It's more than a war (by F.Z.)

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Fareed Zakaria said:
It's More Than a War
To defeat terrorism we must think beyond bureaucratic reform and even beyond military force. What we need is a new global strategy.


You know that the 9/11 Commission report has had a real impact because Congress has decided to meet in sweltering August to act on its recommendations. In fact, the report is fast achieving Biblical status. Both left and right cite its arguments to vindicate their claims. The Wall Street Journal editorial page believes that it confirms the Bush administration's version of events. Liberal columnists say it amply demonstrates Clinton's strong focus on Al Qaeda. This is in some part because the report is vast and detailed. If you search hard, you will find in it what you want.

But mostly the near-universal approval reflects the report's quality. It is that rare thing in Washington, a genuinely bipartisan product. It is thorough and fair, with a sense of history and of the breadth of its mandate. Because of extraordinary, almost unprecedented access to classified documents, it provides a unique bird's-eye view into decision making at the highest levels of government. It is also well written, rare for work that is the product of a committee. All of this makes for the most important report by an independent commission in decades.

And what does it say? The press has focused on its administrative recommendations: a new intelligence czar, new systems for congressional oversight of intelligence, homeland security and so on. Bureaucratic reforms are important. But all this attention on organization charts misses the big picture. What we need first and foremost is a grand strategy. The absence of such a comprehensive, long-term approach is the crucial gap in American policy. And it won't be solved by a better bureaucratic structure for intelligence.

The obsessive focus on bureaucratic reform is a product of a very American search for a simple solution. There's a problem; create a new government position to fix it. But what the 9/11 Commission report really does is take us back to basics, back to 9/12. The United States was attacked brutally by a new enemy, militant Islamic terror. How should we handle this threat? The commission puts forward a series of ideas and approaches in the first of two chapters of recommendations. This chapter ("What to Do?") precedes the one on organizational changes ("How to Do It"), which only makes sense. What the commission suggests doing is important, persuasive and a substantial departure from current policy.

The conclusion takes on the central organizing idea of the post-9/11 strategy--that we are at war--and is deeply skeptical of it. The report notes that the use of the metaphor of a war accurately describes the effort to kill terrorists in the field, as in Afghanistan. It also properly evokes the need for large-scale mobilization. But the report points out that after Afghanistan, the scope for military action is quite limited. "Long-term success," it concludes, "demands the use of all elements of national power: diplomacy, intelligence, covert action, law enforcement, economic policy, foreign aid, public diplomacy, and homeland defense." Even when it speaks of preventive action it suggests "a preventive strategy that is as much, or more, political as it is military."

The report describes the struggle as "more than a war," but what the conclusions make plain is that it really means that it is different from war. Of the 27 recommendations in this chapter, only one can be seen as advocating the use of military force: attacking "terrorists and their organizations." And even that one, on closer inspection, is more complicated. The sanctuaries identified are in places like Pakistan, Thailand, and Nigeria and in Central and Eastern European cities with lax border controls. What are we to do, invade these countries? The only way that we will apprehend or kill suspected terrorists and disrupt their organizations is by cooperating with these governments.

It is increasingly clear that the conflict in Afghanistan falsely fed the idea that the war against terrorism was a real war. In fact, Afghanistan was an exception. The reality of this threat, the very reason it is so difficult to tackle, is precisely that it cannot be addressed by conventional military means. Yet the prism of war has distorted the vision of important segments of Washington, especially within the Bush administration. This has produced bad strategy. The Yale historian John Lewis Gaddis has written on the Bush administration's strategy and describes its three pillars as hegemony, preemption and unilateralism. All three approaches seem justifiable if you believe that we are in a war that can be won militarily. All are counterproductive in a struggle that seeks to modernize alien societies, win over Muslim moderates and sustain cooperation on intelligence and law enforcement across the world.

The issue of Iraq highlighted these choices. If you believed that this was truly a war, all that mattered was defeating the enemy. If you believed that a broader political struggle was key, then creating a new and modern Iraq was in many ways more important than defeating Saddam Hussein. The administration showed its colors with a brilliant war plan and no postwar planning. Even in Afghanistan, where the war succeeded and the postwar settlement is working (though fragile), the administration's superhawks (such as Donald Rumsfeld) were continually opposed to greater efforts at nation-building. It doesn't help the war on terror, they argued. But it does help the struggle against Islamic extremism. And there is no war on terror that is not fundamentally an ideological struggle.

The most surprisingly negative picture that emerges from the report is of the Pentagon. Throughout the 1990s, it simply did not want to take on the role of defending America against this foe. (Nor, to be fair, did the White House order it to do so, either under Clinton or Bush, pre-9/11.) In 1998, a group of midlevel officials argued that the Pentagon should be the lead agency in this battle against terrorists; their report went nowhere. That year Richard Clarke chaired an exercise that imagined that terrorists would hijack a jet plane, fill it with explosives and head toward a target in Washington. He asked the Pentagon what it could do about such a situation. The answer was, pretty much nothing. Condoleezza Rice, who was asked in June 2001 to draw up plans to attack Al Qaeda and the Taliban, recalled to the commission that "the military didn't particularly want this mission." And before and after 9/11 the civilian leadership of the Pentagon--Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith--was utterly obsessed with Iraq. They dismissed the need for a response to the attack on the USS Cole, which Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz claimed was now "stale." (In fact, it had taken place four months earlier.)

The bulk of the commission's substantive recommendations are for a broad political and economic strategy toward the Muslim and Arab world. The report argues that the United States should "offer an example of moral leadership in the world, committed to treat people humanely, abide by the rule of law, and be generous and caring to our neighbors." It recommends substantial resources being devoted to scholarship, exchange and library programs in the Muslim world, and has a specific, excellent recommendation to fund public education in these countries. Madrassas and other such religious schools have grown in the Muslim world because the secular educational system has collapsed under the weight of poverty and population growth.

The report's conclusion repeatedly stresses multilateralism and recognizes that the civilized world will need a common and coordinated approach to fighting this long struggle. It will need common standards on sharing intelligence, treating suspects, tracking money and handling proliferation problems. Without a global--or at least wide, multilateral--system, there are simply too many nooks and crannies for terrorists to exploit. American security requires global cooperation.

A commission staffer told me that many on the panel thought their recommendations could have been titled "Bringing Foreign Policy Back In." What their report also does, however, is bring homeland security back in. It urges new screening procedures, biometric identification systems, better watch lists and more emergency-response training. All this sounds less sexy than the politics of diplomacy but it might well prove more important. The patchwork of local, city and state systems--all different, some incompatible--must give way to national standards for national defense.

In the past three years the United States has added almost $200 billion to its spending on international affairs and homeland security, a 50 percent increase. It has put the battle against terrorism at the top of the global agenda. There has not been such a mobilization of resources since the Korean War. That analogy is worth pursuing. As that war broke, the Truman administration's first impulse was simply to mobilize all American resources and throw them at the problem. Only later did it begin stepping back and asking itself what was the best strategy to deal with the broader phenomenon of Soviet and Chinese communism. Truman's team initiated a debate among its leading thinkers--George Kennan, Paul Nitze, Dean Acheson, Charles Bohlen--that framed policy choices for decades. The Eisenhower administration came into office and also forced such a reexamination, focusing on a long-term, fiscally sustainable strategy--in keeping with Eisenhower's own concerns. It was in these few years that America's basic cold-war strategy was set.

Our period of mobilization is now over. Some of what has happened in the heat of these past years was necessary, some grossly overdone. What is important now is to step back, reflect, reason and construct a longer-term, sustainable strategy. It is a pivotal moment for whoever occupies the White House in the next four years. He has the opportunity to act not as a crisis manager but a strategist, shaping American policy not for the next few years but for the next few decades. And if he does it right, it could even mean success.


More to come
 
Fareed Zakaria said:
Why Kerry is Right On Iraq
Perhaps Iraq would have been a disaster no matter what. But there's a thinly veiled racism behind such views, implying Iraqis are savages.



John Kerry isn't being entirely honest about his views on Iraq. But neither is President George W. Bush. "Knowing what we know now," Bush asked, "would [Kerry] have supported going into Iraq?" The real answer is, of course, "no." But that's just as true for Bush as for Kerry. We now know that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Is Bush suggesting that despite this knowledge, he would still have concluded that Iraq constituted a "grave and gathering threat" that required an immediate, preventive war? Please. Even if Bush had come to this strange conclusion, no one would have listened to him. Without the threat of those weapons, there would have been no case to make to the American people or the world community. There were good reasons to topple Saddam Hussein's regime, but it was the threat of those weapons that created the international, legal, strategic and urgent rationale for a war. There were good reasons why intelligence agencies all over the world—including those of Arab governments—believed that Saddam had these weapons. But he didn't.

The more intelligent question is, given what we knew at the time, was toppling Saddam's regime a worthwhile objective? Bush's answer is yes, Howard Dean's is no. Kerry's answer is that it was a worthwhile objective but was disastrously executed. For this "nuance" Kerry has been attacked from both the right and the left. But it happens to be the most defensible position on the subject.

By the late 1990s, American policy on Iraq was becoming untenable. The U.N. sanctions had turned into a farce. Saddam was able to siphon off billions for himself, while the sanctions threw tens of thousands of ordinary Iraqis into poverty every year. Their misery was broadcast daily across the Arab world, inflaming public opinion. America and Britain were bombing Iraqi military installations weekly and maintaining a large garrison in Saudi Arabia, which was also breeding trouble. Osama bin Laden's biggest charges against the United States were that it was occupying Saudi Arabia and starving the Iraqi people.

Given these realities, the United States had a choice. It could either drop all sanctions and the containment of Iraq and welcome Saddam back into the world community. Or it had to hold him to account. Given what we knew about Saddam's past (his repeated attacks on his neighbors, the gassing of the Kurds, the search for nuclear weapons) and given what we thought we knew at the time (that his search for WMD was active), conciliation looked like wishful thinking. It still does. Once out of his box, Saddam would almost certainly have jump—started his programs and ambitions.

Bush's position is that if Kerry agrees with him that Saddam was a problem, then Kerry agrees with his Iraq policy. Doing something about Iraq meant doing what Bush did. But is that true? Did the United States have to go to war before the weapons inspectors had finished their job? Did it have to junk the United Nations' process? Did it have to invade with insufficient troops to provide order and stability in Iraq? Did it have to occupy a foreign country with no cover of legitimacy from the world community? Did it have to ignore completely the State Department's postwar planning? Did it have to pack the Governing Council with unpopular exiles, disband the Army and engage in radical de-Baathification? Did it have to spend a fraction of the money allocated for Iraqi reconstruction—and have that be mired in charges of corruption and favoritism? Was all this an inevitable consequence of dealing with the problem of Saddam?

Perhaps Iraq would have been a disaster no matter what. But there's a thinly veiled racism behind such views, implying that Iraqis are savages genetically disposed to produce chaos and anarchy. In fact, other nation-building efforts over the past decade have gone reasonably well, when well planned and executed.

"Strategy is execution," Louis Gerstner, former CEO of IBM, American Express and RJR Nabisco, has often remarked. In fact, it's widely understood in the business world that having a good objective means nothing if you implement it badly. "Unless you translate big thoughts into concrete steps for action, they're pointless," writes Larry Bossidy, former CEO of Honeywell.

Bossidy has written a book titled "Execution," which is worth reading in this context. Almost every requirement he lays out was ignored by the Bush administration in its occupation of Iraq. One important example: "You cannot have an execution culture without robust dialogue—one that brings reality to the surface through openness, candor, and informality," Bossidy writes. "Robust dialogue starts when people go in with open minds. You cannot set realistic goals until you've debated the assumptions behind them."

Say this in the business world and it is considered wisdom. But say it as a politician and it is derided as "nuance" or "sophistication." Perhaps that's why Washington works as poorly as it does.

done...
 
Not me either.

..i guess he just likes to post info about america, being as its such a great country...:)
 
It was made for me! :)

I'm going to finish reading it and post a reasonable comment.

Great text, some very intelligent statements... We all know Bush made a bunch of mistakes and invading Iraq wasn't the right thing to do, but they're's in general not much you can do about it now except do your best with rebuilding the country.
 
I hate those guys who do the right thing for the wrong reason. They oppose bush because he ruined America's imperial plans with his silly plns. "omg we should have spies everywhere in teh world but thx to bush teh idiot we're in messy iraq!! we should've been in saudi arabia instead!!"
You see, they don't oppose the immorality of the war (the only thing that really matters to me) they just think it's a waste of time and money. if the same things were to happen in saudi arabia these stupids would be happy.

even michael moore in his 9/11, you can smell racism in the way he makes fun of other nations! "cossstttarrrreekkkaaaaaa!!! omg morocoo has monekys!! wahhahahaha" and the constant talk about "saduis" .. "the saudis .. " "it was the saudis" .. "the saudis" I could swear he wants to invade saudi arabia.
 
What could top a thread like this off?
Maybe a debate which includes, science, religion, politics and pie! But mostly the first three.
 
sprafa - post a damn link. My brain is numb from today. Posting in italic font is like kicking my brain - no good can come from it.

Posting the entire article will not make more people read it.
 
some one is either trying to change the subject or is acting stupid :rolleyes:
 
Whoever didn't got this in the 1st place, please alow me to explain.

I posted this to people who would like to read it. You don't like to. Then don't freaking post saying how you don't like it.

I already know the majority of the members in this forums don't appreaciate this. Well, I'm not doing it for you. I'm doing it for the minority that actually matters.

How clear is that ?
 
Pretty damn clear. :D

But I have to say, now both Politicians are sucking up to each others viewpoint. If you missed Kerry's recent campaigning, aswell Bushes, you might be suprised on how similiar these two have gotten.

I think that Comedian... Bill Mahr, pointed it out to some element.
 
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