http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=15439

Pentagon Strategy Creates Rift Among Hawks

By Jim Lobe, AlterNet
March 21, 2003

An almost audible sigh of relief could be heard from a nondescript
downtown building in Washington, D.C. on Thursday morning when President
Saddam Hussein appeared on Iraqi television some hours after U.S.
warplanes and cruise missiles bombarded a residence in Baghdad. 


Media reports quoted U.S. officials as saying that the raid was directed
at a "target of opportunity," possibly Hussein and his two sons
themselves, shortly after the 48-hour ultimatum delivered by President
George Bush had expired. If the raid had succeeded in killing the three
men, U.S. officials told reporters, the Pentagon's war plans might have
shifted dramatically against an all-out war. 


But fortunately for the neo-conservative hawks over at the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI) on 19th St., three blocks from the White
House, it appears that Hussein remains alive, and the invasion will now
go forward as planned. "That we appear not to have gotten Saddam Hussein
last night ... may be a blessing in disguise," came the email message
from AEI's press center. 


A "decapitation" strategy targeted on Hussein, his sons, and a few other
top Ba'ath officials without a full-scale invasion and occupation
represents a dangerous threat to the neocon vision for the future of the
Middle East. "As in Operation Desert Storm, the measure of victory in
this war against Iraq will not be how big we start but where and when we
stop," said the message from resident fellow Tom Donnelly. "'Going to
Baghdad' means more than physically occupying the city. It is a metaphor
for tearing out Saddamism, root and branch. There will be many moments –
and a quick kill on Saddam would be one – where some might be tempted to
say, as the first Bush administration did when the television pictures of
the famous Highway of Death hit American airwaves in 1991, that enough
has been done". 


Perish the thought, cry the AEI hawks led by chairman of the Pentagon's
Defense Policy Board (DPB), Richard Perle. The current Pentagon strategy
has them deeply worried that that their hopes for a thorough-going purge
of ruling Ba'ath Party officials – which they see as the first step to
transforming the entire Arab Middle East – may yet be frustrated. 


The disagreement over military strategy is the first sign of a
disagreement within the powerful alliance that has shaped U.S. foreign
policy since the 9/11 attacks. The coalition consists of three main
components: hard right-wing, or nationalist Republicans like the Pentagon
chief Donald Rumsfeld and vice president Dick Cheney; neo-conservatives
like Perle and most of Rumsfeld's and Cheney's immediate subordinates,
such as Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz; and the Christian Right,
whose concerns have been represented most forcefully within the White
House itself, particularly among Bush's domestic advisers. 


Over the past eighteen months, these groups have agreed that the "war on
terrorism" must include the ouster of Saddam Hussein, beating the war
drums against Baghdad moments after the dust settled in lower Manhattan.
While they have been unanimous on key issues of tactics, such as
marginalizing Secretary of State Colin Powell and other "realist"
veterans of the first Bush administration, and strategy, such as ousting
Hussein, they have never agreed on what happens once Hussein is removed. 


"The earliest and most salient rift (in the hawks' coalition) will be the
hard-right nationalists, like Rumsfeld and Cheney, and the
neo-conservatives," according to Charles Kupchan, a foreign-policy
analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations and National Security Council
strategist under former President Bill Clinton. "For the hard right, this
is really about getting Saddam Hussein and weapons of mass destruction.
Once that's done, they're going to say, 'Okay, we've done our job, now
let's get the hell out and go home". 


But the neo-conservatives, on the other hand, want to stick around to use
Iraq as a base from which to exert pressure on other presumably hostile
regimes, particularly Syria, Iran, and even Saudi Arabia. The third wing
of the coalition, the Christian Right, is more likely to side with
Rumsfeld and Cheney than the neo-conservatives in Kupchan's view,
creating a split that "will complicate George Bush's life immensely". 


In many ways, these rifts were already apparent in Afghanistan, with
Rumsfeld and Cheney dead-set against serious "nation-building" and the
extension of peacekeeping forces beyond Kabul for fear it would interfere
with U.S. military operations against al Qaeda. The result – which the
neo-conservatives warned against at the time – is that the authority of
the U.S.-installed central government is basically confined to the
capital, while most of the countryside remains in the hands of warlords.
The neocons claim that Washington cannot afford to leave Iraq in a
similar state of disorder. 


While Cheney and Rumsfeld have both given lip service to the idea that
Washington's occupation of Iraq will be the first step toward the
democratization of the entire region, they have also been the most
outspoken in insisting that Hussein's self-exile would be one sure way of
avoiding war. This attitude has caused no end of anxiety among the
neo-conservatives both within the administration, in the think tanks like
AEI, and in such media outlets as the Rupert Murdoch-owned Weekly
Standard (headquartered in the AEI building), Fox News, and on the
editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal. 


For them, Iraq must not only be de-Ba'athized, but Washington must also
be accorded the opportunity to show the world, (especially other Muslim
states) just how powerful and determined the United States is to both
wage war and enforce political reform. The neoconservatives view
"Saddamism without Saddam" as the worst possible outcome of the present
crisis. In the past months, they have excoriated the State Department and
the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for encouraging coups d'etat or
enlisting the participation of even former senior Ba'ath officials in any
post-invasion administration. 


For the same reasons, they have voiced – albeit, far more tactfully due
to their interest in preserving the strategic alliance – concern about
Cheney's and Rumsfeld's calls for Hussein's exile and suggestions that
U.S.-backed purges of the Iraqi regime will be carefully targeted and
limited. The neo-conservatives have long favored a far-reaching purge
that would bring to power the core of the exiled Iraqi National Congress
(INC) led by Ahmed Chalabi, an old friend of Perle and Wolfowitz. Chalabi
would be ideally suited to co-operate with U.S. efforts to knock over the
other "dominoes" in the region who are perceived as hostile to the U.S.
or Israel. 


It is still too early to tell whether the neocons will get the
opportunity to fulfill their vision for the Middle East or whether their
hopes will be rudely shattered by a carefully targeted Cruise missile.

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