-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.amconmag.com/10_7/the_road_to_folly.html

Day of the armchair warriors

Iraq Invasion: The Road to Folly
Ignorant of Iraq, void of strategic vision, and viewing the Mideast through the
neoconservative prism, Bush steers America toward a quagmire.
by Eric S. Margolis

Maj. Gen. J.F.C. Fuller, Britain’s leading military thinker of the 20th century, wrote 
that the
object of war is not victory, but peace. A war that fails to achieve clear political 
objectives is
merely an exercise in violence and futility.

In its headlong rush to invade Iraq, the Bush administration is violating Fuller’s 
simple yet
immensely important strategic dictum. Britain’s Prime Minister Anthony Eden committed 
the
same grave error in 1956 when he launched an ill-conceived invasion of Egypt which, 
like
modern Iraq, had the audacity to defy a great power. The Suez operation was a military
success that turned into a political fiasco.

The Bush administration is clearly obsessed with Iraq, but it has no clear plan on 
what to do
with this Mideast version of ex-Yugoslavia once America’s military might overthrows
Saddam Hussein’s regime. Nor is there understanding of how invasion and occupation will
affect the Fertile Crescent, America’s client Arab regimes, Turkey, indeed, the entire
Mideast.

There is also the dearth of reliable political information on Iraq from human sources 
that
has long plagued U.S. Mideast policy. Much of the Bush administration’s current view 
of the
region has been fashioned by neoconservatives, who hold key policymaking positions in
White House, Pentagon, and vice president’s office. Equally significant, the 
administration’s
non-electronic human intelligence on the Mideast and terrorism relies heavily on self-
serving data supplied by foreign intelligence services and Iraqi exile groups.

The ideologues and Pentagon hawks driving administration policy recall the Roman 
senator
Cato, who ended every oration with, “Carthage must be destroyed!” Few of these armchair
warriors have even been to Iraq; less have ever served in U.S. armed forces, yet all 
are
eager to send American soldiers to fight a potentially bloody war whose benefits to the
United States are doubtful.

Lust for destruction is not policy, no matter how much Pentagon hawks and 
neoconservative
media trumpets may yearn to plow salt into the fields of Iraq. Nor is the piratical 
proposal
that the U.S. “liberate” Iraq and plunder its great oil reserves to bring 
“civilization and
democracy” to that benighted nation.

If Washington were truly concerned about democracy and human rights in the Arab World,
it could long ago have promoted democracy in the military dictatorships and feudal
sheikdoms over which the U.S. exercises paramount influence: Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf emirates. Instead, under the banner of a war on
terrorism, the U.S. has been buttressing autocracy and despotism, most recently in 
Central
Asia and Pakistan.

The first question, of course, is why should the U.S. attack and invade Iraq, a nation 
that
has not committed any act of war against America? The rest of the world will rightly 
see
such an act as naked aggression, a return to British and Soviet-style imperialism, and 
a
personal vendetta by George Bush against Saddam Hussein.

According to President Bush, Iraq must be destroyed because Saddam Hussein might
possess some hidden chemical or biological weapons (WMDs), or because Iraq might one
day develop nuclear weapons, or might slip WMDs to anti-American terrorists, or simply
because he is “evil.” The Bush administration’s insistence on the right to preemptively
intervene anywhere on earth recalls the old Brezhnev Doctrine of Soviet days.

Why Iraq alone is a danger among the 18 nations that possess weapons of mass
destruction – including India whose new ICBMs will be able to deliver nuclear weapons 
to
the U.S. – remains a mystery. Why Saddam’s ravaged, hermetically bottled up Iraq would
be more of a danger to the US than 1.5 billion Muslims enraged by America’s perceived
persecution of Iraqis, Afghans, and Palestinians also remains unclear. Terrorists 
don’t need
Iraq to concoct germ weapons, as Japan’s Aum Shinrikyo showed, and Saddam Hussein is
too intelligent to invite nuclear attack by the United States or Israel by slipping 
germ
weapons to terrorists. If Saddam had wanted to do so, he had ample opportunity from
1991-2001.

Equally unclear is why the U.S. refuses to seek diplomatic accommodation with Iraq 
rather
than war. Saddam Hussein has repeatedly shown himself a wily survivor willing to deal 
with
the devil, when necessary. The United States was a close ally, financial backer, and
provider of arms and intelligence to Saddam in the 1980s. He is certainly not eager to 
face
an American invasion that would bring his own demise, and would therefore welcome a
diplomatic escape from the dire fate he faces.

Just before the 1991 Gulf War, this writer discovered a group of British scientific 
technicians
in Baghdad who had been “seconded” to Iraq by the British Ministry of Defense and the
Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, to help Baghdad develop biological weapons. The 
British
technicians were based at the secret biowarfare complex at Salman Pak where they were
developing anthrax, botulism and possibly Q-fever for Saddam’s military – with the full
knowledge and support of the British and American governments. Other British scientists
were developing poison gas for Iraq. They showed me documents confirming that the
feeder stocks for Iraq’s germ weapons had been supplied by the United States.

In other words, it was fine for Iraq to shower poison gas – and potentially germs – on
Muslim Iranians and Kurdish rebels during the Iran-Iraq War. But once Iraq invaded 
Kuwait,
a protectorate inherited by the U.S. from the British Empire, and once Israel felt 
threatened
by Saddam WMDs, then it was time to destroy Iraq. But Iraq did not use its WMD arsenal
during Gulf War I, though U.S. troop concentrations at crowded Saudi ports would have
made ideal targets.

No matter, answer administration critics, Saddam might have some gas or germ weapons
hidden away. Yes, he might. But as former UN arms inspector Scott Ritter has observed, 
all
leftover WMDs from the 1980s have a shelf-life of only 3-5 years and are no longer 
lethal.
Iraq may have developed a few toxins since then, but it has no delivery systems for 
these
complex, unstable, clumsy weapons. Britain, France, Israel, Syria, Egypt, Iran, Libya, 
India
and Pakistan, Ukraine, Russia, Serbia, China, Taiwan – and Cuba – also have chemical
weapons; some have biological weapons. Castro’s are only 90 miles from Miami.

Then, there is North Korea. Amidst cries for war against Iraq, it’s fascinating to 
consider
Stalinist North Korea, a nation that, unlike Iraq, well and truly threatens Americans. 
The
37,000 U.S. troops in South Korea are within range of North Korea’s huge numbers of
heavy guns, rocket batteries, and Scud missiles that can deliver tons of poison gas and
biowarfare toxins. U.S. bases in South Korea, Japan, and Okinawa are prime targets for
North Korean WMDs and attacks by its 100,000- man commando force, the world’s largest.
North Korea has at least two nuclear devices and has repeatedly threatened to “burn” 
Seoul
and “slaughter” American troops in South Korea. The North continues to work on an ICBM
capable of reaching Japan and the U.S. mainland.

Surely on the scale of threats to Americans, aggressive, sinister and wholly 
unpredictable
North Korea should demand more urgent attention than demolished Iraq? On the contrary,
both the Clinton and Bush Administrations chose to negotiate with Pyongyang and bribe 
it to
be good with $ 4.6 billion worth of light water nuclear reactors, oil, food, and cash.
American aid feeds starving North Koreans while the US denies Iraq chlorine to purify 
its
contaminated drinking water, the main cause of death for hundreds of thousands of Iraqi
children.

Why indulge North Korea while scourging Iraq? First, oil. Iraq’s oil reserves are 
second only
to those of Saudi Arabia. Considering that the Bush administration has embarked on a 
long-
term campaign militarily to dominate and exploit the oil of Central Asia’s Caspian 
Basin, it is
not a stretch of imagination to believe that control of the more proximate oil of Iraq 
is also
high on the administration’s petro-agenda.

Second, Iraq, unlike North Korea, poses a potential threat to Israel’s regional 
hegemony
and Mideast nuclear monopoly because of its oil wealth and – at least until 1991 – 
industrial
base. For Administration hawks who view the Mideast mainly through the lens of Israel’s
strategic needs, crushing Iraq is a high priority. A shattered Iraq, divided into 
Kurdish,
Sunni, and Shia regions, would permanently terminate any future challenge to Israel.

Iraq’s northern oil fields could then be annexed by Israel’s new strategic ally, 
Turkey, which
has no oil. Turkey’s generals have long eyed Iraq’s oil-rich Mosul and Kirkuk regions, 
once
part of the Ottoman Empire. Oil would transform Turkey from a financial cripple into a
major political and military power, and assure its role as America’s regional gendarme.

Overthrowing Saddam Hussein and splintering Iraq would certainly be beneficial for 
Israel,
but there are a host of arguments to be made why such aggression would be inimical to
America’s interests. First and foremost, the substantial loss of American lives, 
unless there
is a surprise coup against Saddam, in what inevitably would be a conflict fought out in
urban areas where U.S. firepower and technology would be attenuated.

During the 1973 war, the crack Israeli army was forced to withdraw from Suez City in 
the
face of stubborn resistance from dug-in Egyptian troops and irregulars. Though U.S. 
forces
could quickly defeat Iraq’s regular army in the field, there is a high risk of 
prolonged urban
guerilla warfare and great numbers of civilian casualties.

If Saddam does have any active chemical or biological weapons hidden away, he might 
well
use them against American troops concentrations in the Gulf, unlike 1991. A cornered
Saddam facing death might fire a few Scud missiles with chemical warheads at Israel in 
a
Mideast Gotterdammerung. Israel warns it will retaliate with nuclear weapons if Iraq
attacks with WMDs.

Virtually the entire world is against an invasion of Iraq, save Israel and Britain, 
and Tony
Blair’s Labour Party is deeply split over the issue. Waves of anti-Americanism would
intensify across the Muslim world, jeopardizing American diplomats, businessmen, and
tourists. The costs of an invasion of Iraq using at least 100,000 troops would begin 
at $75
billion and soar from there. Reserves will have to be mobilized.

This huge cost, born entirely by American taxpayers, would come just as the Bush
administration has created a yawning deficit that will inevitably trigger rising 
inflation. The
faux war in Afghanistan, where some 12,000 US troops are chasing shadows, is costing $5
billion each month. The U.S.-installed Karzai regime rules only Kabul, and that only 
with the
bayonets of western troops.

But the most important practical reason not to attack Iraq comes from General Fuller. 
What
will the US do with this Mideast Yugoslavia once it conquers Iraq?

Consider Iraq’s bloody history: Britain created Iraq after World War I to acquire its 
oil, and
put a puppet king, Faisal I, on the throne. Iraqis and Kurds rebelled in 1920 and were
crushed by British troops and bombers. Iraq’s second king, Gazi, vowed to “liberate” 
Kuwait
and died mysteriously soon after, murdered, Iraqis say, by British intelligence.

Faisal II, another British puppet, was overthrown in a 1958 military coup by Col. 
Kassem.
The Kurds rebelled again. Kassem massed troops in invade Kuwait but was stopped by
British forces, then murdered in a military coup led by Col. Aref. Two years later, 
Saddam
Hussein seized power. The Kurds rebelled once more, aided by the U.S., Israel, and 
Iran. In
1979, the U.S. and Britain armed and financed Saddam to invade Iran and overthrow its
Islamic regime. In 1990, Washington gave Saddam what he took as a green light to invade
Kuwait.

This chronically unstable “Pandora’s Box,” as Jordan’s King Abdullah calls it, is the 
nation
the U.S. plans to rule. When Saddam falls, Iraq will almost certainly splinter. This 
is the
very reason why Bush père wisely decided against marching on Baghdad in 1991. President
Bush Sr. and his Arab allies concluded Iran would annex southern Iraq. The only leader
who could hold the nation together was the iron-fisted Saddam. Interestingly, one 
night in
1942, Hitler observed, “The only person who knows how to deal with Russians is Stalin.
When I take over Russia, I will put him back in power.”

A gelded, isolated Saddam is far less of a danger than a geopolitical maelstrom in 
Iraq that
might force US troops to put down Kurdish rebels seeking their own state, or battle 
Shias,
Iraq’s religious majority. War in Iraq may spark an anti-western revolution in Turkey 
or
reignite the Kurdish uprising there. Will the Arab world explode, as Egypt warns?

What about Iran? The same rationale advanced by neoconservatives to invade Iraq also
applies to Iran, a nation of 68 million, and a greater challenge to Israel than Iraq. 
Will the
U.S. face a lengthy guerilla war in the cities of Iraq or the lush valleys of the 
Tigris and
Euphrates, where the British were defeated by the Turks in 1916. The cost of 
permanently
garrisoning Iraq will strain America’s already overstretched armed forces and make them
less effective in responding to a genuine threat elsewhere, notably the Korean 
Peninsula.

The squabbling Iraqi opposition groups cultivated by the United States are sneered at 
even
by their American paymasters, discredited because of their links to Israel, and most 
unlikely
to form a stable regime. Whatever Iraqi general the US puts in power in Baghdad will, 
like
all his predecessors, battle the rebellious Kurds, yearn to annex Kuwait, and 
inevitably seek
nuclear weapons to counter Israel’s nuclear arsenal and Iran’s advantage in manpower.
Iraq will be Iraq, no matter who rules. The best way to end the Mideast’s WMD arms race
is to impose regional disarmament. This includes Israel, which continues to refuse 
nuclear
arms inspection

However brutal and aggressive, Saddam Hussein has also been Iraq’s most effective ruler
since 1957. It was Saddam who transformed Iraq into a modern, industrialized nation 
with
one of the Arab world’s highest standards of education and income. Washington could yet
rue the day it failed to keep this Arab Stalin in power.

America may seize and exploit Iraq’s oil in the short term, as neo- imperialists in
Washington are urging, but in the long run, the cost of protecting oil installations 
and a
puppet regime in Baghdad will exceed profits gained from pumping stolen oil. Bush is 
wrong
if he thinks Iraq can be turned into another docile American protectorate, like Kuwait 
or
Bahrain.

The Muslim world increasingly views George Bush’s America as set on a crusade against
Muslims everywhere, a view reinforced by U.S. attacks on Libya, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, 
Iran,
Somalia, Sudan, and Afghanistan over past two decades.

There is simply no political benefit for the United States in invading Iraq.

On the contrary, such an act of brazen aggression would summon up a host of unforeseen
dangers and unimagined consequences that could destabilize the Mideast and Turkey,
create a world economic crisis, and, perhaps, cause the aggressive Bush Administration 
to
commit an act of imperial overreach that permanently injures America’s geopolitical
interests and, let us not forget, its moral integrity.

Eric S. Margolis is author of War at the Top of the World – The Struggle for 
Afghanistan
and Asia (Routledge, New York 2002) and Contributing Foreign Editor of Sun Media. He 
has
covered Iraq since the 1970s.

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