-Caveat Lector-

U.S. Plan For Iraq's Future Is Challenged
Pentagon Control, Secrecy Questioned

By Karen DeYoung and Dan Morgan
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, April 6, 2003; Page A21

As it anticipates imminent victory in Iraq, the Bush administration is facing
questions, criticism and the threatened rejection of significant parts of its
plan for rebuilding the country and establishing a new, representative Iraqi
government.

The concerns begin with the secrecy that has surrounded the planning process and
the lack of publicly released details. What is known is that President Bush, for
reasons he has not made clear, has given the Department of Defense primary
control over all postwar aid and reconstruction, a role that has sparked
discomfort across a broad, bipartisan spectrum in Congress and among other
governments.

While it has announced plans to quickly establish an "interim authority" of
Iraqis on the ground, the administration has not said what that authority's
responsibilities will be or how its members will be chosen. Many say it should
not be created before all Iraqis untainted with association with President
Saddam Hussein are free to participate, and some question whether any
U.S.-created authority will be considered legitimate in the eyes of Iraqis or
the rest of the world.

So far, the administration has responded largely with pledges to include others
in the reconstruction effort and to ensure the eventual establishment of a truly
representative government. But with U.S. troops entering Baghdad, there have
been moves at home and abroad to push postwar plans in directions that the
administration has indicated it will strongly resist.

Congress has already rewritten the emergency request for $2.5 billion in
reconstruction assistance that Bush submitted last month, with the Senate
barring the money from use by the Pentagon. The House has insisted that it go
through the traditional State Department aid agencies. "The secretary of state
is the appropriate manager of foreign assistance, and is so designated by law,"
said Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz), a House Appropriations Committee member,
expressing a view widely held across party lines.

Prominent lawmakers said they expect the changes to survive a House-Senate
conference this week. But the White House has mounted a strong effort to reverse
them, including calls by Vice President Cheney late last week to the top GOP
leadership.

Secretary of State Colin L. Powell has not commented on the financial
arrangements, but there has been a series of disputes with the Defense
Department over the makeup of the postwar team. Officials at the State
Department are also concerned that the early establishment of an Iraqi authority
will give too much initial power to Pentagon-preferred exile leaders at the
expense of potential leaders within the country.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush's chief ally in invading Iraq without
the U.N. Security Council's approval, has pushed for a much stronger U.N. role
in the postwar process than the president envisions. British and U.S. officials
said that when the two leaders meet tomorrow in Belfast, Blair plans to remind
the president of their joint pledge to seek U.N. endorsement of postwar
reconstruction and political plans.

At the United Nations, senior officials said there is virtually no chance that
the Security Council will endorse a Pentagon-run reconstruction effort or a
U.S.-installed Iraqi authority. Without new council resolutions, the European
Union said last week that it will not participate in the postwar effort.

The administration responded on Friday with reassurances that its goal is a
free, disarmed and democratic Iraq. "To achieve these goals," White House
national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said, "we will work with Iraqis, our
coalition partners and international organizations to rebuild Iraq. We will
leave Iraq completely in the hands of Iraqis as quickly as possible."

Reconstruction


The foundation of the administration's postwar plan for Iraq is the Office of
Reconstruction and Humanitarian Aid, a Pentagon-based agency established by
National Security Directive 24, a document Bush signed several months ago. Its
head, chosen by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, is retired Army Lt. Gen.
Jay M. Garner. He plans to install American "civilian advisers" at the top of
Iraqi government ministries and agencies.

Garner reports to Rumsfeld through Army Gen. Tommy R. Franks, the head of the
U.S. Central Command. Although the State Department's Agency for International
Development and disaster relief organizations will handle much of the actual
humanitarian and reconstruction work, the plan calls for them to answer to
Garner, who will control their funding.

Despite repeated requests for more information and for a meeting with Garner,
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.) said he
and his staff have received only "inconclusive and not very comprehensive views"
on Garner's plans. The Pentagon has refused requests from Lugar and other
committees to meet with Garner. With Garner's team awaiting entry into Iraq, the
Defense Department "has refused requests by the staff of the Appropriations
Committee to brief us, and has its people sitting around a swimming pool in
Kuwait drawing up plans," said a senior congressional aide.

Top Republicans as well as Democrats have been smarting for months over what
they view as highhanded treatment by the White House and the Defense Department
on a range of fiscal issues. While there is overwhelming support on Capitol Hill
for the way Bush and Rumsfeld have conducted the war, the peacetime arrangements
for Iraq outlined in Bush's emergency spending package met with near universal
rejection.

In what members said was an unprecedented move, Bush asked for the $2.5 billion
reconstruction fund to be appropriated to the White House itself, presumably to
be distributed through the Pentagon. A memo prepared by senior GOP staff for the
House Appropriations Committee noted that the arrangement would erect a "wall of
executive privilege [that] would deny Congress and the Committee access to the
management of the Fund. Decision-makers determining the allocation . . . could
not be called as witnesses before hearings, and most fiscal data would be beyond
the Committee's reach."

In addition, the memo said, "further drawing our Armed Forces into long-term
nation-building . . . would degrade their capacities to fight wars."

Versions of the bill passed last week in both the House and the Senate would
prevent the money from going to the Defense Department. "We had to do that,"
said a senior House Democrat who is generally very supportive of the Pentagon.
"It sends a message."

"We all admire the Department of Defense when they're doing the things they're
best trained for," said Senate Appropriations Committee member Patrick J. Leahy
(D-Vt.). But there is "no consensus" for allowing the Pentagon to handle the
reconstruction effort, "and we're the ones who have to come up with the money."

Rice said the White House will continue to press against the changes. "The
president asked for the appropriations to be made available . . . to the
president for distribution," she said, and Bush has designated the Defense
Department as "the lead agency" for postwar operations.

Pentagon control has also concerned Blair and the United Nations. The White
House has said it is prepared to work with U.N. agencies and nongovernmental
organizations on the reconstruction of Iraq, but its failure so far to define
their roles has increased suspicion that it expects them to take a secondary
position.

Powell has been in close touch with U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, and he
said last week that he anticipates Annan will appoint a special envoy to
coordinate with the U.S. operation. But it is a "misapprehension," said one
informed source, to believe that Annan "is going to appoint a special
coordinator who in reality, if not in letter, will be subordinate to an
occupying power."

France, Germany, Russia and China, Security Council members who opposed the
U.S.-British war decision, all issued statements on Friday saying that the
United Nations is the only legitimate authority for supervising the rebuilding
of Iraq.

Iraq's Political Future


Questions about the creation and composition of an Iraqi interim authority rose
to the surface last week after reports that Rumsfeld had proposed it be
established immediately and installed in southern Iraq before the end of the
war. Rumsfeld argued that appointing the body now would "put an Iraqi face" on
the country's immediate future, U.S. officials said, and would deflect criticism
that the United States plans to exert sole control.

The State Department has agreed on the importance of establishing some sort of
organized Iraqi entity on the ground, but officials there have argued that it is
much too early to constitute a recognized "authority." Since there has been
little chance yet for legitimate, anti-Hussein leaders to emerge from within,
they say, it would inevitably be dominated by exile figures whose following in
Iraq is unclear.

Underlying this disagreement is a long-standing dispute between the two
departments over specific exile leaders who are favored by the Pentagon and
mistrusted by officials at State and the CIA.

In particular, some Defense officials, along with senior Pentagon adviser
Richard N. Perle and former CIA director R. James Woolsey, have a longstanding
relationship with Ahmed Chalabi, head of the exile Iraqi National Congress
(INC). They have argued that his democratic experience outside Iraq and his
longtime commitment to the overthrow of Hussein and to other administration
goals in the Middle East make him well-suited to play a leading role.

The INC is one of six anti-Hussein organizations -- including groups
representing northern Iraq Kurds and southern Shiites -- that have formed an
uneasy coalition under U.S. auspices. Among several alternatives, the State
Department has suggested that the six be designated as part of a "conference" of
Iraqi leaders, with other leaders to be added as more of the country is brought
under U.S. control. When the balance is right, the conference could name an
interim authority to function alongside the U.S. administration, and eventually
work toward a new Iraqi government.

Rice said, in response to questions on Friday, that it is "possible" the
authority would be established soon. While assuring that it would be
"broad-based," she did not specify how its members would be selected. "We went
through a similar phase in Afghanistan," she said, when a transitional authority
was named to assume early governing responsibilities and to prepare for
elections.

But in Afghanistan, the entire process was supervised by the United Nations, and
Rice made clear that is not the current U.S. plan. "I would just caution that
Iraq is not East Timor, or Kosovo, or Afghanistan," she said, all of which
established new administrations under U.N. auspices. "Iraq is unique."

That appears to contradict the procedure advocated by Blair's government, and
seems certain not to be recognized by the United Nations.

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said in a speech on Tuesday that his
government will not only "ensure that the United Nations oversees the medium-
and long-term international aid program to Iraq," but will seek new Security
Council resolutions "to endorse an appropriate post-conflict administration."


© 2003 The Washington Post Company

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