9/11 Plus Seven

by: Andrew J. Bacevich  |  TomDispatch.com

9/11 Plus Seven
The Bush administration hoped that invading Iraq would launch a much larger and ambitious project that leveraged their standing over other Middle East countries. (Photo: AFP / Getty Images)

    The events of the past seven years have yielded a definitive judgment on the strategy that the Bush administration conceived in the wake of 9/11 to wage its so-called Global War on Terror. That strategy has failed, massively and irrevocably. To acknowledge that failure is to confront an urgent national priority: to scrap the Bush approach in favor of a new national security strategy that is realistic and sustainable - a task that, alas, neither of the presidential candidates seems able to recognize or willing to take up.

    On September 30, 2001, President Bush received from Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld a memorandum outlining U.S. objectives in the War on Terror. Drafted by Rumsfeld's chief strategist Douglas Feith, the memo declared expansively: "If the war does not significantly change the world's political map, the U.S. will not achieve its aim." That aim, as Feith explained in a subsequent missive to his boss, was to "transform the Middle East and the broader world of Islam generally."

    Rumsfeld and Feith were co-religionists: Along with other senior Bush administration officials, they worshipped in the Church of the Indispensable Nation, a small but intensely devout Washington-based sect formed in the immediate wake of the Cold War. Members of this church shared an exalted appreciation for the efficacy of American power, especially hard power. The strategy of transformation emerged as a direct expression of their faith.

    The members of this church were also united by an equally exalted estimation of their own abilities. Lucky the nation to be blessed with such savvy and sophisticated public servants in its hour of need!

    The goal of transforming the Islamic world was nothing if not bold. It implied far-reaching political, economic, social, and even cultural adjustments. At a press conference on September 18, 2001, Rumsfeld spoke bluntly of the need to "change the way that they live." Rumsfeld didn't specify who "they" were. He didn't have to. His listeners understood without being told: "They" were Muslims inhabiting a vast arc of territory that stretched from Morocco in the west all the way to the Moro territories of the Southern Philippines in the east.

    Yet boldly conceived action, if successfully executed, offered the prospect of solving a host of problems. Once pacified (or "liberated"), the Middle East would cease to breed or harbor anti-American terrorists. Post-9/11 fears about weapons of mass destruction falling into the hands of evil-doers could abate. Local regimes, notorious for being venal, oppressive, and inept, might finally get serious about cleaning up their acts. Liberal values, including rights for women, would flourish. A part of the world perpetually dogged by violence would enjoy a measure of stability, with stability promising not so incidentally to facilitate exploitation of the region's oil reserves. There was even the possibility of enhancing the security of Israel. Like a powerful antibiotic, the Bush administration's strategy of transformation promised to clean out not simply a single infection but several; or to switch metaphors, a strategy of transformation meant running the table.

    When it came to implementation, the imperative of the moment was to think big. Just days after 9/11, Rumsfeld was charging his subordinates to devise a plan of action that had "three, four, five moves behind it." By December 2001, the Pentagon had persuaded itself that the first move - into Afghanistan - had met success. The Bush administration wasted little time in pocketing its ostensible victory. Attention quickly shifted to the second move, seen by insiders as holding the key to ultimate success: Iraq.

    Fix Iraq and moves three, four, and five promised to come easily. Writing in the Weekly Standard, William Kristol and Robert Kagan got it exactly right: "The president's vision will, in the coming months, either be launched successfully in Iraq, or it will die in Iraq."

    The point cannot be emphasized too strongly: Saddam Hussein's (nonexistent) weapons of mass destruction and his (imaginary) ties to Al Qaeda never constituted the real reason for invading Iraq - any more than the imperative of defending Russian "peacekeepers" in South Ossetia explains the Kremlin's decision to invade Georgia.

    Iraq merely offered a convenient place from which to launch a much larger and infinitely more ambitious project. "After Hussein is removed," enthused Hudson Institute analyst Max Singer, "there will be an earthquake through the region." Success in Iraq promised to endow the United States with hitherto unprecedented leverage. Once the United States had made an example of Saddam Hussein, as the influential neoconservative Richard Perle put it, dealing with other ne'er-do-wells would become simple: "We could deliver a short message, a two-word message: 'You're next.'" Faced with the prospect of sharing Saddam's fate, Syrians, Iranians, Sudanese, and other recalcitrant regimes would see submission as the wiser course - so Perle and others believed.

    Members of the administration tried to imbue this strategic vision with a softer ideological gloss. "For 60 years," Condoleezza Rice explained to a group of students in Cairo, "my country, the United States, pursued stability at the expense of democracy in this region here in the Middle East - and we achieved neither." No more. "Now, we are taking a different course. We are supporting the democratic aspirations of all people." The world's Muslims needed to know that the motives behind the U.S. incursion into Iraq and its actions elsewhere in the region were (or had, at least, suddenly become) entirely benign. Who knows? Rice may even have believed the words she spoke.

    In either case - whether the strategy of transformation aimed at dominion or democratization - today, seven years after it was conceived, we can assess exactly what it has produced. The answer is clear: next to nothing, apart from squandering vast resources and exacerbating the slide toward debt and dependency that poses a greater strategic threat to the United States than Osama bin Laden ever did.

    In point of fact, hardly had the Pentagon commenced its second move, its invasion of Iraq, when the entire strategy began to unravel. In Iraq, President Bush's vision of regional transformation did die, much as Kagan and Kristol had feared. No amount of CPR credited to the so-called surge will revive it. Even if tomorrow Iraq were to achieve stability and become a responsible member of the international community, no sensible person could suggest that Operation Iraqi Freedom provides a model to apply elsewhere. Senator John McCain says that he'll keep U.S. combat troops in Iraq for as long as it takes. Yet even he does not propose "solving" any problems posed by Syria or Iran (much less Pakistan) by employing the methods that the Bush administration used to "solve" the problem posed by Iraq. The Bush Doctrine of preventive war may remain nominally on the books. But, as a practical matter, it is defunct.

    The United States will not change the world's political map in the ways top administration officials once dreamed of. There will be no earthquake that shakes up the Middle East - unless the growing clout of Iran, Hezbollah, and Hamas in recent years qualifies as that earthquake. Given the Pentagon's existing commitments, there will be no threats of "you're next" either - at least none that will worry our adversaries, as the Russians have neatly demonstrated. Nor will there be a wave of democratic reform - even Rice has ceased her prattling on that score. Islam will remain stubbornly resistant to change, except on terms of its own choosing. We will not change the way "they" live.

    In a book that he co-authored during the run-up to the invasion, Kristol confidently declared, "The mission begins in Baghdad, but it does not end there." In fact, the Bush administration's strategy of transformation has ended. It has failed miserably. The sooner we face up to that failure, the sooner we can get about repairing the damage.

    -------

    Andrew J. Bacevich is professor of history and international relations at Boston University. His bestselling new book is "The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism." You can read excerpts from it by clicking here, and here, or watch a video of him discussing the lessons of 9/11, seven years later, by clicking here.

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Nothing new here, folks,

Nothing new here, folks, nothing new to see. Move along.


911, anthrax, Wellstone

911, anthrax, Wellstone murders, and the wars were the result of frat boy stunts.


The 10 billion$$ a week they

The 10 billion$$ a week they spent and the millions of innocent people that have died, is nothing but pure genocide and these bastards need to be strung up as they did to Suddam. The $$ spent so far could have bought that and probably most of those countries change to a better life for all of them. It sure would have been a great boon for the infrastructure for this country. If McCain wins we will have just more of the same shit to have to live with. Things don't look good for a peaceful existent in the near future. I really am ashamed of what these rich little bastards have done to this country and then just go about their lives as nothing has happened. They need to be made an example of for future leaders to respect life and freedom as something special for all. Corporations have taken over our lives and are poisoning us with their packaged foods and chemical drugs. We have to return to Natural food to get healthy again and survive this slaughter by Corporations. My blog for more on this http://www.my-healthy.info/4u


Brilliant dissection, Mr.

Brilliant dissection, Mr. Bacevich. I only hope that we are not (Neo)-CONNED one more time, with a fraudulent "election", into supporting more of this suicidal carnage. We may not survive another four years of it, if for no other reason than economics and the gargantuan deficit. I am also not convinced that the "bad guys" we have been handed by this lying government are in fact the actual bad guys, or at least not the full list of bad guys, from 9-11 to the present. If Osama Bin Laden were STILL working for elements of the CIA (that trained him), would we know it? What assurances do we have, other than "trust us"? It might explain how we always warn him a few months ahead, every time we're going to "get him". My only thought on a "new national security strategy, is: scrap it. Statistically, the average American is many, many times more likely to die from a drunk driver, or industrial accidents, than by an act of terrorism. So where are the Billions and Billions of dollars for workplace safety? Why don't we re-institute Prohibition, to keep drunk drivers from happening? This whole War on Terror is really the War to Promote Terror. It's a vile excuse to destroy our Liberty and our Constitution, which was exactly what Osama Bin Laden said he would do to us. Played our Government, didn't he? -And we all shut up and went along for the ride.


Two hundred years ago, Spain

Two hundred years ago, Spain was the sick old man of Europe. Any resemblance to her great days of imperial glory had long vanished and the future appeared to hold little hope for improvement. North of the border, Napoleon ever ready to take advantage of an opportunity to enlarge his empire declared that" Spain was ill and that he was the cure." In those days, as doctors still made house calls, French troops after a series of complex political maneuvers occupied Spain, and certain Spaniards –particularly young upper class republicans enamoured of the enlightenment-even welcomed them. However, this was not to last. The French who had come as self proclaimed liberators, spent too much time liberating the Spanish of their property as well as taking “liberties” with their women and in the end only succeeded in liberating a bloody war of independence that ended their dream of adding Spain to the empire. Maddened to the point of exasperation, Napoleon declared that the reason for his failure in Spain was due to the laziness of the Spaniards, whom he said, “would rather fight than work.” This may seem like sour grapes, however, there is some truth in what Napoleon said. Spain was decadent; perhaps terminally so and French intervention may well have proven to be the indicated medicine-certainly if more humanely applied-to end the decadence of Bourbon rule. But as Napoleon also admitted, nations would rather be oppressed by their own people than liberated by foreigners, and so it was that the French were hated by the Spanish -whatever their intentions and driven out. One of the tragedies of all this is that due to the French occupation, a large segment of the Spanish population came to regard republicanism with great suspicion if not outright hatred and this was to have long term effects on the development of democracy in Spain. Sound familiar? P.Elfant


What is the GWOT really?

What is the GWOT really? And who is to say that the USG really wants to stamp out terrorism? These are all useful tools that the PTB can use to keep the US population under control through fear. As a past example, check out GLADIO, the P2 Masonic Lodge and the Bologna, Italy train station bombing. Now we have DHS. The 9/11 attack was our Reichstag fire allowing the PTB to institute draconian measures to curtail our personal freedoms. But many Americans are no longer buying that story, so hey, why not start a new Cold War with Russia? Using fear of a real or fictitious external threat is an age-old tool used for keeping one's own people down. The strings on all of this are being pulled by the NEOCONs, which are Fascists with a new label. Check out the history of the rise to power of the Third Reich in Germany and see if you can find the parallels between then and what has been happening in our own country these last several years.


Amillion or more civilian

Amillion or more civilian lives later and we have not accomplished anything but killing Sadam Hussein, the man who kept that part of the middle east together and was not going to risk terrorizing America. We should be leaving the middle east completely alone and getting out of the middle east by not buying any oil from them. Oil is killing the earth. WWIII is being fought over oil and if we put our minds to it we wouldn't need oil.


The neo-con strategy of

The neo-con strategy of transforming the Muslim world by force is another futile example of hammering on the horses hoof in order to make the shoe fit. I became convinced that there were no WMDs in Iraq on the day our troops entered the country & that Bush KNEW it because no elected president would risk losing tens of thousands of his soldiers to gas/biological counter-attack if he thought Iraq really did have them. He was not mislead by faulty intelligence, he knew & he lied.