IT is tempting to believe the new orthodoxy that America's war of pre-emption against Iraq is the precursor to even more US-led wars – yet this view is almost surely wrong.

Far from Iraq being the precedent that launches a new US global strategy this war will represent the best and last demonstration of the pre-emptive faith that has guided America's neo-conservatives.
The truth about pre-emption is that such a doctrine has severe limits – strategic, economic and political. America's neo-conservatives, in denial about the costs of pre-emption, are about to be hit by their full force.
The costs for the US in a relatively swift victory in Iraq will be immense (let alone a slow victory) and the purging of the Iraqi neurosis from the American mind will mean an end to foreign invasions rather than a start to them.
Just examine the "axis of evil" realities. The US can invade Iraq and succeed for three reasons – because Iraq is now a depleted and weak state; because its regime is discredited worldwide as evil; and because there are no regional or global powers to dissuade the US by making its actions prohibitive. Each condition is critical for pre-emption.
Only one of these conditions applies to North Korea. Yes, it is evil. But it is a strong military state able to render incalculable damage to South Korea if attacked. It is surrounded by major powers – Russia, Japan and China. China is the key player in any settlement with Pyongyang. It would not tolerate US pre-emption and such a move would force a US-China crisis. After all, China has previously gone to war against US penetration into North Korea.
Two of these conditions are not applicable to Iran. Compared with Iraq, it is strong (65 million people as opposed to 23 million and a GDP of $US113 billion compared with Iraq's $US25 billion).
Australian National University professor Amin Saikal says: "Iran compared with Iraq is socially homogeneous with a more resilient nationalism. It has a degree of Islamic democracy and a broader political system than any in the Arab world. If the US resorted to surgical strikes Iran could retaliate by de-stabilising the American position in both Iraq and Afghanistan." Steven R. Weisman of The New York Times reported on March 23 that Secretary of State Colin Powell, when asked whether the Iraq war reflected a broader doctrine of pre-emptive attacks on enemies, replied: "No, no, no." Powell's view will prevail (this time).
The US is discovering in Iraq the difficulties of military pre-emption but Iraq is a picnic compared with any adventure in Iran or North Korea. Bush knows this. His 2003 State of the Union address said "different threats require different strategies." Bush is about to document the cost of the Iraq war. But as Yale's Professor William Nordhaus argues, the President has failed to prepare his country for this burden which includes post-war occupation. If the US declines to pay then it "would leave a mountain of rubble and mobs of angry people in Iraq and the region". Nordhaus offers a range of estimates over a decade from $US99 billion ($165.7 billion) to $US1924 billion. It seems the US will have years to reflect upon its misjudgment of the cost-benefit equation in Iraq.
The true cost of Iraq, however, will defy arithmetic. The US will discover after Saddam Hussein is gone that the world remains a dangerously unsafe place with new risks replacing the old risks that it paid so much to solve.
It will also prove a truth – a truth documented in the latest issue of The National Interest by Columbia University's Jack Snyder, who surveys imperial temptations and concludes that "a general strategy of preventative war is likely to bring about precisely the outcome that Bush and Condoleezza Rice wish to avert". The reason is because weak states on the hit list will develop new lethal capacities to save themselves. What else would they do?
In summary, a theory of pre-emption at state-to-state level will not endure because its political gains cannot outweigh its costs and a democratic society such as the US will adjust accordingly.
In the interim there are belated signs that the Howard Government now accepts the risks of pre-emption. This shift follows Defence Minister Robert Hill's embrace of the idea last November and John Howard's infamous late 2002 application of pre-emption to the region.
The facts, however, are that the Howard cabinet has not endorsed the doctrine of pre-emption as such; in their statements on Australia's war decision neither Howard nor Alexander Downer supported this principle; and the Government justifies the Iraq war in its own right not as part of any broader pre-emptive game plan.
Indeed, Howard's remarks last weekend warned against any pre-emptive theory and Downer assured the house this week that Australia had no "plans to mount military action against Cuba, Sudan, North Korea or whoever". Downer's public line is to cast doubt on whether such a doctrine exists at all.
But it does. Bush's historic West Point speech last June made explicit his support for pre-emption. His new National Security Strategy of September 2002 made this position formal: "Deterrence based only upon the threat of retaliation is less likely to work against rogue states . . . to forestall or prevent hostile acts by our adversaries, the United States will, if necessary, act pre-emptively."
It is equally a fact that cabinet endorsed the recent strategic review from Hill that envisaged Australia's military forces fighting in further coalitions-of-willing led by the US. Australia's recent more sceptical line on pre-emption is long overdue. It puts Australia at odds with the neo-conservative mentality that dominates much of the Bush administration. This is a good place to be because the neo-conservatives are about to have an experience they love – they are going to be mugged by reality.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,6187398%255E12250,00.html

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