Bush must call for reinforcements in Iraq

By Robert Kagan and William Kristol

Published: November 12 2006 18:41 | Last updated: November 12 2006 18:41
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/8a848c2e-7278-11db-a5f5-0000779e2340.html>

President George W. Bush has just over two years left in office. The
central question facing him is: what kind of Iraq will he bequeath to
his successor? Will it be a metastasising mess dumped on the doorstep
of the next president, or an Iraq on the path to stability and
success? The answer will determine how this president should be
remembered by future generations.

There are, of course, other grave issues that will consume the Bush
administration over the next two years: the continuing need to defend
Americans from terrorist threats; Iran's efforts to acquire nuclear
weapons; containment and weakening of a nuclear-armed North Korea; an
increasingly belligerent Russia; and manifold challenges presented by
a rising China. But the fact remains that Mr Bush (correctly, in our
view) took the nation to war to remove Saddam Hussein, and the success
or failure of that war will be central to his legacy.

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The trajectory is downward towards failure. Indeed, this has been the
case for more than three years, ever since Pentagon officials decided
to put far too few troops in Iraq to bring stability after Hussein's
ousting. The result has been not only a consistently inadequate level
of forces. The endless cycle of promised draw-downs, deteriorating
security and cancellation of the proposed draw-downs has been
politically disastrous in both Iraq and the US.

In Iraq, US policies have steadily undermined public confidence that
America has either the will or capacity to provide the security Iraqis
need. So they have turned to their own sectarian armed groups for
protection. That, and not historical inevitability or the alleged
failings of the Iraqi people, has brought Iraq closer to civil war.

These policies have been equally damaging in the US. The American
people have rightly judged that the administration is floundering in
Iraq and, worse, is not committed to doing what is necessary to
succeed. This perception undoubtedly played a large part in last
week's mid-term election. Now, many Americans are looking to the Iraq
Study Group, the commission headed by James Baker and Lee Hamilton,
for a face-saving, bipartisan way to withdraw from Iraq as quickly as
possible. The great irony is that with nothing new to offer, the Baker
commission's forthcoming report – if it takes the shape most observers
predict – will probably suffer the same fate as similar past efforts.

There is a popular theory that the prospect of US withdrawal will
force Iraqis to reach an accommodation with one another. This would be
more plausible had it not been disproved by three years of painful
experience. Instead of looking for a face-saving way to lose in Iraq,
President Bush could finally demand of his top advisers a strategy to
succeed: provide the US force levels necessary to achieve even minimal
political objectives. This could begin by increasing US troops in Iraq
by at least 50,000 in order to clear and hold Baghdad without shifting
troops from other parts of Iraq. These operations could then be
expanded into areas of insurgency. This strategy would not stabilise
the country right away but could secure Iraq's vital centre and
provide real hope for progress.

Those who claim that 50,000 more troops do not exist to send to Iraq
are wrong. But it is true that US ground forces are stretched, and
that steps are needed to increase their overall size.

If the president undertook to send the necessary troops, we have no
doubt many likely recommendations from the Baker commission would make
sense and could be supported. We share the commission's belief that
the administration should actively seek bipartisan support for its
approach to Iraq. Democratic hopefuls for the 2008 presidential
elections should welcome any effort to ensure they are not left to
deal with a collapsing country. There is much easy talk of how a
victory strategy in Iraq has been rendered impossible by Tuesday's
elections. This is nonsense. First, victory in Iraq is a national
priority, and to abandon it because of a loss of House and Senate
seats would be irresponsible. The Republican loss was largely due to
lack of confidence that Mr Bush had a victory strategy for Iraq, not a
belief that he was not exiting fast enough. If the president makes
clear he has such a strategy, he will have the support to do what is
necessary.

As for the Baker commission's likely recommendation that the US should
engage Syria and Iran in the search for solutions in Iraq, we are
sceptical these countries want to help. But it is one thing to seek
their help while the US is losing and its negotiating position is
weakest, and quite another to engage in such diplomacy while
increasing US force levels to try to improve the security situation.

Finally, as others have noted, if the Iraqis choose to organise their
country in a less "unified" and more "federated" way, that is fine –
as long as it is peaceful and stable. A peaceful, federated Iraq will,
however, require no less of a commitment of US troops to provide
security than a unitary one.

The president has two years to turn things around and leave a viable
Iraq to the next president. It should be obvious that "staying the
course" is a recipe for failure. So are politically driven exit
strategies. The president is left with the choice: quit, or do what is
necessary to succeed. We trust he understands that the task before him
in Iraq is to find a strategy for success.

Robert Kagan is author of "Dangerous Nation" (Alfred A. Knopf) and a
contributing editor at The Weekly Standard. William Kristol is editor
of The Weekly Standard. This article is based on a longer essay in
this week's Standard.

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