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>From http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A10749-2002Jul27.html

washingtonpost.com

Some Top Military Brass Favor Status Quo in Iraq
Containment Seen Less Risky Than Attack

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, July 28, 2002; Page A01

Despite President Bush's repeated bellicose statements about Iraq, many senior U.S. 
military officers contend
that President Saddam Hussein poses no immediate threat and that the United States 
should continue its
policy of containment rather than invade Iraq to force a change of leadership in 
Baghdad.

The conclusion, which is based in part on intelligence assessments of the state of 
Hussein's nuclear, chemical
and biological weapons programs and his missile delivery capabilities, is increasing 
tensions in the
administration over Iraqi policy.

The cautious approach -- held by some top generals and admirals in the military 
establishment, including
members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -- is shaping the administration's consideration 
of war plans for Iraq,
which are being drafted at the direction of Bush and Defense Secretary Donald H. 
Rumsfeld.

The senior officers' position -- that the risks of dropping a successful containment 
policy for a more
aggressive military campaign are so great that it would be unwise to do so -- was made 
clear in the course of
several interviews with officials inside and outside the Pentagon.

High-level civilians in the White House and Pentagon vehemently disagree. They contend 
that Hussein is still
acting aggressively, is intimidating his neighbors and is eager to pursue weapons of 
mass destruction and the
means to deliver them.

These officials say time is not on the side of the United States. "The whole question 
is, how long do you wait
with Saddam Hussein in possession of the capabilities he has and would like to have?" 
said Richard N. Perle,
head of the Defense Policy Board, a Pentagon advisory group.

The uniformed military's skepticism would not stop Bush if he were determined to 
attack Iraq, a White House
aide said. "I assume that if the president decides this is going to happen, they'll go 
along with it," he said.

But the military leadership's insistence on airing its concerns already appears to 
have had an effect. Despite
the administration's public rhetoric about Iraq, the view of officials interviewed at 
the Pentagon in recent
days is that there will be no action against Iraq before next spring, and perhaps not 
even then. They argue
that the administration's goal of regime change may well be achieved by Hussein 
falling into poor health or
perhaps by CIA covert operations aimed at toppling him.

By making their views known, the top brass also may bolster congressional Democrats 
who are counseling a
more cautious approach on Iraq. Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.), chairman of the 
Foreign Relations
Committee, has scheduled hearings beginning Wednesday on the administration's Iraq 
policy.

The military's objections also indicate that while the U.S. government is united about 
wanting Hussein out of
power, it remains deeply divided about how to achieve that goal. The military's 
support of containment, and
its concern about the possible negative consequences of attacking Iraq, are shared by 
senior officials at the
State Department and the CIA, according to people familiar with interagency 
discussions.

One oddity of the containment policy is that the military at first was uneasy with its 
open- ended,
indeterminate nature. But over the last decade, the military grew more comfortable 
with the policy of
restraining Iraq through "no-fly" zones, naval enforcement of sanctions and the 
continuous presence of
about 20,000 U.S. military personnel near Iraq's borders.

Senior officers believe the policy has been more effective than is generally 
recognized, officials said. As
evidence, the top brass said the approach has deterred Hussein from threatening his 
neighbors and from
backing terrorist organizations. They said it also has prevented him from updating his 
military equipment.

Also, while Iraq unquestionably possesses chemical and biological weapons, defense 
officials said the current
U.S. intelligence assessment is that it has few, if any, operational long-range 
missiles that could be used to
deliver those weapons to attack Israel or other U.S. allies in the region. U.S. 
intelligence has concluded that
Iraq possesses perhaps as many as two dozen Scud "B" missiles -- with a range of 400 
miles -- that it
managed to hide from international inspectors, but that they are not assembled.

Officials said the officers contend that continuing a containment policy is preferable 
to invading an Iraq that
possesses an arsenal of biological and chemical weapons. Another concern is that Iraq 
could split up under a
U.S. attack, potentially leading to chaos and the creation of new anti-American 
regimes and terrorist
sanctuaries in the region.

Active-duty members of the military have not publicly questioned the direction of 
Bush's Iraq policy, but in
private some are very doubtful about it.

"In my assessment, the whole containment-and-sanctions policy has worked better than 
it's given credit for,"
said one defense official sympathetic to the military argument. He noted that since 
the Gulf War ended in
1991, Hussein has obtained some spare military parts but has been unable to import new 
tanks, aircraft or
missiles.

More than one officer interviewed questioned the president's motivation for repeatedly 
calling for the ouster
of Hussein. "I'm not aware of any linkage to al Qaeda or terrorism," one general 
involved in the Afghanistan
war said, "so I have to wonder if this has something to do with his father being 
targeted by Saddam," a
reference to the U.S. government's belief that Iraqi agents plotted to assassinate 
former president George
H.W. Bush with a car bomb during a 1993 visit to Kuwait.

Retired officers and experts who stay in touch with the top brass, and are free to say 
what those on active
duty cannot, are more outspoken in supporting the containment policy and questioning 
the administration's
apparent determination to abandon it.

"I'd argue that containment is certainly a better approach than either marching on 
Baghdad or destabilizing
the Iraqi government by killing Saddam," said retired Col. Richard Dunn III, a former 
Army strategist. "It only
has to work until something happens to him -- he's either killed or dies."

Added Jim Cornette, a former Air Force biological warfare expert who participated in 
Gulf War targeting of
Iraqi weapons bunkers, "We've bottled him up for 11 years, so we're doing okay. I 
don't know the reason the
administration is so focused on Iraq. I'm very puzzled by it."

Supporters of containment said they expect the United States would prevail quickly in 
any war, but in the
course of the conflict would face several challenges. The Joint Chiefs have used their 
discussions of the war
plan developed this spring, which calls for invading Iraq from the south, north and 
west with about 225,000
troops, to put before the administration their concerns about three major risks they 
see:

� What to do about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, especially its arsenal of 
biological weapons.

� How to engage in urban warfare in Baghdad, especially with the large numbers of 
military and civilian
casualties that such a battle likely would cause.

� How to predict the costs of a post-victory occupation, which presumably would 
require tens of thousands of
U.S. troops, not only to keep the peace and support the successor regime, but also to 
prevent Iraq from
breaking up.

A major goal of U.S. policy in a post-Hussein Iraq would be to prevent the creation of 
an independent state in
the heavily Shiite south, or an independent Kurdish state in the north. To fulfill 
U.S. promises to Turkey and
Arab states that Iraq would remain whole, a defense official said, "I think it is 
almost a certainty that we'd
wind up doing a campaign against the Kurds and Shiites." That would represent a 
striking reversal of
administration policy of supporting the Kurds against Baghdad.

Also, officials worry, a large U.S. presence might antagonize Arab public opinion as 
well as impose heavy
financial and human costs on the U.S. military, which already feels stretched by the 
war on terrorism and
peacekeeping commitments in the Balkans.

Advocates of an invasion of Iraq said they have several problems with the military's 
outlook.

They said Hussein's potential for acquiring long-range missile systems is greater than 
advocates of
containment outline. Retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Thomas G. McInerney said, for example, 
that Hussein may be
able to smuggle in missiles from sympathetic Islamic extremists in Pakistan.

Others contend Hussein could carry out a chemical or biological weapons attack without 
missiles. "You don't
have to have a long-range missile necessarily to deliver a deadly weapon, especially 
if it's powdered
anthrax," Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz said recently.

Perle said it is foolish to believe that Hussein would use only the conventional 
approaches he has used in the
past. "Saddam could decide at any time to hand anthrax to terrorists," he said.

As for the military's view that there is no evidence of an Iraqi intent to work with 
terrorists to attack the
United States, Perle said, "That's the type of thinking that brought us to September 
11th." It is "flat-out
wrong" to think that there are no links between Iraq and terrorist organizations, he 
said.

Perle said that, ultimately, U.S. policy on Iraq will be set by civilians, and that it 
will be based on a different
set of assumptions than those of the uniformed armed services. "Whether he is 
contained or not, that's a
political question," Perle said. What to do about Iraq essentially boils down to how 
much risk the U.S.
government is willing to take, he said, and "that's a political judgment that these 
guys aren't competent to
make."

� 2002 The Washington Post Company
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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