The issue: March 19
marks the three-year anniversary of the Iraq war. Much has been
accomplished: A constitution has been written and elections held.
But sectarian violence has intensified since the Feb. 22 bombing of
a Shiite shrine.
Earlier this month, Iowa's Sen. Tom Harkin stated his belief that
Iraq had descended into civil war. The Register asked Harkin and
nation-security expert James Jay Carafano to address what the
United States should do now.
To paraphrase H.L. Mencken, for every vexing, complex and
intractable problem, there is a solution that is simple, elegant
and wrongheaded. The apoplectic call to immediately withdraw all
U.S. military troops from Iraq is one of those kinds of
answers.
First of all, it is worth pointing out that in substance, President
Bush and those who oppose the presence of American troops in Iraq
agree. Neither wants GIs to stay there. Both want a peaceful,
secure and prosperous Iraq. Neither believes that keeping our
troops there is the long-term solution to eliminating the violence
that plagues the country.
Where the president and his critics part company is on the right
strategy to safeguard U.S. interests and assist the Iraqis. Bush's
approach is that as the "Iraqis stand up, Americans will stand
down." In other words, as Iraqi security forces are trained and
certified, they will take over and U.S. troops will be in support
roles and gradually withdrawn.
This is actually the tried-and-true strategy, the one the United
States employed during its occupations in Europe and Japan after
World War II. As legitimate governments stood up and were supported
by their own police and military, the Americans got out of the
business of running their countries.
If the Cold War hadn't broken out, all the GIs likely would have
been home by 1948, even though, at that point, Europe and Japan
were hardly out of the woods in their efforts to build stable
societies and get on with the task of post-war
reconstruction.
The alternative is to just leave. That's a problem. Right now, the
Iraqi forces can't be sustained with administrative and logistical
support from the U.S. military. And the presence of coalition
forces prevents any side from thinking they can run away with the
country.
Going to zero coalition forces in Iraq would be like creating the
conditions for a Rwanda writ large, where the absence of a credible
international force encouraged unprecedented genocide and rekindled
civil war. Indeed, that is what the terrorists want - a no man's
land of bloodletting that might eventually lead to another
Taliban-style regime.
Whether Iraq succeeds or fails as a nation is now largely up to the
Iraqis. They have their own sovereign government, police and
military. Securing Iraq's future is their job. What they know for a
fact is that if all coalition troops leave now, they will fail.
That is why the government, freely elected by the Iraqi people, has
pleaded with the governments of the coalition forces to leave their
troops there for now.
America's troops should come home. An open-ended promise to leave
our troops there forever would only encourage the Iraqis to avoid
addressing the tough tasks they face in rebuilding their own nation
and serve as a rallying cry for the murderers who would like to
turn Iraq into a terrorist-Disneyland. The United States should
begin a phased reduction of its activities and its forces in Iraq
that makes strategic sense.
James
Carafano is a senior research
fellow for defense and homeland security at The Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in the Des Moines Register