Jason Linkins

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Jason Linkins

The Huffington Post

Letter From A Soldier: Answers You Won't Want To Hear

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April 1, 2008 01:25 PM


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About Jason Linkins

Jason Linkins is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, covering media and politics. He's based in Washington, DC. Previously, he wrote for HuffPo's Eat The Press, and has also contributed to DCist and Wonkette.

In The Bonfire of the Vanities Tom Wolfe described a New York City awash in what could be called "sectarian" tension. The city trooped along in its day-to-day, glossy existence, seemingly unaware of the racial divisions and class separations that prevailed, and the white-hot caldera they fueled below the city's fault lines. In the midst of the erupting tensions, one of Wolfe's characters (a black preacher, actually, how timely!) introduced a concept that has resurfaced in my memory from the moment it seemed clear that we were bent on a course to depose Saddam Hussein and assume responsibility for the future of Iraq.

That concept? Steam control. The idea being that Gotham was a boiler, perpetually on the edge of explosion, that was only kept intact through a thousand tiny adjustments. This was the arduous, unappealing work of managing this particular polis -- backroom promises, compromises, and buy-offs helped to reduce the pressure and keep the peace, and it did so at the expense of higher-minded principles. The need for "steam control" overrode the need for justice, or truth, or the curing of society's ills. Instead of solving the root of the tension, the tensions were leveraged against one another until a stalemate was achieved.

What happens when you apply the same ideas Wolfe ascribed to New York City in a place where the tensions are even deeper, the divisions more entrenched, everyone is armed to the teeth, and there is no tradition of the sort of democratic institutions that could maintain order in the wake of a blooming power vacuum?

You get Iraq, circa 2008. And you have American soldiers managing the valves on a boiler that's constantly on the verge of eruption.

The email of one such soldier made its way to the blog of Spencer Ackerman today, and every single one of his keen insights are worthy of digestion. There's one in particular I find worthy of highlighting. After summarizing what he sees as the only plausible way forward -- "We need to ask 'if we left tomorrow, what would happen in Iraq?' and from there, we need to determine which of those anticipated results are unacceptable to us. Then we must aim our efforts on making sure those unacceptable results do not occur" -- he reaches this conclusion (emphasis mine):

When I look at the problem that way, it becomes almost impossible to find a purpose in what we do. Regardless of what we do, the Shia are going to take control. They have completely infiltrated all the security forces. The only kind of leader who could keep them in check was a tyrant like Saddam. And when the Shia take control, as soon as we leave, they are going to be as brutal as they like against the Sunni and there will be little we can do about it. That is what will happen whether we leave tomorrow or in ten years.

When it comes to whether or not deposing Hussein was for good or ill, a discouraging word is seldom heard. This is mainly because critics are often shamed with the admonishment: "Surely you must admit that the world is better off without Saddam Hussein!" In the strict terms of a game of moral checkers, one is hard pressed to admit otherwise. And if it turns out that our efforts in Iraq manage to kill and harm Iraqis at a slower rate than Hussein killed and harmed Iraqis, we might be able to one day back up our moral certainty with statistics.

Still, I hardly think it's out of bounds to appreciate just how bad ol' Saddam had it during the last years of his rule. It cannot be surprising to hear this soldier note Saddam's ability to keep Iraq "in check" -- after all, it's men and women like him who have essentially assumed Hussein's daily tasks of "steam control." Our troops handle Iraq's valves in an endless process of managing sectarian tensions, while working to keep regional rivals from asserting their claim over Iraq's sovereignty. Our soldiers have a keen view of how hard it was for Saddam to keep the threats, both within (the Shia and Kurds) and without (al Qaeda and Iran) at bay. And they have had to manage the fractured state without indulging in Hussein's brand of unrelenting brutality (though, sadly, there have not been a complete absence of incidents of same).

And "steam control" is about the only thing we are achieving in Iraq. This was never more evident than the past week, where Muqtada al Sadr rather effortlessly demonstrated how much more influence he has over the state of play than we do. I'll not soon forget those chants -- "Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada!" -- that preceded Hussein's hanging. Any illusion that the United States had control of Iraq should have ended right then and there. It's pretty clear that despite all the good press the "Surge" gets at home, the relative peace Iraq has lately enjoyed has been achieved at the whim of al Sadr and his loyalists, to say nothing of Iran, whose fingerprints are ubiquitous as well.

Meanwhile, we're consigned to the boiler room, frantically attempting to stave off the inevitable -- something John McCain says we could be doing for the next American century. Senator McCain claims that he is a break from the flawed strategy of the Bush administration. But the Iraq miasma is not the result of a flawed strategy. It is the result of a flawed concept to begin with, and the notion that "better" strategy is going to remove the mistakes at the root are delusional. This soldier's assessment of the role Saddam Hussein played in the great scheme of things is central to exposing one of the Iraq War's great flaws: having assuming the responsibility of "steam control," we can see just how badly Hussein was hogtied and hamstrung in maintaining his own power, and how little capability he had where posing an imminent threat to the United States is concerned.

I don't think this metaphor is a bad one. "Things are heating up," the email reads. "We're facing a high risk with very little potential payoff." Somewhere in Hell, Saddam Hussein's ears are ringing.


 
 

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Thirty years ago, my wife and I were part of an educational group that spent most of the summer touring Egypt. Our tour leader Ali was an Egyptian academic who had taught in a number of different Arabic countries. Even at that time there was an undercurrent of anti-Arabic feeling in the USA, a feeling that the Arab states were unstable and could rise up in a war against the West.
However, it was Ali's contention that, contrary to our perceptions, the Arab countries were not a monolithic threat but were a series of fractured, artificially created fiefdoms awash with petty religious jealousies and outright hatreds. He also maintained that the vast disparity between wealth of the leaders and that of the rest of their public were so great that violent suppression was the only way to maintain order.
Saddam Hussein was the embodiment of Ali's argument and once he was removed through our bungled war the outcome was preordained to the point that the only way order will be restored is through the installation of a Saddam-like substitute. It looks like Moqtada El Sadr may be that person.
And in the end, we have to ask, "What exactly have we accomplished there?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 04/03/2008

I personally thought Hussein was doing a fine job of keeping these religious fanatics in check.
What's the difference whether American soldiers kill these people or they kill themselves?
I'll tell you. When they're killing each other, no American blood is spilled. If we leave this afternoon, that's not soon enough for me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 04/03/2008

While collectively we should all choke on our own bile at what we have wrought for the Iraqi people. I agree. Staying serves no purpose. Short of making Iraq the 51st state in the Union and taking up permanent residence, the writing is on the wall. Unfortunately, its scrawled in Sunni and Kurd blood. Bush and the neocons seem determined to provide the punctuation in American blood - A comma, I'm guessing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 04/03/2008

Excellent article, great comments. Wish I was articulate enough to express as well. It's everything I've been thinking as I read more and more about the history and current situation.

I'm ashamed of my President and my government, and mad as hell that our soldiers and military families are bearing the brunt of their incompetence, arrogance and unending greed. Soon we will all be suffering (if you aren't already) as the full repercussions of this war/occupation seep into every corner of our country for generations to come. There is no possibility of anything but a disastrous end to this mess and Bush's administration is responsible. Of course war profiteers like Bush, Cheney and their ilk will make big profits regardless. I think every politician who backed this war should have their children yanked out of this country and dropped outside the wire in the war zone for a dose of reality and personal involvement in the war.

Our country has been permanently smeared by the lies, corruption, and disgraceful actions and intentions of the Bush administration. They have stolen the good name and reputation earned by generations of Americans. They have demolished our country's economy and are so deluded they don't even understand that fact. I feel for our military men and women who are stuck in such a hopeless position in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 AM on 04/03/2008

You seem plenty articulate to me. And i would add that since we're a "democratic" nation, the world's view (if i may presume to speak for the world) is that we American's collectively have blood on our hands for having elected these fiends into office - twice. We MUST set this right in November. We must.

PS: Like so many of us, i never personally voted for Bush, and i don't actually think he was elected either time. But you get my point ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 04/03/2008

And your military credentials are--------------------------thought so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 PM on 04/02/2008

Like it would require military credentials to recognize what a disaster U.S. foreign policy has been the last seven years. There are these things called brains, they are used to interpret ones surroundings and draw rational conclusions...I suggest you grow one for your own sake and ours.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 04/03/2008

There IS a purpose to our being in Iraq, namely to ensure that GW Bush will not be the one who stopped the war. That's all. He's just trying to run out the clock, and he will succeed. The presidency is just a big old football game, and Bush is the quarterback. On his last day, he'll toss the ball in the air, and say "screw you guys, I'm going home." And everyone will watch him walk calmly off the field, and be powerless to do anything. And he will laugh at his enemies and supporters alike, and say to his father, "You ordered me to do your dirty work and play the fool. Well, now I've done with it. Our democracy is in ruins. Are you proud of me?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 PM on 04/02/2008

Paraguay has no extradition treaty with the U.S., but ve haff vays.............

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 04/03/2008

play the fool?! Give Dubyah the Academy Award.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:30 AM on 04/03/2008

What I am opposed to is a dumb war. What I am opposed to is a rash war. What I am opposed to is the cynical attempt by Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz and other armchair, weekend warriors in this administration to shove their own ideological agendas down our throats, irrespective of the costs in lives lost and in hardships borne.
What I am opposed to is the attempt by political hacks like Karl Rove to distract us from a rise in the uninsured, a rise in the poverty rate, a drop in the median income, to distract us from corporate scandals and a stock market that has just gone through the worst month since the Great Depression...
I also know that Saddam poses no imminent and direct threat to the United States, or to his neighbors...and that in concert with the international community he can be contained until, in the way of all petty dictators, he falls away into the dustbin of history.
I know that even a successful war against Iraq will require a U.S. occupation of undetermined length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences.
I know that an invasion of Iraq without a clear rationale and without strong international support will only fan the flames of the Middle East, and encourage the worst, rather than best, impulses of the Arab world, and strengthen the recruitment arm of al-Qaeda.
" State Sen. Barack Obama, October 2002.
----
Absolutely correct, then and now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 04/02/2008

somewhere USAisEVIL is happy - American troops getting killed

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 04/02/2008

Gee, since Monkey Boy says he listens to the "troops on the ground", I wonder if he listen to this "troop". HIGHLY unlikely. And I bet this poor bastard gets sent RIGHT to the front lines for his opinions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 04/02/2008

What is wrong with these people when Saddam Hussein is actually the best alternative.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 04/02/2008

What is wrong with the Iraqis is that there is no such thing as an "Iraqi". This was an artificial nation, as Yugoslavia was. When the iron grip of the dictator is gone, everything falls apart. Apparently our so-called leaders are unable to read history, much less to learn from it. To have citizens of a nation living together in at least relative harmony, the nation has to grow from the ground up. There is no solution in Iraq except partition, as there was no solution in the former Yugoslavia except for dividing into separate states.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:31 PM on 04/02/2008

I've been thinking that since the war started.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 04/02/2008

We really can't talk about some other countries choice in leaders. Look at what we did TWICE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 04/02/2008

I tend to agree, but there is a huge difference. We inflicted Saddam Hussein on the Iraqi's during the Reagan Administration and we also inflicted George Bush on ourselves. They are both American installed leaders, so to speak. The Iraqi's have not had a self inflicted national leader in like...forever. This is their big chance and I hope it works out better for them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 04/03/2008

most of which have NO relevance, sorry

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 04/02/2008

linkins killed a good point of discussion by drowning us in words, most of which have relevance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 04/02/2008

Goddamn America's Iraq Invasion and Occupation WAR CRIME!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 04/02/2008

Without war the United States would cease to exist. It is our only reason for existing. We are a barbaric people who use our power to kill and maim. Someone should invade us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 04/02/2008

I think someone has delusions of the movie Red Dawn. Are you projecting yourself as our nations hero, the guy who saves he day, the guy who gets to the root of all our problems and brings peace to our barbaric land, tames the American savages, makes the world love us...shall I go on?

Your theory is crap. And in case you haven't heard, Patrick Swayze has cancer and cannot lead the American Revolution you envision.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 04/02/2008

The tone of your post suggests that you are criticizing the U.S. for barbarism and that is not acceptable to you. Then you welcome and invite barbarism against us. Hypocrit much?
I'll forego the obvious urge to rip into you for saying "someone should invade us".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 04/02/2008

Violence begets violence. If someone hurts you it is only natural to assume that you would want to retaliate. Well let me introduce you to the Iraqi people who all want to pay the US back in one form or another.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 04/02/2008

wow................. why not take that a step further? We as a race should obviously commit mass suicide so that future generations..... oh wait....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 PM on 04/02/2008

Excellent analogy! The current reduced level of atrocity in Iraq is partly due to the restraint of the militia leaders. They have perceived it to be in their long term interests to preserve their forces for the ultimate power struggle that will occur when we leave.

We are like the prison staff on an overcrowded jail. We need the "good will" of the inmates in order to keep a lid on the violence. But all sides know that should the inmates rebel we will have the devil of a time re-gaining control.

The only way we get out of Iraq is for us to cut a deal with Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia to let us leave quietly and with a small fig leaf of respect. We don"t want to have to fight our way back to Kuwait with our heavy equipment over the roads controlled by the militias.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 04/02/2008

Come on, People! The Surge is working. Can't you feel the tingle? That's how you know. It's science.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 04/03/2008

While it is true that the Shiites have no hurry, and that they will not get the Sunnis of the hook if America leaves, I question the wisdom of "cutting deals and running"! This is unworthy of a Superpower, and would mean empowerment of terrorists throughout the world. My preference is to exile al-Sadr, preferably to a prison. Thousands are dead because of his thirst for power! America has wasted five years tolerating al-Sadr! Instead of "attacking Iran" out of frustration, the U.S. military ought to clean up Sadr City and to have it rebuild under a different name! This for me would make the Shiites more manageable, and the Sunnis more acquiescent! Furthermore, I question the wisdom of exiting via Kuwait. I am not a military man, but for me the route through Jordan and Israel makes more sense. Moreover, as far as Sadr City, I believe that al-Sadr's militia must be told to stop hiding behind the skirts of women and children, and come out to fight. If the militia refuses, the city must be evacuated, and commandos should be used to attack the militia from all sides, especially from the air. I cannot believe that in the 21 century, a town can't be cordoned and conquered in a matter of days! But the leader must be removed first!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 04/02/2008

I'm not sure I get your logic. Let's see:

1. imprison an incredibly popular native leader who represents the vast majority of Shi'ites in a majority Shi'ite country in the interests of Democracy. Check.

2. "Cleanse" Iraq of Shi'ite insurgency forces which could form the basis for a rational military in a stable Shi'ite nation. Check.

3. Impose U.S. hegemony on a land of warring interests. Check.

4. Then, finally, hightail it out through Jordan and Israel and declare victory as befits the dignity of a Superposer. Che...no, wait....

Excuse me, but wasn't that the plan when we went in? Decapitate the regime, gain total control over the government and the country's resources (without regard to the popularity of the action), declare victory and leave? How is that working for us?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 04/03/2008

you are right why not just completely anihilate everyone..because that is the only way we can accomplish what you are wanting. That or start the draft because we have so strapped our military. We should neverhave started this war without any plan on maintaining order when "mission accomplished"happened. This whole thing has been half assed from the beginning. We are at a point that we need to cut our losses and get out. American citizens will not tolerate a draft which is what would be needed to accomplish anything now. Though we should never have gone into Iraq in the first place.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 04/02/2008

Even if we totally destroyed teh Mahdi Army there are others (some, like the Badr Brigade are closely tied to both Iraqi leadership and Iran) Then who would fill the power vacuum?

We cannot do any of what you prescribe. If we could even roll armor into Sadr city we might be able to "rebuild it" but since we can't do that, there's no way we can start "cleaning it up."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 04/02/2008

The restraint of the militia leaders is because we are paying them. There is no long term interest for them; it is daily/weekly/monthly protection money payments from the US taxpayers. As soon as they stop, the peace deal is over.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 04/02/2008

Payments are irrelevant. The militia leaders do whatever is in their interests whether we pay them or not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 PM on 04/02/2008

And right now it is in the interests of the various militia leaders to arm, consolidate territory and get some money in the bank. How is paying them not aiding and abetting implementation of their final final plans?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 PM on 04/03/2008

No. A strategy must be developed to disarm them! All Iraq needs to be disarmed. There must be modern ways to do this! Kurds should be asked to help, and the Sunnis, not for money, but for geopolitical concessions. We do not need to pay them, just get them on board for a worthy cause! The disarmament should be thorough, and no weapon should be left in Iraqi hands. The government of al-Maliki must proclaim a total disarmament! This will save Iraq!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 04/02/2008

Isn't that just the point, though. Iraq does not want to be saved in its' present, western induced incarnation. Kurdistan will, eventually, secede. The majority Shi'ite areas will eventually form a government unto itself allied with Iran and the more impoverished Sunni areas will either be absorbed into Syria and Jordan or (worse) form an unstable government of its' own much like Yemen...a magnet for such as Al Qaeda.

The answer is not to continue with a hundred years of failed interventionism, but to help with the transition and ensure that the Sunni areas do not devolve into a failed state with the help of Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Anything less and we WILL be there for the next hundred years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 04/03/2008