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December 6, 2006
Today's release of the
Iraq Study Group report raises as many questions as it answers.
A few highlights of the report and its 79 recommendations follow.
TROOP WITHDRAWALS?
Despite some early headlines
suggesting that the Iraq Study Group would be calling for a withdrawal
of U.S. combat forces from Iraq by the beginning of 2008, a look
at the fine print suggests otherwise. The group's recommendations
look more like an exercise in "bait and switch" than an
actual commitment to U.S. withdrawal.
Trainers embedded with
Iraqi forces should be considered combat forces, as should the armed
U.S. personnel that would be present to protect them in their efforts.
These troops could remain in the tens of thousands after an alleged
"withdrawal."
In keeping with its recommendation
to shift the mission of U.S. troops from combat to training of Iraq
troops, the Study Group suggests a presence of U.S. forces to provide
logistical support, continued training, and "force protection"
(troops to protect U.S. training and logistics personnel) for a
"sustained period," in the words of panel member Edwin
Meese. Panel co-chair James Baker has further noted that "for
quite some time" there will be "a robust American presence
both in Iraq and in the region." Panel members would not project
how many U.S. troops would be needed to carry out these long-term
activities.
GREATER HONESTY, LESS
SPIN
The Study Group deserves
credit for speaking more plainly about the some of the realities
of the war than the Bush administration has done so far. For example,
at the outset the panel's report states bluntly that "the situation
in Iraq is grave and deteriorating." In defending the group's
recommendation to attempt to bring Iran and Syria into regional
talks on how to end the fighting in Iraq, James Baker noted that
"for 40 years we talked to the Soviet Union at a time that
they were committed to wiping us off the face of the earth
you talk to your enemies." By contrast, President Bush has
indicated that he is not willing to talk to Tehran until they suspend
their nuclear enrichment activities, a non-starter diplomatically.
The report also acknowledges
the heavy costs of the war, putting the price tag to date at $400
billion and noting that some analyses put the ultimate cost of the
conflict at up to $2 trillion.
DOES SIZE MATTER?
By padding the length
of its report and releasing it as a Vintage Press book, the Iraq
Study Group seems to be trying to make its analysis and recommendations
look as if they are as "hefty" and substantive as the
9/11 Commission Report. Less than 100 of the 160 pages of the report
are devoted to analysis and recommendations. The rest consist of
lengthy appendices with maps of the region, names of commissioners
and sub-panels involved in the effort, and other incidental bits
of information, all spaced out as far as possible in an effort to
up the page count. To paraphrase former Vice-Presidential candidate
Lloyd Bentsen, we have seen the 9/11 report, and this is no 9/11
report.
THROWING BONES TO
CRITICS
While the study group
studiously avoids making a timeline for U.S. withdrawal leaving
the way clear for the very "open-ended" U.S. troop commitment
that it claims to oppose it does suggest a few small reforms
along the lines suggested by some critics of the war.
Among these proposed changes are the suggestion that future funding
for the war be included in the regular budget, where it can receive
closer scrutiny, rather than in "emergency" supplementals
that often give only broad stroke descriptions of what Iraq spending
is for; a recommendation to extend the term of the highly effective
Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction "for the
duration of assistance programs in Iraq," with a mandate that
includes training activities as well as reconstruction efforts;
and a call to President Bush to publicly state that the United States
has no interest in permanent bases in Iraq.
The proposed pledge on
bases is hedged by a suggestion that U.S. bases could be present
as long as an Iraqi government "asks for" them. If a non-representative,
pro-U.S. government is doing the asking, it would render the "no
bases" pledge next to meaningless.
THE POLITICS OF WITHDRAWAL
By offering the prospect
of some change even if it leaves tens of thousands of combat
troops and trainers in Iraq in 2008 and beyond the Baker-Hamilton
report could take pressure off Republicans and Democrats alike.
Major figures in both parties could be relieved of the demand to
push for a genuine withdrawal prior to the 2008 presidential elections.
Citizens who want a quicker timeline for U.S. withdrawal and a genuine
military disengagement from Iraq will need to make their voices
heard if U.S. policy is to go beyond the half-measures set out by
the Baker-Hamilton panel.
William D. Hartung is
a Senior Fellow at the World Policy Institute in New York.
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