HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
Is
the Neocon Agenda for Pax Americana Losing Steam?
by
Jim Lobe
September
9, 2003
President
George W. Bush's speech to the nation last night was notable in many ways, most
critically for marking what appears to be a weakening of the steep
unilateralist trajectory on which neoconservative and right-wing hawks set U.S.
foreign policy two years ago. Who would have thought it would lose momentum so
quickly after Washington's stunning military victory in Iraq in early April and
plummet back to earth?
Now,
just a week before the second anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks
on New York and the Pentagon, the Bush administration appears to have decided
that Washington really cannot run Iraq, let alone the entire Middle East, by
itself and must rely on others--even the much-despised United Nations--to help
out.
Whether
the UN will agree to do so--and on what conditions--remains to be determined,
but, for the first time in two years, it appears that the administration's more
multilaterally inclined, led by Secretary of State Colin Powell, may actually
be moving into the driver's seat. While the battle for control is far from
over, the signs of what is being euphemistically called a "policy
adjustment'' have already emerged.
Not
only has Powell been given the authority to launch serious negotiations over a
new UN Security Council resolution that will almost certainly reduce
Washington's control over the political process and reconstruction in Iraq, but
even the ultra-unilateralist Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, Douglas
Feith--whose office was responsible for post-war planning in Iraq--insisted
publicly that he has long favored going to the UN for help.
Feith's
scarcely credible protests underline the degree to which the hawks,
particularly his two superiors, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and
Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, have been placed on the defensive. Hailed as
strategic geniuses as recently as July, their repeated assurances that
everything was going according to plan despite steadily mounting U.S.
casualties, a series of disastrous bombings, and skyrocketing estimates of the
financial costs of occupation--the latest estimates call for as much as $80
billion next year, or four times the State Department's annual administrative
and foreign aid budget--have become the stuff of late-night comedy routines and
growing anger in key institutional sectors, particularly the military and
Republicans in Congress.
Thus,
carefully orchestrated clarion calls by Wolfowitz and his allies in the media
to stay the course in Iraq in order to defeat international terrorism once and
for all, published at the beginning of the week in the neoconservative Wall
Street Journal and Weekly Standard, were quickly drowned out by Republican
lawmakers returning from the August recess demanding that the administration
quickly devise an "exit strategy'' for Iraq and, explicitly evoking the
Vietnam War, show them a "light at the end of the tunnel."
"Wolfowitz
frankly has very little credibility up here," said one congressional
staffer who recalled that the Pentagon's number two man had led the campaign to
persuade Congress that Iraq had vast quantities of weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) and close ties to al Qaeda before the war. He has since admitted that the
intelligence on both questions was "murky." Wolfowitz, along with
Vice President Dick Cheney, also argued that U.S. troops would be greeted as
"liberators" by the Iraqi operation, rather than occupiers. "For
him, of all people, to be the point man for arguing that Iraq is now the
decisive battlefield in the war on terrorism simply defies common sense,"
the aide added, noting that Wolfowitz also supervised Feith's post-war
planning, which is now seen as an appalling failure.
But
while Republican lawmakers, fresh from public meetings with their constituents
back home and only one year away from the 2004 elections, expressed growing
impatience with the costs in U.S. lives and money of an open-ended occupation,
senior military officers, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appear to have
decided that their civilian bosses represent a major threat to their
institution.
The
Washington Post reported September 4th that the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs,
Gen. Richard B. Myers, and his deputy, Gen. Peter Pace, effectively
circumvented the Pentagon's civilian leadership in lobbying in support of
Powell's efforts to turn to the Security Council for a new resolution. The
result was that when Powell presented the idea to Bush earlier this week, he
was able to speak for the uniformed military, as well as the State Department,
effectively undermining Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz.
The
willingness of the top brass to defy their civilian leadership is remarkable,
but their discontent has grown by leaps and bounds since just before the Iraq
war when Wolfowitz publicly berated then-Army chief Eric Shinseki for telling
lawmakers that at least 200,000 soldiers would be needed to keep the peace in
Iraq, an estimate that Wolfowitz called "wildly off the mark" at the
time, but which is now seen as an accurate forecast. For his impertinence,
Shinseki was made to retire a year earlier than would normally have applied in
his case.
Now,
the Army is seen as stretched far beyond its limits both in Iraq and around the
world, fulfilling another warning by Shinseki in his farewell address earlier
this year: "Beware the 12-division strategy for a 10-division Army."
All
of this has emboldened retired senior officers to unleash unprecedented criticism
of Rumsfeld and his chief aides. At a meeting Thursday of several hundred
Marine and Navy officers, retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who served as head
of the U.S. Central Command until 2000 when he supported Bush's presidential
candidacy, issued a blistering attack on the Pentagon leadership's performance
in Iraq, even comparing it to the Vietnam War. "My contemporaries, our
feelings and sensitivities," said Zinni, "were forged on the
battlefields of Vietnam, where we heard the garbage and the lies, and we saw
the sacrifice," he said. "I ask you, is it happening again?"
Zinni,
who now works for Powell on Middle East issues at the State Department, also
complained bitterly about both the Pentagon's planning for post-war Iraq and
the decision to circumvent the UN in going to war. "We certainly blew past
the UN," he said. "Why, I don't know. Now we're going back hat in
hand."
Zinni
received "prolonged applause at the end," according to the Washington
Post, which noted that some officers bought tapes of the speech to give to
others.
''I've
never seen so much discontent among the retired community," former Marine
Lt. Gen. Paul Van Riper, who served as a commander in the Gulf War, told
another Post reporter. At a meeting last week with eight other retired generals,
Van Riper said, one asked about Rumsfeld, who was on an unannounced visit to
Baghdad at the time. "When are they going to get rid of this guy?"
Jim Lobe is a political
analyst with Foreign Policy in Focus (online at www.fpif.org).
He also writes regularly for Inter Press Service. He can be reached at: jlobe@starpower.net