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http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2003/0304.marshall.html

Practice to Deceive
Chaos in the Middle East is not the Bush hawks' nightmare scenario--it's
their plan.

By Joshua Micah Marshall
Imagine it's six months from now. The Iraq war is over. After an initial
burst of joy and gratitude at being liberated from Saddam's rule, the people
of Iraq are watching, and waiting, and beginning to chafe under American
occupation. Across the border, in Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, our
conquering presence has brought street protests and escalating violence. The
United Nations and NATO are in disarray, so America is pretty much on its
own. Hemmed in by budget deficits at home and limited financial assistance
from allies, the Bush administration is talking again about tapping Iraq's
oil reserves to offset some of the costs of the American presence--talk that
is further inflaming the region. Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence has discovered
fresh evidence that, prior to the war, Saddam moved quantities of biological
and chemical weapons to Syria. When Syria denies having such weapons, the
administration starts massing troops on the Syrian border. But as they begin
to move, there is an explosion: Hezbollah terrorists from southern Lebanon
blow themselves up in a Baghdad restaurant, killing dozens of Western aid
workers and journalists. Knowing that Hezbollah has cells in America,
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge puts the nation back on Orange Alert.
FBI agents start sweeping through mosques, with a new round of arrests of
Saudis, Pakistanis, Palestinians, and Yemenis.

To most Americans, this would sound like a frightening state of affairs, the
kind that would lead them to wonder how and why we had got ourselves into
this mess in the first place. But to the Bush administration hawks who are
guiding American foreign policy, this isn't the nightmare scenario. It's
everything going as anticipated.

In their view, invasion of Iraq was not merely, or even primarily, about
getting rid of Saddam Hussein. Nor was it really about weapons of mass
destruction, though their elimination was an important benefit. Rather, the
administration sees the invasion as only the first move in a wider effort to
reorder the power structure of the entire Middle East. Prior to the war, the
president himself never quite said this openly. But hawkish neoconservatives
within his administration gave strong hints. In February, Undersecretary of
State John Bolton told Israeli officials that after defeating Iraq, the
United States would "deal with" Iran, Syria, and North Korea. Meanwhile,
neoconservative journalists have been channeling the administration's
thinking. Late last month, The Weekly Standard's Jeffrey Bell reported that
the administration has in mind a "world war between the United States and a
political wing of Islamic fundamentalism ... a war of such reach and
magnitude [that] the invasion of Iraq, or the capture of top al Qaeda
commanders, should be seen as tactical events in a series of moves and
countermoves stretching well into the future."

In short, the administration is trying to roll the table--to use U.S.
military force, or the threat of it, to reform or topple virtually every
regime in the region, from foes like Syria to friends like Egypt, on the
theory that it is the undemocratic nature of these regimes that ultimately
breeds terrorism. So events that may seem negative--Hezbollah for the first
time targeting American civilians; U.S. soldiers preparing for war with
Syria--while unfortunate in themselves, are actually part of the hawks'
broader agenda. Each crisis will draw U.S. forces further into the region
and each countermove in turn will create problems that can only be fixed by
still further American involvement, until democratic governments--or,
failing that, U.S. troops--rule the entire Middle East.

There is a startling amount of deception in all this--of hawks deceiving the
American people, and perhaps in some cases even themselves. While it's
conceivable that bold American action could democratize the Middle East, so
broad and radical an initiative could also bring chaos and bloodshed on a
massive scale. That all too real possibility leads most establishment
foreign policy hands, including many in the State Department, to view the
Bush plan with alarm. Indeed, the hawks' record so far does not inspire
confidence. Prior to the invasion, for instance, they predicted that if the
United States simply announced its intention to act against Saddam
regardless of how the United Nations voted, most of our allies, eager to be
on our good side, would support us. Almost none did. Yet despite such grave
miscalculations, the hawks push on with their sweeping new agenda.

Like any group of permanent Washington revolutionaries fueled by visions of
a righteous cause, the neocons long ago decided that criticism from the
establishment isn't a reason for self-doubt but the surest sign that they're
on the right track. But their confidence also comes from the curious fact
that much of what could go awry with their plan will also serve to advance
it. A full-scale confrontation between the United States and political
Islam, they believe, is inevitable, so why not have it now, on our terms,
rather than later, on theirs? Actually, there are plenty of good reasons not
to purposely provoke a series of crises in the Middle East. But that's what
the hawks are setting in motion, partly on the theory that the worse things
get, the more their approach becomes the only plausible solution.

Moral Cloudiness

Ever since the neocons burst upon the public policy scene 30 years ago,
their movement has been a marriage of moral idealism, military
assertiveness, and deception. Back in the early 1970s, this group of
then-young and still mostly Democratic political intellectuals grew alarmed
by the post-Vietnam Democrats' seeming indifference to the Soviet threat.
They were equally appalled, however, by the amoral worldview espoused by
establishment Republicans like Henry Kissinger, who sought co-existence with
the Soviet Union. As is often the case with ex-socialists, the neocons were
too familiar with communist tactics to ignore or romanticize communism's
evils. The fact that many neocons were Jewish, and outraged by Moscow's
increasingly visible persecution of Jews, also caused them to reject both
the McGovernite and Kissingerian tendencies to ignore such abuses.

In Ronald Reagan, the neocons found a politician they could embrace. Like
them, Reagan spoke openly about the evils of communism and, at least on the
peripheries of the Cold War, preferred rollback to coexistence. Neocons
filled the Reagan administration, and men like Paul Wolfowitz, Richard
Perle, Frank Gaffney, and others provided the intellectual ballast and moral
fervor for the sharp turn toward confrontation that the United States
adopted in 1981.

But achieving moral clarity often requires hiding certain realities. From
the beginning, the neocons took a much more alarmist view of Soviet
capacities and intentions than most experts. As late as 1980, the ur-neocon
Norman Podhoretz warned of the imminent "Finlandization of America, the
political and economic subordination of the United States to superior Soviet
power," even raising the possibility that America's only options might be
"surrender or war." We now know, of course, that U.S. intelligence
estimates, which many neocons thought underestimated the magnitude and
durability of Soviet power, in fact wildly overestimated them.

This willingness to deceive--both themselves and others--expanded as neocons
grew more comfortable with power. Many spent the Reagan years orchestrating
bloody wars against Soviet proxies in the Third World, portraying thugs like
the Nicaraguan Contras and plain murderers like Jonas Savimbi of Angola as
"freedom fighters." The nadir of this deceit was the Iran-Contra scandal,
for which Podhoretz's son-in-law, Elliot Abrams, pled guilty to perjury.
Abrams was later pardoned by Bush's father, and today, he runs Middle East
policy in the Bush White House.

But in the end, the Soviet Union did fall. And the hawks' policy of
confrontation did contribute to its collapse. So too, of course, did the
economic and military rot most of the hawks didn't believe in, and the
reforms of Mikhail Gorbachev, whom neocons such as Richard Perle counseled
Reagan not to trust. But the neocons did not dwell on what they got wrong.
Rather, the experience of having played a hand in the downfall of so great
an evil led them to the opposite belief: that it's okay to be spectacularly
wrong, even brazenly deceptive about the details, so long as you have moral
vision and a willingness to use force.

What happened in the 1990s further reinforced that mindset. Hawks like Perle
and William Kristol pulled their hair out when Kissingerians like Brent
Scowcroft and Colin Powell left Saddam's regime in place after the first
Gulf War. They watched with mounting fury as terrorist attacks by Muslim
fundamentalists claimed more and more American and Israeli lives. They
considered the Oslo accords an obvious mistake (how can you negotiate with a
man like Yasir Arafat?), and as the decade progressed they became
increasingly convinced that there was a nexus linking burgeoning terrorism
and mounting anti-Semitism with repressive but nominally "pro-American"
regimes like Saudi Arabia and Egypt. In 1996, several of the
hawks--including Perle--even tried to sell Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu on the idea that Israel should attack Saddam on its own--advice
Netanyahu wisely declined. When the Oslo process crumbled and Saudi Arabian
terrorists killed 3,000 Americans on 9/11, the hawks felt, not without some
justification, that they had seen this danger coming all along, while others
had ignored it. The timing was propitious, because in September 2001 many
already held jobs with a new conservative president willing to hear their
pitch.

Prime Minister bin Laden

The pitch was this: The Middle East today is like the Soviet Union 30 years
ago. Politically warped fundamentalism is the contemporary equivalent of
communism or fascism. Terrorists with potential access to weapons of mass
destruction are like an arsenal pointed at the United States. The primary
cause of all this danger is the Arab world's endemic despotism, corruption,
poverty, and economic stagnation. Repressive regimes channel dissent into
the mosques, where the hopeless and disenfranchised are taught a brand of
Islam that combines anti-modernism, anti-Americanism, and a worship of
violence that borders on nihilism. Unable to overthrow their own
authoritarian rulers, the citizenry turns its fury against the foreign power
that funds and supports these corrupt regimes to maintain stability and
access to oil: the United States. As Johns Hopkins University professor
Fouad Ajami recently wrote in Foreign Affairs, "The great indulgence granted
to the ways and phobias of Arabs has reaped a terrible harvest"--terrorism.
Trying to "manage" this dysfunctional Islamic world, as Clinton attempted
and Colin Powell counsels us to do, is as foolish, unproductive, and
dangerous as détente was with the Soviets, the hawks believe. Nor is it
necessary, given the unparalleled power of the American military. Using that
power to confront Soviet communism led to the demise of that totalitarianism
and the establishment of democratic (or at least non-threatening) regimes
from the Black Sea to the Baltic Sea to the Bering Strait. Why not use that
same power to upend the entire corrupt Middle East edifice and bring
liberty, democracy, and the rule of law to the Arab world?

The hawks' grand plan differs depending on whom you speak to, but the basic
outline runs like this: The United States establishes a reasonably
democratic, pro-Western government in Iraq--assume it falls somewhere
between Turkey and Jordan on the spectrum of democracy and the rule of law.
Not perfect, representative democracy, certainly, but a system infinitely
preferable to Saddam's. The example of a democratic Iraq will radically
change the political dynamics of the Middle East. When Palestinians see
average Iraqis beginning to enjoy real freedom and economic opportunity,
they'll want the same themselves. With that happy prospect on one hand and
implacable United States will on the other, they'll demand that the
Palestinian Authority reform politically and negotiate with Israel. That in
turn will lead to a real peace deal between the Israelis and Palestinians. A
democratic Iraq will also hasten the fall of the fundamentalist Shi'a
mullahs in Iran, whose citizens are gradually adopting anti-fanatic,
pro-Western sympathies. A democratized Iran would create a string of
democratic, pro-Western governments (Turkey, Iraq, and Iran) stretching
across the historical heartland of Islam. Without a hostile Iraq towering
over it, Jordan's pro-Western Hashemite monarchy would likely come into full
bloom. Syria would be no more than a pale reminder of the bad old days. (If
they made trouble, a U.S. invasion would take care of them, too.) And to the
tiny Gulf emirates making hesitant steps toward democratization, the corrupt
regimes of Saudi Arabia and Egypt would no longer look like examples of
stability and strength in a benighted region, but holdouts against the
democratic tide. Once the dust settles, we could decide whether to ignore
them as harmless throwbacks to the bad old days or deal with them, too. We'd
be in a much stronger position to do so since we'd no longer require their
friendship to help us manage ugly regimes in Iraq, Iran, and Syria.

The audacious nature of the neocons' plan makes it easy to criticize but
strangely difficult to dismiss outright. Like a character in a bad
made-for-TV thriller from the 1970s, you can hear yourself saying, "That
plan's just crazy enough to work."

But like a TV plot, the hawks' vision rests on a willing suspension of
disbelief, in particular, on the premise that every close call will break in
our favor: The guard will fall asleep next to the cell so our heroes can
pluck the keys from his belt. The hail of enemy bullets will
plink-plink-plink over our heroes' heads. And the getaway car in the
driveway will have the keys waiting in the ignition. Sure, the hawks' vision
could come to pass. But there are at least half a dozen equally plausible
alternative scenarios that would be disastrous for us.

To begin with, this whole endeavor is supposed to be about reducing the
long-term threat of terrorism, particularly terrorism that employs weapons
of mass destruction. But, to date, every time a Western or non-Muslim
country has put troops into Arab lands to stamp out violence and terror, it
has awakened entire new terrorist organizations and a generation of
recruits. Placing U.S. troops in Riyadh after the Gulf War (to protect Saudi
Arabia and its oilfields from Saddam) gave Osama bin Laden a cause around
which he built al Qaeda. Israel took the West Bank in a war of self-defense,
but once there its occupation helped give rise to Hamas. Israel's incursion
into southern Lebanon (justified at the time, but transformed into a
permanent occupation) led to the rise of Hezbollah. Why do we imagine that
our invasion and occupation of Iraq, or whatever countries come next, will
turn out any differently?

The Bush administration also insists that our right to act preemptively and
unilaterally, with or without the international community's formal approval,
rests on the need to protect American lives. But with the exception of al
Qaeda, most terrorist organizations in the world, and certainly in the
Middle East, do not target Americans. Hamas certainly doesn't. Hezbollah,
the most fearsome of terrorist organizations beside al Qaeda, has killed
American troops in the Middle East, but not for some years, and it has never
targeted American civilians on American soil. Yet like Hamas, Hezbollah has
an extensive fundraising cell operation in the States (as do many terrorist
organizations, including the Irish Republican Army). If we target them in
the Middle East, can't we reasonably assume they will respond by activating
these cells and taking the war worldwide?

Next, consider the hawks' plans for those Middle East states that are
authoritarian yet "friendly" to the United States--specifically Egypt and
Saudi Arabia. No question these are problem countries. Their governments buy
our weapons and accept our foreign aid yet allow vicious anti-Semitism to
spew from the state run airwaves and tolerate clerics who preach jihad
against the West. But is it really in our interests to work for their
overthrow? Many hawks clearly think so. I asked Richard Perle last year
about the dangers that might flow from the fall of Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak. "Mubarak is no great shakes," he quipped. "Surely we can do better
than Mubarak." When I asked Perle's friend and fellow Reagan-era neocon Ken
Adelman to calculate the costs of having the toppling of Saddam lead to the
overthrow of the House of Saud, he shot back: "All the better if you ask
me."

This cavalier call for regime change, however, runs into a rather obvious
problem. When the communist regimes of Eastern and Central Europe fell after
1989, the people of those nations felt grateful to the United States because
we helped liberate them from their Russian colonial masters. They went on to
create pro-Western democracies. The same is unlikely to happen, however, if
we help "liberate" Saudi Arabia and Egypt. The tyrannies in these countries
are home grown, and the U.S. government has supported them, rightly or
wrongly, for decades, even as we've ignored (in the eyes of Arabs) the
plight of the Palestinians. Consequently, the citizens of these countries
generally hate the United States, and show strong sympathy for Islamic
radicals. If free elections were held in Saudi Arabia today, Osama bin Laden
would probably win more votes than Crown Prince Abdullah. Topple the
pro-Western autocracies in these countries, in other words, and you won't
get pro-Western democracies but anti-Western tyrannies.

To this dilemma, the hawks offer two responses. One is that eventually the
citizens of Egypt and Saudi Arabia will grow disenchanted with their
anti-Western Islamic governments, just as the people of Iran have, and
become our friends. To which the correct response is, well, sure, that's a
nice theory, but do we really want to make the situation for ourselves
hugely worse now on the strength of a theoretical future benefit?

The hawks' other response is that if the effort to push these countries
toward democracy goes south, we can always use our military might to secure
our interests. "We need to be more assertive," argues Max Boot, a senior
fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, "and stop letting all these
two-bit dictators and rogue regimes push us around and stop being a patsy
for our so-called allies, especially in Saudi Arabia." Hopefully, in Boot's
view, laying down the law will be enough. But he envisions a worst-case
scenario that would involve the United States "occupying the Saudi's oil
fields and administering them as a trust for the people of the region."

What Boot is calling for, in other words, is the creation of a de facto
American empire in the Middle East. In fact, there's a subset of neocons who
believe that given our unparalleled power, empire is our destiny and we
might as well embrace it. The problem with this line of thinking is, of
course, that it ignores the lengthy and troubling history of imperial
ambitions, particularly in the Middle East. The French and the English
didn't leave voluntarily; they were driven out. And they left behind a
legacy of ignorance, exploitation, and corruption that's largely responsible
for the region's current dysfunctional politics.

Another potential snafu for the hawks is Iran, arguably the most dangerous
state in the Middle East. The good news is that the fundamentalist Shi'a
mullahs who have been running the government, exporting terrorism, and
trying to enrich their uranium, are increasingly unpopular. Most experts
believe that the mullahs' days are numbered, and that true democracy will
come to Iran. That day will arrive sooner, the hawks argue, with a
democratic Iraq on Iran's border. But the opposite could happen. If the
mullahs are smart, they'll cooperate just enough with the Americans not to
provoke an attack, but put themselves forth to their own people as defenders
of Iranian independence and Iran's brother Shi'a in southern Iraq who are
living under the American jackboot. Such a strategy might keep the
fundamentalists in power for years longer than they otherwise might have
been.

Then there is the mother of all problems, Iraq. The hawks' whole plan rests
on the assumption that we can turn it into a self-governing democracy--that
the very presence of that example will transform politics in the Middle
East. But what if we can't really create a democratic, self-governing Iraq,
at least not very quickly? What if the experience we had after World War II
in Germany and Japan, two ethnically homogeneous nations, doesn't quite work
in an ethnically divided Iraq where one group, the Sunni Arabs, has spent
decades repressing and slaughtering the others? As one former Army officer
with long experience with the Iraq file explains it, the "physical analogy
to Saddam Hussein's regime is a steel beam in compression." Give it one good
hit, and you'll get a violent explosion. One hundred thousand U.S. troops
may be able to keep a lid on all the pent-up hatred. But we may soon find
that it's unwise to hand off power to the fractious Iraqis. To invoke the
ugly but apt metaphor which Jefferson used to describe the American dilemma
of slavery, we will have the wolf by the ears. You want to let go. But you
dare not.

And what if we do muster the courage to allow elections, but the Iraqis
choose a government we can't live with--as the Japanese did in their first
post-war election, when the United States purged the man slated to become
prime minister? But if we do that in Iraq, how will it look on Al Jazeera?
Ultimately, the longer we stay as occupiers, the more Iraq becomes not an
example for other Arabs to emulate, but one that helps Islamic
fundamentalists make their case that America is just an old-fashioned
imperium bent on conquering Arab lands. And that will make worse all the
problems set forth above.

None of these problems are inevitable, of course. Luck, fortitude, deft
management, and help from allies could bring about very different results.
But we can probably only rely on the first three because we are starting
this enterprise over the expressed objections of almost every other country
in the world. And that's yet another reason why overthrowing the Middle East
won't be the same as overthrowing communism. We did the latter, after all,
within a tight formal alliance, NATO. Reagan's most effective military move
against Moscow, for instance, placing Pershing II missiles in Western
Europe, could never have happened, given widespread public protests, except
that NATO itself voted to let the weapons in. In the Middle East, however,
we're largely alone. If things go badly, what allies we might have left are
liable to say to us: You broke it, you fix it.

Whacking the Hornet's Nest

If the Bush administration has thought through these various negative
scenarios--and we must presume, or at least pray, that it has--it certainly
has not shared them with the American people. More to the point, the
president has not even leveled with the public that such a clean-sweep
approach to the Middle East is, in fact, their plan. This breaks new ground
in the history of pre-war presidential deception. Franklin Roosevelt said he
was trying to keep the United States out of World War II even as he--in some
key ways--courted a confrontation with the Axis powers that he saw as both
inevitable and necessary. History has judged him well for this. Far more
brazenly, Lyndon Johnson's administration greatly exaggerated the Gulf of
Tonkin incident to gin up support for full-throttle engagement in Vietnam.
The war proved to be Johnson's undoing. When President Clinton used American
troops to quell the fighting in Bosnia he said publicly that our troops
would be there no longer than a year, even though it was widely understood
that they would be there far longer. But in the case of these deceptions,
the public was at least told what the goals of the wars were and whom and
where we would be fighting.

Today, however, the great majority of the American people have no concept of
what kind of conflict the president is leading them into. The White House
has presented this as a war to depose Saddam Hussein in order to keep him
from acquiring weapons of mass destruction--a goal that the majority of
Americans support. But the White House really has in mind an enterprise of a
scale, cost, and scope that would be almost impossible to sell to the
American public. The White House knows that. So it hasn't even tried.
Instead, it's focused on getting us into Iraq with the hope of setting off a
sequence of events that will draw us inexorably towards the agenda they have
in mind.

The brazenness of this approach would be hard to believe if it weren't
entirely in line with how the administration has pursued so many of its
other policy goals. Its preferred method has been to use deceit to create
faits accomplis, facts on the ground that then make the administration's
broader agenda almost impossible not to pursue. During and after the 2000
campaign, the president called for major education and prescription drug
programs plus a huge tax cut, saying America could easily afford them all
because of large budget surpluses. Critics said it wasn't true, and the
growing budget deficits have proven them right. But the administration now
uses the existence of big budget deficits as a way to put the squeeze on
social programs--part of its plan all along. Strip away the presidential
seal and the fancy titles, and it's just a straight-up con.

The same strategy seemed to guide the administration's passive-aggressive
attitude towards our allies. It spent the months after September 11
signaling its distaste for international agreements and entangling
alliances. The president then demanded last September that the same
countries he had snubbed support his agenda in Iraq. And last month, when
most of those countries refused, hawks spun that refusal as evidence that
they were right all along. Recently, a key neoconservative commentator with
close ties to the administration told me that the question since the end of
the Cold War has been which global force would create the conditions for
global peace and security: the United States, NATO, or the United Nations.
With NATO now wrecked, he told me, the choice is between the Unites States
and the United Nations. Whether NATO is actually wrecked remains to be seen.
But the strategy is clear: push the alliance to the breaking point, and when
it snaps, cite it as proof that the alliance was good for nothing anyway.
It's the definition of chutzpah, like the kid who kills his parents and begs
the judge for sympathy because he's an orphan.

Another president may be able to rebuild NATO or get the budget back in
balance. But once America begins the process of remaking the Middle East in
the way the hawks have in mind, it will be extremely difficult for any
president to pull back. Vietnam analogies have long been overused, and used
inappropriately, but this may be one case where the comparison is apt.

Ending Saddam Hussein's regime and replacing it with something stable and
democratic was always going to be a difficult task, even with the most able
leadership and the broadest coalition. But doing it as the Bush
administration now intends is something like going outside and giving a few
good whacks to a hornets' nest because you want to get them out in the open
and have it out with them once and for all. Ridding the world of Islamic
terrorism by rooting out its ultimate sources--Muslim fundamentalism and the
Arab world's endemic despotism, corruption, and poverty--might work. But the
costs will be immense. Whether the danger is sufficient and the costs worth
incurring would make for an interesting public debate. The problem is that
once it's just us and the hornets, we really won't have any choice.

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