terrorism and Force”– will deal how the September 11 attacks affected American strategy, particularly with the concepts that propelled the Bush administration to adopt a new, aggressive mode of American global leadership relying heavily on military force and then to intervene in Iraq. The fifth chapter is an assessment of the decision to invade Iraq, the Bush administration’s efforts to mobilize support for this, and the military campaign to remove Saddam Hussein from power. The symbolism here is dialectical: as the United States attained perhaps its most impressive battlefield victory, the contradictions and shortcomings of the Bush grand strategy became evident. The sixth chapter is entitled “Counterinsurgency.” Again, I will focus on placing the U.S. efforts in their broader strategic context, stressing the peculiarly American approach to counterinsurgency as it was reborn in Iraq after a decade’s hibernation.

I will end with conclusions about with the process of selecting, interpreting and using paradigms to drive American strategy, including an assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of this process and some ideas on how it made be made more effective.

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