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washingtonpost.com
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52450-2003Jan27.html
Desert Caution
Once 'Stormin' Norman,' Gen. Schwarzkopf Is Skeptical About U.S. Action in
Iraq

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 28, 2003; Page C01

TAMPA--Norman Schwarzkopf wants to give peace a chance.

The general who commanded U.S. forces in the 1991 Gulf War says he
hasn't seen enough evidence to convince him that his old comrades Dick
Cheney, Colin Powell and Paul Wolfowitz are correct in moving toward a
new war now. He thinks U.N. inspections are still the proper course to
follow. He's worried about the cockiness of the U.S. war plan, and even
more by the potential human and financial costs of occupying Iraq.

And don't get him started on Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

In fact, the hero of the last Gulf War sounds surprisingly like the man on
the street when he discusses his ambivalence about the Bush
administration's hawkish stance on ousting Saddam Hussein. He worries
about the Iraqi leader, but would like to see some persuasive evidence of
Iraq's alleged weapons programs.

"The thought of Saddam Hussein with a sophisticated nuclear capability is a
frightening thought, okay?" he says. "Now, having said that, I don't know
what intelligence the U.S. government has. And before I can just stand up
and say, 'Beyond a shadow of a doubt, we need to invade Iraq,' I guess I
would like to have better information."

He hasn't seen that yet, and so -- in sharp contrast to the Bush
administration -- he supports letting the U.N. weapons inspectors drive the
timetable: "I think it is very important for us to wait and see what the
inspectors come up with, and hopefully they come up with something
conclusive."

This isn't just any retired officer speaking. Schwarzkopf is one of the
nation's best-known military officers, with name recognition second only to
his former boss, Secretary of State Powell. What's more, he is closely allied
with the Bush family. He hunts with the first President Bush. He
campaigned for the second, speaking on military issues at the 2000 GOP
convention in Philadelphia and later stumping in Florida with Cheney, who
was secretary of defense during the 1991 war.

But he sees the world differently from those Gulf War colleagues. "It's
obviously not a black- and-white situation over there" in the Mideast, he
says. "I would just think that whatever path we take, we have to take it
with a bit of prudence."

So has he seen sufficient prudence in the actions of his old friends in the
Bush administration? Again, he carefully withholds his endorsement. "I don't
think I can give you an honest answer on that."

Now 68, the general seems smaller and more soft-spoken than in his Riyadh
heyday 12 years ago when he was "Stormin' Norman," the fatigues-clad
martinet who intimidated subordinates and reporters alike. During last
week's interview he sat at a small, round table in his skyscraper office,
casually clad in slacks and a black polo shirt, the bland banks and hotels of
Tampa's financial district spread out beyond him.

His voice seems thinner than during those blustery, globally televised Gulf
War briefings. He is limping from a recent knee operation. He sometimes
stays home to nurse the swelling with a bag of frozen peas.

He's had time to think. He likes the performance of Colin Powell --
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War, now secretary of
state. "He's doing a wonderful job, I think," he says. But he is less
impressed by Rumsfeld, whose briefings he has watched on television.

"Candidly, I have gotten somewhat nervous at some of the pronouncements
Rumsfeld has made," says Schwarzkopf.

He contrasts Cheney's low profile as defense secretary during the Gulf War
with Rumsfeld's frequent television appearances since Sept. 11, 2001. "He
almost sometimes seems to be enjoying it." That, Schwarzkopf admonishes,
is a sensation to be avoided when engaged in war.

The general is a true son of the Army, where he served from 1956 to 1991,
and some of his comments reflect the estrangement between that service
and the current defense secretary. Some at the top of the Army see
Rumsfeld and those around him as overly enamored of air power and high
technology and insufficiently attentive to the brutal difficulties of ground
combat. Schwarzkopf's comments reflect Pentagon scuttlebutt that
Rumsfeld and his aides have brushed aside some of the Army's concerns.

"The Rumsfeld thing . . . that's what comes up," when he calls old Army
friends in the Pentagon, he says.

"When he makes his comments, it appears that he disregards the Army,"
Schwarzkopf says. "He gives the perception when he's on TV that he is the
guy driving the train and everybody else better fall in line behind him -- or
else."

That dismissive posture bothers Schwarzkopf because he thinks Rumsfeld
and the people around him lack the background to make sound military
judgments by themselves. He prefers the way Cheney operated during the
Gulf War. "He didn't put himself in the position of being the decision-maker
as far as tactics were concerned, as far as troop deployments, as far as
missions were concerned."

Rumsfeld, by contrast, worries him. "It's scary, okay?" he says. "Let's face it:
There are guys at the Pentagon who have been involved in operational
planning for their entire lives, okay? . . . And for this wisdom, acquired
during many operations, wars, schools, for that just to be ignored, and in
its place have somebody who doesn't have any of that training, is of
concern."

As a result, Schwarzkopf is skeptical that an invasion of Iraq would be as
fast and simple as some seem to think. "I have picked up vibes that . . .
you're going to have this massive strike with massed weaponry, and
basically that's going to be it, and we just clean up the battlefield after
that," he says. But, he adds, he is more comfortable now with what he
hears about the war plan than he was several months ago, when there was
talk of an assault built around air power and a few thousand Special
Operations troops.

He expresses even more concern about the task the U.S. military might
face after a victory. "What is postwar Iraq going to look like, with the
Kurds and the Sunnis and the Shiites? That's a huge question, to my mind.
It really should be part of the overall campaign plan."

(Rumsfeld said last week that post-Saddam planning "is a tough question
and we're spending a lot of time on it, let me assure you." But the
Pentagon hasn't disclosed how long it expects to have to occupy Iraq, or
how many troops might be required to do that.)

The administration may be discussing the issue behind closed doors,
Schwarzkopf says, but he thinks it hasn't sufficiently explained its thinking
to the world, especially its assessment of the time, people and money
needed. "I would hope that we have in place the adequate resources to
become an army of occupation," he warns, "because you're going to walk
into chaos."

The Result of a Bad Ending?

Just as the Gulf War looks less conclusive in retrospect, so has
Schwarzkopf's reputation diminished since the glory days just after the
war, when, Rick Atkinson wrote in "Crusade," Schwarzkopf "seemed
ubiquitous, appearing at the Kentucky Derby, at the Indianapolis 500, on
Capitol Hill, in parades, on bubblegum cards."

Twelve years and two American presidents later, Saddam Hussein is still in
power, and the U.S. military is once again mustering to strike Iraq.

Some strategic thinkers, both inside the military and in academia, see
Schwarzkopf's past actions as part of the problem. These experts argue
that if the 1991 war had been terminated more thoughtfully, the U.S.
military wouldn't have to go back again to finish the job.

"Everyone was so busy celebrating the end of the Vietnam syndrome that
we forgot how winners win a war," says one Gulf War veteran who asked
that his name not be used because he hopes to work in the
administration.

Schwarzkopf in particular draws fire for approving a cease-fire that
permitted the Iraqi military to fly helicopters after the war. Soon
afterward, Iraqi helicopter gunships were used to put down revolts against
Hussein in the Shiite south and the Kurdish north of Iraq. Only later were
"no-fly zones" established to help protect those minority populations.

"It's quite clear that however brilliant operationally and technologically,
the Gulf War cannot be viewed strategically as a complete success," says
Michael Vickers, a former Special Forces officer who is now an analyst for
the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a defense think tank.

Added one Pentagon expert on Iraq, "With benefit of hindsight, the victory
was incomplete, and the luster of the entire operation has faded."

When Army colonels study the Gulf War at the Army War College nowadays,
notes one professor there, "a big part of the class is discussing war
termination."

For all that, few experts contend that Schwarzkopf is really the one to
blame for the way the Gulf War ended. "Insofar as Gulf War 1 didn't finish
the job, blame is more likely and appropriately laid on Bush 41 and, to a
somewhat lesser extent, on Colin Powell," says John Allen Williams, a
political scientist who specializes in military affairs at Loyola University
Chicago.

Schwarzkopf himself doesn't entirely disagree with the view that the war
was ended badly. "You can't help but sit here today and, with 20/20
hindsight, go back and say, 'Look, had we done something different, we
probably wouldn't be facing what we are facing today.' "

But, he continues, Washington never instructed him to invade Iraq or oust
Saddam Hussein. "My mission, plain and simple, was kick Iraq out of Kuwait.
Period. There were never any other orders." Given the information
available back then, the decision to stop the war with Saddam Hussein still
in power was, he says, "probably was the only decision that could have
been made at that time."

'Tell It Like It Is'

Schwarzkopf was never as lionized in military circles as he was by the
general public. Like a rock star, he shuns commercial air travel mainly
because he can barely walk through an airport without being besieged by
autograph seekers and well-wishers. But his reputation inside the Army has
"always been a bit different from the outside view," notes retired Army Col.
Richard H. Sinnreich, who frequently participates in war games and other
military training sessions.

Sinnreich doesn't think that many in the armed forces blame Schwarzkopf
for the inconclusive ending of the Gulf War. "I know of no Army officer,
active or retired, who holds such a view," he says. "The decision to
suspend offensive operations clearly was a political decision that I suspect
the relevant principals now profoundly regret, even if they're loath to
admit it."

But what did sour some in the Army on Schwarzkopf, says Sinnreich, was
his "rather ungracious treatment of his Gulf War subordinates."

Schwarzkopf raised eyebrows across the Army when, in his Gulf War
memoir, he denounced one of his generals, Frederick Franks, for allegedly
moving his 7th Corps in a "plodding and overly cautious" manner during the
attack on the Iraqi military. He elaborated on that criticism in subsequent
rounds of interviews. This public disparagement of a former subordinate
rankled some in the Army, which even more than the other services likes
to keep its internal disputes private.

"I think his attack on Franks was wrong," says Army Maj. Donald Vandergriff,
in a typical comment.

"It wasn't meant to be an attack on Fred Franks," Schwarzkopf responds in
the interview. Rather, he says, he was trying to provide an honest
assessment, in the tradition of the Army's practice of conducting brutally
accurate "after-action reviews." "No matter how painful it is, [when] you
do your after-action review, tell it like it is."

The other behavior that bothered some was Schwarzkopf's virtual absence
from the Army after the Gulf War. Many retired generals make almost a full-
time job of working with the Army -- giving speeches at West Point and at
the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., visiting bases to mentor up-and-
coming officers, sitting on Pentagon advisory boards, writing commentaries
in military journals.

"The fact that Schwarzkopf . . . did not make himself available to speak to
the many, many Army audiences anxious to listen to him won him no
friends in the Army," notes retired Army Brig. Gen. John Mountcastle.

Adds Earl H. Tilford Jr., a former director of research at the War College's
Strategic Studies Institute: "You never saw him at Carlisle, never."

Likewise, a professor at West Point recalls repeatedly being brushed off by
Schwarzkopf's office.

Schwarzkopf says he avoided those circles for good reason. After the Gulf
War, he says, he decided to take a low profile within the Army because he
didn't want to step on the toes of the service's post-Gulf War leaders.
There were sensitivities about overshadowing those generals, he says,
especially after word leaked that he had been considered for the post of
Army chief of staff but had declined the position.

Seeing that "open wound," he says, "I purposely distanced myself for a
reasonable time."

The Army War College's location in rural Pennsylvania makes it difficult to
reach from his home in the Tampa area, he says. And he notes that he has
done much other work behind the scenes on behalf of the Army, including
meeting with presidential candidate Bush to lobby him on military
readiness issues.

He also has been busy with nonmilitary charities. After a bout with
prostate cancer in 1994, he threw himself into helping cancer research;
no fewer than 10 groups that fight cancer or conduct other medical
research have given him awards in recent years.

No More Heroes?

Perhaps the real reason that Schwarzkopf's reputation has shrunk has more
to do with America and less to do with Schwarzkopf's actions. American
wars used to produce heroes such as Washington, Grant and Eisenhower,
whose names were known by all schoolchildren, notes Boston University
political scientist Andrew Bacevich.

But in recent decades, Bacevich says, "military fame has lost its
durability." Sen. John McCain may appear to be an exception, he says, but
he is someone noted less for what he did in the military than for what he
endured as a prisoner of war.

More representative, Bacevich notes, may be Army Gen. Tommy R. Franks,
the officer who would lead U.S. forces in any new war with Iraq. Franks
"has not ignited widespread popular affection," says Bacevich, himself a
retired Army colonel.

It may be that American society no longer has an appetite for heroes,
military or otherwise, says Ward Carroll, a recently retired naval aviator
and author of "Punk's War," a novel about patrolling the no-fly zone over
southern Iraq. American society may not be making the kinds of sacrifices
that make people look for heroes to celebrate. "You don't have rationing,
you don't have gold stars in the window, and the other things that made
[war heroes] a part of the fabric of American life" in the past, he says.

Even Schwarzkopf's own Gulf War memoir was titled "It Doesn't Take a
Hero."

Or it just may be that America no longer puts anyone up on a pedestal.
"Even our sports heroes aren't heroes anymore, in the way that Lou Gehrig
and Mickey Mantle were," says Carroll. "The picture is a lot more blurred
nowadays."

Washington Post researcher Rob Thomason contributed to this report.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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