DON’T BS THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ABOUT IRAQ, SYRIA, AND ISIL


Brian Fishman August 20, 2014 ·



http://warontherocks.com/2014/08/dont-bs-the-american-people-about-iraq-syria-and-isil/#_



The apparent beheading of American journalist James Foley by the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is a stark reminder of the group’s
terrible brutality and the seriousness required to counter them.
Unfortunately, much of the political discourse about the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is counterproductive to good policy. Many of the
basic facts are wrong and the arguments—whatever the merits of the policies
they prescribe—tend to be political, overly personal, and hyperbolized.
President Obama’s policies in the Middle East have failed in numerous ways,
but he is right that the paucity of our political debate is the greatest
threat to our global standing.



One cannot credibly argue that the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq in 2010
contributed to the rise of ISIL without also acknowledging that the U.S.
invasion in 2003 did the same. The former without the latter is a political
argument, not a policy position. The same goes for airstrikes in Syria and
arming the Syrian rebels. It’s a reasonable hypothesis that supporting the
Free Syrian Army earlier might have blunted ISIL, but that’s a pretty
hollow position if one also gives Syrian rebel factions a pass for
tolerating and even embracing ISIL and Jabhat al-Nusrah through late 2012.
As a long-time analyst of jihadism in the Middle East, it was clear to me
in the summer of 2011 that the Islamic State of Iraq was well-positioned to
capitalize on what was then a largely peaceful Syrian protest movement. And
it was just as obvious that the group—whose brutality, extremism, and
grandiose political aspirations were well-documented long before the Syrian
uprising—would later turn on the Syrian rebels whose cause they claimed to
champion. The same should have been obvious to the Syrian rebels, their
external supporters, and pretty much anyone interested in the Syrian
uprising and the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad.



Retired U.S. Army Col. Pete Mansoor is a serious man, but his assessment
that the mission against ISIL will require 10,000-15,000 troops does not
match up with the policy the President has chosen. Mansoor’s troop numbers
are based on a policy “to roll back ISIL”, when the President has carefully
limited his policy to “stopping the current advance” and aiding refugees.
Reading most of the media coverage over the last few weeks, you’d be
forgiven for thinking President Obama was seeking to defeat ISIL in detail,
but had chosen ineffectual means. But that is not his goal, even
considering the coordinated U.S., Iraqi, and Kurdish effort to retake the
Mosul Dam from ISIL. It is fair to criticize the President’s policy as too
limited or vague (I think it is both), but it is not to roll ISIL back and
should not be measured on that basis. That distinction makes a difference,
because as Doug Ollivant and Ken Pollack have both pointed out, airpower is
much more effective against an army massing for an offensive than on troops
settling in to govern in urban areas.



The larger problem with Mansoor’s vision is that “rolling back” ISIL is an
unstable and untenable policy at this time. The Islamic State is a threat
to U.S. interests because of the safe haven it creates and the instability
it fosters; the exact location of its borders is not the most important
factor. And so a policy of pushing them into a smaller box does not solve
the problem; it is a temporary fix, an open-ended commitment, an invitation
for mission creep, or all of the above. If destroying ISIL becomes the
near-term policy goal—which seems the likely outcome of saying you are
going to “roll back” the group—then 10,000-15,000 troops vastly understates
the true commitment, which will actually require years, direct military
action on both sides of the Iraq/Syria border, tens (if not hundreds) of
billions of dollars, and many more than 15,000 troops. ISIL is an
inherently resilient organization—look how far they have come since getting
“rolled back” during the Surge in 2007 when 150,000 American troops were
occupying the country.



One thing is clear about President Obama: right or wrong in his decisions,
the guy does not want to be fed a bunch of bullshit. And many of the
arguments made about ISIL, Syria, and Iraq these days are spurious —even
when used to advance reasonable policy recommendations. The arguments to
“roll back” ISIL fall into this category. Obama recognizes his critics are,
intentionally and unintentionally, trying to back him into mission creep
and he intends to avoid that outcome. As a result, he does less than he
should (and maybe would) if he could manage the domestic politics and the
U.S. Congress better. Whatever Obama’s mistakes, it is hard to blame him
for being gun-shy politically after watching the Benghazi shenanigans for
two years. If Obama’s political opponents talk impeachment over an incident
like Benghazi, what would they say if U.S. weapons provisioned to Syrian
rebels wound up in the hands of ISIL, as is almost certain to happen to
some degree with a large scale weapons delivery program?



This is why politics should stop at the water’s edge: partisan tussling
makes for bad national security policy and makes us less safe.



No one has offered a plausible strategy to defeat ISIL that does not
include a major U.S. commitment on the ground and the renewal of functional
governance on both sides of the Iraqi-Syrian border. And no one will,
because none exists. But that has not prevented a slew of hacks and wonks
from suggesting grandiose policy goals without paying serious attention to
the costs of implementation and the fragility of the U.S. political
consensus for achieving those goals. Although ISIL has some characteristics
of a state now, it still has the resilience of an ideologically motivated
terrorist organization that will survive and perhaps even thrive in the
face of setbacks. We must never again make the mistake that we made in
2008, which was to assume that we have destroyed a jihadist organization
because we have pushed it out of former safe-havens and inhibited its
ability to hold territory. Bombing ISIL will not destroy it. Giving the
Kurds sniper rifles or artillery will not destroy it. A new prime minister
in Iraq will not destroy it.



Please do not step in here with the fly-paper argument: that the conflict
will attract the world’s would-be jihadis to one geographic area where we
can target them all and thereby solve the problem. Notice that no
authorities on jihadism ever make this argument. That is because they
understand that war makes the jihadist movement stronger, even in the face
of major tactical and operational defeats. The conflicts in Syria and Iraq
strengthen ISIL because war is the only force terrible enough to hold
together a broad and extreme enough Sunni coalition to be amenable to ISIL.
Abu Mus’ab al-Zarqawi recognized this in 2004 and built a strategy of
provoking Shia militias in order to consolidate fearful Sunni groups. The
concept was sound so far as brutal jihadi strategies go, but Zarqawi’s
organization was just too weak relative to his opposition (U.S. troops and
Shia militias) to execute it. Zarqawi picked a fight he could not
win—provoking attacks on Sunnis without being able to defend them. At the
same time, he was moving into Sunni turf and infringing on tribal
prerogatives. This had the effect of alienating his would-be allies.



But the balance has shifted. ISIL has more strength than al Qaeda in Iraq
ever did and its enemies on the ground are weaker. Without war, ISIL is a
fringe terrorist organization. With war, it is a state.



So long as it exists, the Islamic State’s borders will always be bloody.



This is where I am supposed to advocate a brilliant strategy to defeat ISIL
by Christmas at some surprisingly reasonable cost. But it won’t happen. The
cost to defeat ISIL would be very high and would require a multi-year
commitment. I wish, very much, that the United States had taken ISIL and
its predecessors more seriously after the Surge in 2007—but we did not, and
that represents both a political and analytical failure. In a post-Benghazi
world, looking toward the 2016 Presidential election, the political
consensus to incur the risks and costs of destroying ISIL is tremendously
unlikely. And even then, success hinges on dramatic political shifts in
both Iraq and Syria that under the best of circumstances will require
years. (Despite a new Iraqi Prime Minister, there is no short-term prospect
for credible governance across either Iraq or Syria.)



It would be irresponsible to support a national security policy dependent
on infeasible military operations or ludicrous assumptions about an enemy’s
shortcomings. War is a matter of matching ends, ways, and means – including
political and popular support. It would therefore be irresponsible to
support a policy that would require a level of commitment that our
political institutions do not possess. Our discourse is too broken. Short
of a major terrorist attack, our leaders do not have the ability to produce
consensus. And without real national consensus to sustain a strategy, there
is no viable mechanism to defeat ISIL.



Advocating the defeat of ISIL over the short-term without acknowledging
what will be necessary to achieve that end is a recipe for mission creep.
Mission creep is a recipe for policy failure because the American people
will not allow sustained investment in a policy they did not commit to
originally.



This is the most important strategic lesson from Iraq: Don’t bullshit the
American people into a war with shifting objectives (even if those goals
are important) because they will not put up with that commitment long
enough for those goals to be achieved. This is not a call for pacifism; it
is a call for fighting to win, which requires sustained commitment, which
requires forthrightness in our discourse about whether to choose war. We
should only fight if we are fighting to win, and we will only win when we
commit as a country—not 51 percent, or the viewers of one cable news
station or another, or because one party or faction has managed to back a
president into a political corner. The country must be ready to accept the
sacrifices necessary to achieve grand political ends. Until then, any call
to “defeat ISIL” that is not forthright about what that will require is
actually an argument for expensive failure.







Brian Fishman is a War on the Rocks Contributor and a Fellow at the New
America Foundation.








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