MYTH: The U.S. is making no
progress in defeating the insurgency in Iraq.
QUOTE:
"I'm absolutely convinced that
we're making no progress at all, and I've been complaining for two
years that there's an overly optimistic-an illusionary process
going on here." -Rep. John Murtha on
"Meet the Press," November 20, 2005
REALITY:
The U.S.-led coalition and the Iraqi government have made
substantial progress in eliminating insurgent strongholds in
Fallujah, Mosul, Najaf, Samara, and Tal Afar, and in many smaller
towns in the western Anbar province along the Syrian border. Most
of Iraq is secure from major guerrilla attacks, particularly the
predominantly Shiite south and the predominantly Kurdish north,
which actively support the Iraqi government. Most insurgent attacks
are mounted in the heavily Sunni Arab central and western portions
of Iraq, although small numbers of insurgents continue to launch
terrorist attacks, including suicide bombings at soft targets,
throughout the country. Outside of Iraq's Sunni heartland, which
benefited the most from Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated regime,
the insurgents lack popular support. Their terrorist strategy has
failed to intimidate Iraqi Shiites, Kurds, Turcomans, and
Assyrians, who altogether comprise more than 80 percent of Iraq's
population.
The Iraqi army and
police forces are growing larger, better-trained, and more
effective. The Iraqi Army and security forces grew from just 1
operational battalion in July 2004 to more than 120 today. Over
200,000 trained and equipped Iraqis are now playing an increasingly
active role in rooting out insurgents. While only one battalion is
rated at the U.S. Army category "Level One," about 40 are at "Level
Two." Level 2 battalions are capable of fighting "with some
support"-usually just logistics and air/artillery support-from
American forces. These units patrol their own areas of operations,
relieving U.S. troops to perform other duties. The cities of Najaf
and Mosul are now patrolled exclusively by Iraqi security forces,
as are large portions of Baghdad.
There are now six
police academies in Iraq and one in Jordan training 3,500 Iraqi
police every ten weeks. Today the vast majority of Iraqi police and
army recruits are trained by Iraqis, not Americans, the result of
systematic efforts to "train the trainers." Since the January 30th
elections, no Iraqi police stations have been abandoned under
attack, as once happened frequently, because police have fiercely
resisted attacks even when outnumbered and outgunned, confident
that help would come from 13 provincial SWAT teams and coalition
forces.
Unlike during
several military offensives in 2004, Iraqi security forces now are
strong enough to garrison and control cleared areas, making the
Bush Administration's recent adoption of a "clear, hold, and build"
security strategy possible. Iraqi forces were able to take a
leading role in the successful September 2005 offensive at Tal
Afar, which involved 11 Iraqi and 5 Coalition battalions.
The increasing
effectiveness of the Iraqi security forces has inspired optimism
among the Iraqi people. This is reflected in the growing number of
intelligence tips from Iraqi civilians. In March 2005, Iraqi and
coalition forces received 483 intelligence tips from Iraqi
citizens. This figure rose to 3,300 in August, and to more than
4,700 in September. According to a survey from early November, 71
percent of respondents believed that the Iraqi security forces are
winning the war against the insurgents, while only 9 percent
believed they are losing. The data was gathered from Iraqi callers
who were passing intelligence tips to the Iraqi National Tips Line,
which was created to provide Iraqis with a safe and anonymous means
of passing on information about insurgent activity to their own
government.
MYTH: The U.S. is making little or
no political progress in Iraq.
QUOTE: "It
is surely a joke of history that even as the White House sells this
weekend's constitutional referendum as yet another 'victory' for
democracy in Iraq, we still don't know the whole story of how our
own democracy was hijacked on the way to war." -Frank Rich, "It's
Bush-Cheney, not Rove-Libby," New York Times, October
16, 2005
REALITY:
Iraq has made remarkably rapid progress in establishing the
foundations of a democratic political system after more than three
decades of dictatorship. Pessimistic critics of U.S. policy have
been repeatedly wrong in predicting that Iraqis would not be ready
for the June 2004 transfer of sovereignty, the January 2005
transitional government elections, the writing and approval of a
constitution by October 2005, and the December 15 elections that
will create a government that will lead Iraq for the next four
years.
The insurgents'
inability to block the January elections, combined with a simmering
resentment of their indiscriminate violence, has led many Sunni
Arabs to reconsider their boycott of the political process. Even
the Association of Muslim Scholars, an anti-American group, has
called for Sunni Arabs to join the Iraqi security services. The
insurgents' political base is weakening as it becomes clear that
they are opposed not just to the American presence, but also to the
elected government.
Despite terrorist
attacks and threats of intimidation, 8.5 million Iraqis voted in
the January elections; almost 10 million voted in the October
referendum on the new constitution; and turnout for the December 15
elections is expected to be even greater. Many Sunni Arabs realize
that they erred in boycotting the January elections and are likely
to vote in far larger numbers on December 15. More than 300 parties
and coalitions have registered for the coming elections. Iraq's
political process is messy and slow, like in other newly democratic
political systems, but a new class of political leadership is
emerging that, over time, can build a national consensus and drain
away support for the insurgency, which is dominated by Islamic
radicals and diehard loyalists to Saddam's hated regime.
Ironically, while
Americans appear to be growing more pessimistic about Iraq's
future, Iraqis are growing more optimistic. According to a poll
conducted by Iraqis affiliated with Iraqi Universities, two-thirds
of Iraqis believe they are better off now than under Saddam's
dictatorship, and 82 percent are confident that they will be better
off a year from now than they are today. An October survey
conducted by the International Republican Institute found that 47
percent of Iraqis believed that their country is headed in the
right direction, while 37 percent believed that it was going in the
wrong direction. And 56 percent believed the situation would
get better in six months, while only 16 percent believed the
situation would get worse.
MYTH: The Bush Administration
exaggerated the threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
to justify the war.
QUOTE: "In
his march to war, President Bush exaggerated the threat to the
American people." -Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA), quoted in U.S.
Fed News, November 10, 2005
REALITY:
The Bush Administration acted on the basis of intelligence
conclusions that were widely shared by previous administrations and
foreign governments. President Bush was not the first American
president to emphasize the long-term threat posed by Iraq.
President Bill Clinton justified Operation Desert Fox, a three-day
U.S. air offensive against Iraq, by invoking the threat posed by
Iraqi WMD on December 16, 1998:
Heavy as
they are, the costs of action must be weighed against the price of
inaction. If Saddam defies the world and we fail to respond, we
will face a far greater threat in the future. Saddam will strike
again at his neighbors; he will make war on his own people. And
mark my words he will develop weapons of mass destruction. He will
deploy them, and he will use them.
Clinton's National
Security Council advisor Sandy Berger warned of Saddam's threat in
1998, "He will use those weapons of mass destruction again, as he
has ten times since 1983." Former Vice PresidentAl Gore said in
2002, "We know that [Saddam] has stored secret supplies of
biological and chemical weapons throughout his country." CIA
Director George Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton Administration,
declared that the presence of Iraqi WMD was a "slam dunk." (For
more on the political campaign to paint intelligence mistakes as
conscious lies, see Norman Podhoretz's excellent article, "
Who Is Lying About Iraq?," in the December issue of
Commentary.)
The intelligence
services of Britain, France, Russia, Germany, and Israel, among
many others, held the same opinion. French Foreign Minister
Dominique de Villepin explained his concerns to the UN Security
Council on February 5, 2003: "Right now, our attention has to be
focused as a priority on the biological and chemical domains. It is
there that our presumptions about Iraq are the most significant.
Regarding the chemical domain, we have evidence of its capacity to
produce VX and Yperite. In the biological domain, the evidence
suggests the possible possession of significant stocks of anthrax
and botulism toxin, and possibly a production capability." The
German Ambassador to the United States, Wolfgang Ischinger, said on
NBC's "Today" of February 26, 2003, "I think all of our governments
believe that Iraq has produced weapons of mass destruction and that
we have to assume that they still have-that they continue to have
weapons of mass destruction."
The Bush
Administration may have been wrong about Iraqi WMD, but so were
many other governments, few of which have been accused of lying.
Moreover, three independent commissions have found that there is no
evidence that the Bush Administration exaggerated the intelligence
about Iraqi WMD.
In July 2004, the
bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee issued a report with
the following conclusions:
Conclusion
83. The Committee did not find any evidence that Administration
officials attempted to coerce, influence or pressure analysts to
change their judgments related to Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction capabilities. …
Conclusion 84. The Committee found no evidence that the Vice
President's visits to the Central Intelligence Agency were attempts
to pressure analysts, were perceived as intended to pressure
analysts by those who participated in the briefings on Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction programs, or did pressure analysts to
change their assessments.
In March 2005, the
bipartisan Robb-Silverman commission reached the same
conclusion:
The Commission found no evidence of
political pressure to influence the Intelligence Community's
pre-war assessments of Iraq's weapons programs. As we discuss in
detail in the body of our report, analysts universally asserted
that in no instance did political pressure cause them to skew or
alter any of their analytical judgments. We conclude that it was the paucity of
intelligence and poor analytical tradecraft, rather than political
pressure, that produced the inaccurate pre-war intelligence
assessments.
The July 2004 Butler Report, issued by a
special panel set up by the British Parliament, found that the
famous "16 words" in President Bush's January 28, 2003, State of
the Union address were based on fact, contrary to the claims of
former ambassador Joseph Wilson, who has alleged that Bush's
assertion was a lie. Bush said, "The British Government has learned
that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa." The Butler report called Bush's 16 words
"well founded." The report also made clear that some forged Italian
documents, exposed as fakes after the President spoke, were not the
basis for the British intelligence that he cited or the CIA's
conclusion that Iraq was seeking to obtain uranium.
MYTH: The war in
Iraq has set back the war on terrorism.
QUOTE:
"It's the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time." -Senator
John Kerry (D-MA), September 6, 2004
REALITY:
Some critics contend that Iraq is a detour in the war on terrorism
and a distraction from the hunt for Osama bin Laden, but this
criticism is greatly overstated. The war in Iraq is a different
type of struggle than the war against Al Qaeda. It has required
different kinds of resources. Strategically, the U.S. is certainly
capable of engaging in multiple operations on a global level.
True, some
intelligence assets were diverted from the search for bin Laden to
Iraq. But bin Laden had already gone underground, hunkering down on
the Afghan-Pakistan border eighteen months before the Iraq war. And
there is no evidence that bin Laden would have been caught had
there been no war in Iraq.
One often
overlooked benefit of the war is that Iraq is no longer a state
sponsor of terrorism. This is important because the United States
cannot win the war on terrorism unless it eliminates or at least
greatly reduces state support for terrorism. Al Qaeda, often held
up as the premier example of "stateless terrorism," actually was
helped tremendously by the support of states. The Taliban regime in
Afghanistan and the radical Islamic regime in Sudan provided
crucial shelter that allowed Al Qaeda to develop into the global
threat that it is today.
Now Osama bin
Laden has lost a potential ally, if not an actual ally, in Saddam's
regime, which had a long and bloody history of supporting
terrorists and many reported contacts with Al Qaeda. Moreover, free
Iraqis increasingly are joining the fight against terrorism. Osama
bin Laden's associates in Iraq clearly are worried about the
expansion of the Iraqi security forces. A 2004 message from Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, later was named Al Qaeda's leader in Iraq,
lamented Iraq's progress: "Our enemy is growing stronger day after
day and its intelligence information increases. By God, this is
suffocation."
The war to
liberate Iraq, coming after the successful war to liberate
Afghanistan from the Taliban, has disabused terrorists of the
notion that the United States is a paper tiger. This perception was
created by American withdrawals, following terrorist attacks, from
peacekeeping operations in Lebanon and Somalia that did not involve
vital American national interests.
Another gain from
the war is the effect that it has had on other rogue regimes. Libya
was induced to disarm because of the Iraq war. In fact, Libyan
leader Muammar Qadhafi told Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi that he moved forward after seeing what happened to
Saddam's regime. Iran, also pushed by international pressure,
decided to open its nuclear program to more inspections. Syria,
caught red-handed in the assassination of Lebanon's former Prime
Minister, now is isolated and on the defensive.
While it is true
that some Islamic extremists are going to Iraq to join the
fighting, many of them would have ventured elsewhere to slaughter
civilians had the Iraq war never occurred. As well, the
indiscriminate murder of innocent Iraqis by Zarqawi's terrorists
has undermined Al Qaeda's appeal throughout the Muslim world.
Zarqawi's November 9, 2005, bombing of three hotels in Jordan
outraged Jordanians and other Muslims, even those who previously
had been sympathetic to Al Qaeda. While the war in Iraq has helped
Al Qaeda's recruitment efforts, on balance it has helped the war on
terrorism by depriving Osama bin Laden and other terrorists from
receiving any future support from Saddam's regime.
Now that Iraq has
become, by Al Qaeda's own reckoning, a crucial front in the global
war against terrorism, the United States and its allies cannot
allow Zarqawi's thugs to establish a permanent base in Iraq. From
there, Al Qaeda would be in a better position to penetrate the
heart of the Arab world, threaten moderate Arab regimes, and
disrupt Persian Gulf oil exports, than it enjoyed under the
protection of Afghanistan's Taliban regime from 1996 to 2001.
Finally, any "exit strategy" from Iraq that is perceived by Muslims
to be a victory for Al Qaeda would boost the group's ability to
recruit new members far beyond the current rate.
MYTH: The war in
Iraq is another Vietnam.
QUOTE:
"Iraq is George Bush's Vietnam." -Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA),
April 5, 2004
REALITY:
Iraq is Iraq. Most Iraqis share American goals of building a
pluralistic, democratic, and prosperous Iraq. Even many Sunni Arabs
who boycotted the January elections due to terrorist intimidation
now are participating in politics. The Iraqi insurgents do not have
the military strength, popular support, political unity,
ideological cohesiveness, strong foreign allies, charismatic
leadership, or alternative political program that the Vietnamese
communists possessed. The insurgents are divided by ideology,
religious affiliation, and factional rivalries into separate
groups, including remnants of Saddam's Baathist regime, Sunni
Islamic radicals, Shiite Islamic radicals, tribal forces, and
foreign Islamic radicals, such as Abu Musab Zarqawi's Al Qaeda
faction.
Tensions appear to
be growing between some of the insurgent groups-particularly
animosity towards Zarqawi's group, which has killed hundreds of
civilians in indiscriminate suicide bombings and provoked a
backlash that other groups fear will undermine the insurgency.
While many insurgent factions have been hurt by the improved flow
of intelligence to government forces since the January elections,
Zarqawi's group has suffered disproportionately heavy losses. More
than twenty of his lieutenants have been captured or killed since
the beginning of the year, and Zarqawi himself reportedly was
almost captured twice. His predominantly non-Iraqi forces are so
concerned about being betrayed by Iraqi informants that they
reportedly confiscate cell phones in the areas that they
control.
Unlike the
insurgency in Vietnam, which had a relatively broad base of
support, the Iraqi insurgents are actively supported by only a
minority of the Sunni Arab population, which makes up 20 percent of
the Iraqi population at most. The Iraqi insurgents cannot defeat
the Iraqi people, but can only play a spoiler role.
Vietnam veterans who have served in Iraq see little
comparison between the two wars. A USA Today reporter who
interviewed many Vietnam War veterans now serving in Iraq wrote,
"They see a clearer mission than in Vietnam, a more supportive
public back home and an Iraqi population that seems to be growing
friendlier toward Americans."
MYTH: The U.S. has little allied
support in the war in Iraq.
QUOTE:
"With the exception of British troops in Basra, we are essentially
going it alone across the rest of Iraq." -Senator Frank Lautenberg
(D-NJ), quoted in U.S. Fed News, October 25, 2005
REALITY:
Those who argue that the U.S. fights "alone" in Iraq ignore the
contributions of the Iraqis themselves, who have committed 212,000
soldiers and police to fighting the insurgency and have suffered
the largest number of casualties. In addition, the U.S. has the
strong cooperation of the 26 other nations that have deployed
troops in Iraq. In addition to 155,000 Americans, there are 8,000
Britons, 3,200 South Koreans, 3,000 Italians, 1,400 Poles, 900
Ukrainians, 450 Australians, 400 Bulgarians, and smaller
contingents from Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, Estonia,
Georgia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Mongolia,
Netherlands, Norway, Romania, and Slovakia.
MYTH: Iraqi women were better off
under Saddam's regime than under the new constitution.
QUOTE: "It
looks like today-and this could change-as of today, it looks like
women will be worse off in Iraq than they were when Saddam Hussein
was president of Iraq." -Howard Dean, CBS "Face The Nation," August
14, 2005
REALITY:
Iraq's new constitution mandates that women hold one-quarter of the
seats in Iraq's parliament and protects them against gender
discrimination, unlike Saddam's capricious legal system. Iraqi
women now enjoy more political power than they did under Saddam's
dictatorship, which was run exclusively by men.
Saddam's 1980
invasion of Iraq and 1990 invasion of Kuwait resulted in the deaths
of so many men that women were brought into Iraq's labor force to
replace them. But this economic advancement came at a terrible
price in repression. Entire Iraqi families were jailed as
collective punishment for alleged crimes against the state.
Saddam's goons tortured, killed, and raped women to punish their
husbands and male relatives for political opposition. Those who
argue that Iraqi women were better off under Saddam ignore the
terrible crimes against women that were carried out by his
regime.
MYTH: Iraq's economy is getting
worse.
QUOTE:
"Basic services such as electricity have never been worse and the
economy of Arab Iraq is in ruins." -Andrew Gilligan, The Evening
Standard (London), February 14 2005
REALITY:
Reconstruction and economic progress have come relatively quickly,
compared to the reconstruction efforts in postwar Germany and
Japan, and this is despite continued insurgent attacks on Iraq's
infrastructure and economic targets. Unemployment remains high,
estimated by the government at 28 percent. But U.S. policy did not
create that unemployment.
Iraq's economy is
beginning to thrive. Real GDP is expected to grow 3.7 percent in
2005 and 16 percent in 2006. Iraqi per-capita income has doubled
since 2003, according to the World Bank. Private investment,
bolstered with capital remitted from family members abroad, has
fueled rapid growth in the private sector. More than 30,000 new
businesses have registered with the authorities since the war, and
thousands of unregistered businesses are believed to have been
established.
Iraq's
infrastructure, neglected by Saddam's regime for many years and
damaged in three wars triggered by Saddam, has been strained to its
capacity. But the situation is gradually improving. Since the end
of major combat operations, over 2,000 megawatts of power have been
added to the Iraqi power grid, enough for 5.4 million homes. While
some Baghdad residents had more electrical power under Saddam's
regime-because it diverted power from other parts of Iraq-many
Iraqis now have much greater access to electricity than before the
war.
James
Phillips is Research Fellow in Middle Eastern Studies in the
Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a
division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for
International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.