"Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the
end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning." Who better to
sum up the importance of news of Monday's hand-over of power in
Iraq than British Prime Minister Winston Churchill? When Churchill
uttered these words, it was 1942 and the Allies were fighting the
Germans in Egypt. There were three more years to go before World
War II would be over. It's
It would be nice to think that we can see the end of the U.S.
deployment in Iraq, but that's yet too soon. What we can do is
applaud the transfer of authorities to Iraqis, which is movement in
the right direction at least. Power was transferred from the
Coalition Provisional Authority to the new Interim Government two
days before planned, a crucial step toward rebuilding of the
country and autonomy for its people. After all the ups and downs of
the past year, and the escalating violence aimed at derailing the
political process and driving Americans out, this was an extremely
important day for Iraqis and coalition forces alike.
The United States never set out to be an occupying power in Iraq,
and it is not a role at which we have proven very adept. Our goal
was to remove Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and to eliminate
Saddam Hussein as a threat to the United States and others. The
weapons programs have been eliminated, even if no stockpiles have
been found, and Saddam will today be handed over to the tender
mercies of the new Iraqi judicial authority for prosecution. After
decades of terror and torture, he has a lot to answer to his own
people for.
A crowning achievement would be the establishment of a more or less
democratic system of governance in Iraq, and an important step in
that direction was the transfer of authority to the Interim
Government, which will be in charge of drafting a constitution and
scheduling elections. Most importantly, the interim government
enjoys widespread support among Iraqis. "After decades of brutal
rule by a terror regime, the Iraqi people have their country back,"
said Mr. Bush, while attending the summit of NATO leaders in
Istanbul, Turkey. For all the criticism and suspicion of U.S.
motives in Iraq, here is proof once more that imperialism is not
the American way.
Another encouraging development yesterday was the agreement
reached in Istanbul to give the alliance a role in Iraq's
reconstruction. This has been a major goal for the Bush
administration -- and a step strongly advocated by Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry as well. Involving NATO an
organization helps to internationalize Iraq's reconstruction, and
extends to Iraq an international umbrella separate from that of the
United Nations.
Equally importantly, it shows that NATO still deserves the name of
"alliance" -- even if it seems sometimes that this is just barely
the case. The alliance has been on life support since the fateful
row broke out in January 2003 -- before the military action in Iraq
-- over whether NATO should assist Turkey in planing for military
contingencies in the case of war. France, Germany and Belgium
fiercely opposed this idea.
Specifically, in Istanbul, the alliance's leaders accepted an
eloquent request from Iraqi Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi for
NATO training of Iraq's armed forces. Mr. Allawi is now in charge
of a pretty rag-tag force of 250,000 and badly needs help with the
training of troops, police and border patrols. This is essential if
we are ever going to hand the security of Iraq over to Iraqis
themselves, which remains the goal.
Typically, however, rather than look at the big picture and the
good of the Iraqi people, the leaders of France and Germany chose
to make the decision difficult by insisting that the Iraqi's cannot
be trained in Iraq. The reason is that the French and the Germans
do not want the NATO flag to be flying in Iraq, a point of
principle that leads to a nonsensical situation on the ground. Of
course the Iraqis should be trained where they will have to
operate, and moving them elsewhere would cost far more. Similarly,
internal NATO differences remain over the European contribution to
Afghanistan, where the NATO flag is indeed flying, but Americans
provide by far the greater bulk of the forces on the ground.
There's tough sledding still ahead, no doubt about it, and
Americans will continue to do most of the hard work, even if we
have "allies" with us. Right now, however, let us take a deep
breath, allow our selves a moment of celebration, and hope for a
better Iraq.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies
at the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected]. Her
column ordinarily appears on Wednesdays.
First appeared in The Washington Times