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Monday, December 12, 2016

Rebuke of and advice to Charles Duelfer

PREFACE: Charles Duelfer directed the Iraq Survey Group. He advocates for restoration of sufficiently competitive, robust American liberal leadership with Iraq of a kind with the intensive peace operations that President Obama cut off. Yet Duelfer self-defeatingly also upholds the keystone premise in the politics disqualifying the fundamental policy course correction he advocates: namely, the demonstrably faulty assertion that the Iraq intervention was unjustified in the first place. Here, I advise him on the change he must make for his advocacy to be politically effectual.



from: [Eric LC]
to: info@charlesduelfer.com
date: Mar 17, 2024, 8:30 AM
subject: Critique of Charles Duelfer's "Things to Consider: Iraq War at 20"

Mr. Duelfer,

I clarify the Iraq issue at Operation Iraqi Freedom FAQ. My critique of your 20th anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom post is very belated, but at least it's in time for the 21st anniversary. I also posted it as a comment at "Things to Consider: Iraq War at 20".

Duelfer:
Everyone (and their dog) is writing/commenting about the Iraq war 20 years later. I doubt more accuracy is achieved in these tales after 20 years.
... TV Experts
Experts in think tanks, universities, etc., all derive stature by being in the media. Just look at their resumes. They list the various media outlets on which they have appeared. (I have been guilty of this.) If they are on some television or other media, does that imply credibility? Or do they just generate clicks? Being controversial and of deep conviction is better for media, than nuance. Being good on TV is a separate talent from Iraq expertise. Cable networks particularly tend to sustain their preferred narrative. When Iraq (or anything else) is hot, their bookers need to fill time and their talking heads may know no more than what they read in their morning internet feed.

Indeed. From the start, revisionist experts have misled the public with faulty premises and historical distortion about the Iraq intervention. Fortunately, the primary sources of the mission, i.e., the basic law and facts that define the actual justification of Operation Iraqi Freedom, provide a reliable litmus test for the "accuracy" of anyone's "writing/commenting about the Iraq war".

Primary source authority precedes and outranks secondary expert authority on merit, and applies equally to layman and expert alike. When the Iraq issue is properly aligned with OIF's primary sources, we can accurately assess where "Everyone (and their dog)" credibly accord with the operative law and facts and where anyone, no matter their resume, has misinformed the public contra the operative law and facts.


Duelfer:
“I told you so…”
Bear in mind when you hear the next, “I told you so”, even if the actor really did, so what? Why should a top-level decision maker believe them or me? There are always plenty of “experts” who warn of pending threats.

In the case of Iraq, the President's belief in Saddam's threat followed the controlling law and policy of the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement. Saddam's manifold standing threat was definitively established with the Gulf War and thereafter presumed until Iraq proved it was no longer that threat in accordance with the purpose-designed Gulf War ceasefire "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441). The Saddam regime never came close to resolving its standing threat via the mandated compliance. As you confirmed, Saddam never intended to comply with the ceasefire terms.

In fact, we know now that Saddam's violations of the UNSCR 687 terrorism and UNSCR 688 human rights mandates, which defined Saddam's threat along with his UNSCR 687 WMD violations, were substantially underestimated.


Duelfer:
Who should a president believe?
The intelligence community? Maybe, but they certainly have gotten things wrong in the past. The national security team? What do they know really? And they disagree in fundamental ways. Do you listen to other world leaders? They have their own spin and may be completely wrong. Iraqi oppositionists? They may sound knowledgeable, but they haven’t been in Iraq in decades. The UN weapons inspectors (UNSCOM)? They were in Iraq for many years, but couldn’t verify that Saddam disarmed…or not.

That's easy to answer. President Bush by procedure, like Presidents HW Bush and Clinton, believed the UN weapons inspectors who constantly verified that the Saddam regime failed to disarm in accordance with the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441). (Your "…or not" contradicts the UNSCR 687 standard and fact record.)

President Bush was "still very new to the office when 9-11 happened". But the controlling law and policy that enforced the Gulf War ceasefire UNSC resolutions pursuant to UNSCR 678, the determinative fact status of Iraq's "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire not limited to WMD, and the governing procedure that Bush inherited were already mature. The "very new" President followed the very established governing procedure for Iraq.

President Bush believed the UN weapons inspectors by procedure because the controlling mandate to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (Public Law 105-235) meant that the UNSCR 687 compliance-based UN inspections were determinative for US action on Iraq.

The intelligence community, which as you point out, itself depended on the UN inspections, was ancillary in the compliance-based UNSCR 687 disarmament. Belief or disbelief in the intelligence was not determinative for a US-led UNSCR 678 action.

The national security team was beholden to the US law and policy that enforced UNSCR 687 pursuant to UNSCR 678, same as their boss. Other world leaders were beholden to UNSCRs 678 and 687, same as the American president.

While Iraqi oppositionists did contribute some to the intelligence, they were relevant in the context of UNSCR 688, which the US enforced alongside UNSCR 687 pursuant to UNSCR 678. The Saddam regime's extreme violation of the UNSCR 688 human rights mandates, "the consequences of which threaten international peace and security in the region" (UNSCR 688), is confirmed.

For Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) with UNSCR 687, UNSCOM established, the UN Security Council decided, and UNMOVIC confirmed Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441). When the UNMOVIC Clusters document's "unresolved disarmament issues" established casus belli like the UNSCOM Butler report did in 1998, President Bush properly followed the governing procedure pursuant to UNSCR 678. You yourself corroborated that President Bush's decision was correct as "ISG judges that Iraq failed to comply with UNSCRs" and "the Iraqis never intended to meet the spirit of the UNSC’s resolutions" (Iraq Survey Group).

The procedural record of the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement is straightforward, including the Presidential decisions that plainly responded to the compliance-based UN inspections in accordance with the compliance-based US law and policy pursuant to compliance-based UNSCR 678. So I'm disappointed that in your "writing/commenting about the Iraq war 20 years later" you've misinformed the public about President Bush's decision on Iraq by asserting a revisionist ambiguity that contradicts the operative law and facts.


Duelfer:
While inspectors would not confirm the disposition of Iraq’s full WMD programs, they nevertheless provided a continuous presence that limited uncertainty.

The UN weapons inspectors provided the President with full certainty from 1991 to 2003 that the Saddam regime was noncompliant with UNSCR 687, which was determinative. (The Saddam-induced absence of UNSCOM/UNMOVIC in Iraq between UNSCR 1205 and UNSCR 1441 meant that Iraq was ipso facto noncompliant with UNSCR 687 with its status effectively stuck on the UNSCOM findings that triggered Operation Desert Fox.)

However, the UN weapons inspectors did not limit uncertainty about the "disposition of Iraq’s full WMD programs" because, one, the very design of UNSCR 687 meant that only verification of Iraq's mandated compliance with UNSCR 687 could do that. In that regard, as you confirmed, "the Iraqis never intended to meet the spirit of the UNSC’s resolutions...Outward acts of compliance belied a covert desire to resume WMD activities" (ISG). Two, the misconception that the UN inspections limited uncertainty about Saddam's WMD was conclusively dispelled in 1995 by the Hussein Kamel al-Majid revelation.

Furthermore, the Iraq Survey Group's ex post findings confirm that the idea that the UN inspections limited uncertainty was a dangerous misconception. For example, among the UNSCR 687 violations you found in Iraq, "ISG uncovered information that the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) maintained throughout 1991 to 2003 a set of undeclared covert laboratories...The network of laboratories could have provided an ideal, compartmented platform from which to continue CW agent R&D or small-scale production efforts...The existence, function, and purpose of the laboratories were never declared to the UN" (ISG).

You also discovered proscribed biological capability that was hidden by the IIS from the UN inspections.

In other words, ISG confirmed that in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations" (UNSCR 1441), Saddam instead had ready and hidden at least terrorism-level WMD capability under the noses of the UN weapons inspectors. Keep in mind that the IIS also managed Saddam's world-leading "regional and global terrorism" (Iraqi Perspectives Project), which also breached the ceasefire for casus belli.


Duelfer:
The intelligence community still had to make assessments…but based on less data and growing uncertainty. Moreover, the stories of dubious defectors could not be checked by having inspectors on the ground. Fabricators got a much better hearing than they deserved.

Set aside the ancillary relevance of the intelligence community in the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement. Set aside the UNSCR 687 violations you found which show an active WMD program in violation of UNSCR 687. Do we actually know that the "stories of dubious defectors" were wholly fabricated? The ISG report fails to definitively answer that question.

You emphasized in the ISG's Transmittal Message, Scope Note, and the report's various sections that Iraq's non-pareil "denial and deception operations" (ISG), which in and of themselves breached the ceasefire and continued after the regime change, substantially undermined not only the pre-war UN inspections and intelligence assessments, but also your ex post investigation.

The evidence you found in hand is definitive proof of an Iraqi WMD program in violation of UNSCR 687. However, ISG non-findings that are commonly characterized in the politics as definitive proof of Iraq's innocence are in fact heavily qualified in the ISG report due to "the unparalleled looting and destruction, a lot of which was directly intentional, designed by the security services to cover the tracks of the Iraq WMD program and their other programs as well" (David Kay, 28JAN04).

Therefore, the WMD evidence that you failed to find cannot be definitive proof of Iraq's innocence, even if we ignore the UNSCR 687 violations that you did find.

The Iraqi denial of evidence to the ISG investigation by "the unparalleled looting and destruction, a lot of which was directly intentional, designed by the security services to cover the tracks of the Iraq WMD program" (Kay) logically infers that "Iraq’s full WMD programs" were greater than the UNSCR 687 violations you discovered despite Iraq's "denial and deception operations" (ISG). We can't know how much greater "Iraq’s full WMD programs" actually were because Saddam's agents successfully kept that from you. But we can assume that Iraq had higher value items than what they left behind, and based on your findings on Iraq's proscribed procurement, we can presume there was a lot of it.

As far as "Fabricators got a much better hearing than they deserved", it stands out that the "extensive, yet fragmentary and circumstantial, body of evidence" (ISG) that you found in Iraq includes claims by officials that are similar to the "stories of dubious defectors". For example, "ISG has investigated claims by former IIS officials—a former IIS chemist and his former supervisor, the late Dr. Al Azmirli—that the IIS produced ricin until at least 1995 and possibly until 2003" (ISG). Notably, you did not disprove the claim like you did Secretary Powell's mobile BW labs. Instead, typically, you were stymied by "ISG could not confirm that ricin work had occurred there because of extensive looting" (ISG).


Duelfer:
While UNSCOM dogmatically uncovered virtually all his WMD between 1991 and 1998, we did not know how successful we were.

Set aside that Iraq was obligated to declare and present all its UNSCR 687-proscribed items and activities to UNSCOM, and UNSCOM was not mandated to uncover Saddam's WMD. The fact is you still don't know how successful UNSCOM was or wasn't. The Iraq Survey Group's heavily qualified non-findings mean that while you can guess, you can't really know that "UNSCOM dogmatically uncovered virtually all his WMD between 1991 and 1998".

I'm disappointed that in your "writing/commenting about the Iraq war 20 years later" you've misinformed the public by omitting both the heavily qualified character of ISG's non-findings, despite that it's a constant theme in the ISG report, and the UNSCR 687 violations that you did find.


Duelfer:
Saddam wondered if US intelligence was possibly correct.
Saddam and those around him, had occasional doubts about whether WMD was retained in Iraq. At one point, reacting to the strength of US WMD accusations, he asked his top advisors (at a Revolutionary Command Council meeting) whether there was something they weren’t telling him about Iraq WMD?

I guess you mean Saddam wondered "whether WMD was retained in Iraq" beyond the UNSCR 687 violations that you found, including the "extensive, yet fragmentary and circumstantial, body of evidence suggesting that Saddam pursued a strategy to maintain a capability to return to WMD" (ISG), and the mass of WMD evidence that was denied to you by "the unparalleled looting and destruction, a lot of which was directly intentional, designed by the security services to cover the tracks of the Iraq WMD program and their other programs as well" (Kay).


Duelfer:
[2] Later in detention Saddam said these comments were aimed at Iran. He assumed the US, with its great (expensive anyway) intelligence system, must really know the truth.

Again, setting aside the UNSCR 687 violations that you found and the heavily qualified character of your non-findings, this seems impossible but...Is it possible that Saddam really did not understand that since 1991, the American president's decisions on Iraq were made in accordance with the controlling law and policy that enforced Iraq's mandated compliance with the Gulf War ceasefire terms, including UNSCR 687, pursuant to UNSCR 678? And that in the ceasefire disarmament process, the role of the "intelligence system" was merely ancillary?

Since 1990-1991, the US law and policy on Iraq pursuant to UNSCR 678 was openly broadcast, public domain, consistent, reiterated, straightforward and plainly stated. Did Saddam really not understand that his intransigent flagrant "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire, which includes his self-incriminating comments, would eventually compel the UNSCR 678 enforcers to resume the Gulf War and this time complete it? The ISG report implies as much, but again, it seems impossible. Extremely, dangerously delusional on Saddam's part, if true.


Duelfer:
Iraq was a hard target.
Access to Iraq was very limited. It was like North Korea is today. Remember, Iraq did not have internet (except for a few senior officials). The data that came out of Iraq was limited and therefore the bits that did emerge often received out of proportion attention. The outsized role of bogus defectors like the one dubbed “Curveball” illustrates the problem. Judgements were made on very little real new data.
... [3] The fact that the intelligence assessments relied on such limited information and was such low confidence should have been emphasized. This was one of the terrible faults in the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE). It’s now on-line and worth reading to see how you would react to that intelligence judgment.

Hence UNSCR 687's compliance-based enforcement.

The burden or "onus" (UNMOVIC Clusters document) was on Iraq to prove it disarmed per UNSCR 687 as a necessary condition to forestall resumption of the Gulf War. There was no burden on the UNSCR 678 enforcers to prove Iraq was armed as estimated by the intelligence community, which obviated the "hard target" issue.

Your statement "Judgements were made on very little real new data" is incorrect. At the decision point of Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441), the determinative data of the Saddam regime's noncompliance with the Gulf War ceasefire terms was up to date. In fact, President Bush's 18MAR03 determination for OIF mainly cites to the 06MAR03 UNMOVIC Clusters document. Subsequent fact findings, including yours, have only piled on redundantly to the already dispositive evidence of Saddam's sweeping "material breach" (UNSCR 1441).

Casus belli was always Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441), whose determinative data was open to the public, not the intelligence estimates. While "Curveball" illustrates a problem for the intelligence community, it doesn't significantly affect the ceasefire disarmament process that established OIF's casus belli. Procedurally speaking, there's no relevant reason for "The fact that the intelligence assessments relied on such limited information and was such low confidence should have been emphasized".


Duelfer:
Diminishing flexibility as military prepares.
The political decision to prepare a military option to bolster a diplomatic solution is seductive. However, military preparations acquire their own momentum and before too long become virtually unstoppable. Once the military is instructed to begin to put in place a capability to achieve regime change by force huge things start to move. Tanks, munitions, repair and maintenance facilities, fuel, aircraft support and spares parts, hospitals, search and rescue capabilities etc., take months to deploy forward. It is a massive undertaking and once in place, cannot be held in abeyance or the capability begins to decay. The notion of putting all that military capacity in place and then wait “to give diplomacy a chance” is unfortunately impossible. “Use it or lose it” takes over. What may begin as an option to increase diplomatic leverage for a peaceful solution gradually becomes a factor that makes a peaceful outcome almost impossible. Somewhere in the Iraq build-up there was a “point of no return”. Unless, or course, if Saddam left. That was his choice.

You're misleading the public here.

First, there was no either/or. After 12 years of successful intransigence, particularly Saddam's victory over the diplomatic coercive alternative, i.e., sanctions, after 1996 and over UNSCOM and the UNSCR 678 enforcers in 1998, the viability of the "diplomatic solution" offered by UNSCR 1441 wholly depended on a military threat that was sufficient to compel Saddam's cooperation with the UNSCR 1441 inspections. In other words, the "massive undertaking...of putting all that military capacity in place" was the only way "to give diplomacy a chance".

Second, the diplomatic "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) was given a full chance and then some. The “point of no return” moment for the OIF invasion force build-up coincided with the UNMOVIC Clusters document, which concluded the UNSCR 1441 compliance test with Saddam's utter failure to prove the required "full and immediate compliance by Iraq without conditions or restrictions with its obligations under resolution 687 (1991) and other relevant resolutions" (UNSCR 1441). In fact, according to the timeline spelled out in UNSCR 1441, President Bush technically could have ordered OIF based on Hans Blix's scathing 27JAN03 report. Instead, Bush opted to give Saddam more leeway to fulfill Iraq's ceasefire obligations, and Saddam threw away the extra chance.

In the end, even when the UNMOVIC Clusters document had established casus belli for the UNSCR 1441 "final opportunity to comply" and the OIF invasion force build-up was at the “point of no return”, the US and UK still tried to carve out yet another chance for Saddam to switch off the military threat with Iraq's mandated compliance. But Saddam and his accomplices on the UNSC rejected the attempt.

Three, Saddam leaving Iraq was not the only way, nor the way preferred by President Bush to forestall resumption of the Gulf War. To make the Gulf War ceasefire permanent and stay in power, Saddam only had to prove full compliance with the ceasefire terms that were purpose-designed to cure Iraq's Gulf War-established threat, which Iraq had agreed to do in 1991. But instead of choosing peace with Iraq's mandated compliance in his "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441), Saddam chose to resume the Gulf War by keeping Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441).


Duelfer:
So, before quickly concluding that you know Iraq was a huge avoidable mistake, take a moment to consider the circumstances at the time and whether a different decision would have been possible.
... I had the opportunity to provide my version of “lessons-learned” from Iraq for over 7000 new intelligence officers (mostly analysts) in the years since. It’s something I have spent many years considering and discussing with various participants—including Iraqis who by the accident of birth were in Saddam’s Iraq.

Yes, you should. First things first: Correcting the fundamental flaws in your own consideration of President Bush's decision requires that you step back and lay a proper foundation for the Iraq issue with the primary sources that define OIF's justification. The OIF FAQ (see https://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/p/oif-faq-guide.html) is purpose-designed to teach you how to do that.

Once you've clarified the Iraq issue for yourself, you need to go back to the "over 7000...intelligence officers" and "various participants—including Iraqis" whom you've evidently misinformed and clarify OIF's justification for them, too.


Duelfer:
It is also worth considering whether regime change could have been done differently. But that’s a separate series of questions.
... I stayed in touch with Iraq and Iraqis up to and during the invasion of 2003. I saw Iraqis I had known for years—sometimes at their homes, sometimes in detention. It was not pleasant. Saddam was removed, but…did it really need to be that bad afterwards?

It's important to remember that for any highly competitive endeavor, it's normal for an initial plan, once engaged, to face setbacks that compel adjustment. History shows that pattern is normal for military contests, no less than when competing against vicious unbounded opponents like Saddamists.

We know now that the initial post-war plan, which was valid based on what we knew before OIF, failed in part because Western analysts severely underestimated Saddam's radical sectarian turn, extreme corruption of Iraqi society, and deep domestic, regional, and global terrorism. Outsiders, including Iraqi expats and UN personnel like you who'd been to Iraq, failed to understand how depraved the Saddam regime had become.

The initial post-war plan failed because at first Saddamists were better at killing and terrorizing Iraqis than we were at protecting the Iraqi people per Public Law 105-338, UNSCR 1483 etc.. As a product of Saddam's distinctive governance, Saddamists entered the contest as the world's top experts at inflicting genocide and terrorism on the Iraqi people, and they zealously carried over their expertise to the terrorist insurgency against post-Saddam Iraq.

But setback and adjustment are normal in any kind of real competition, no less in military contests. American leaders and the US forces mandated to defend the Iraqi people adjusted to the Saddamists' vicious opening advantage in relatively short order.

So, "Did it really need to be that bad afterwards?"

An accurate and precise pre-war assessment of the extreme character of the Saddam regime's UNSCR 687 terrorism violations, including Saddam's "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with al Qaeda, and UNSCR 688 human rights violations might have helped.

Realistically, the solution is that the Iraqi regime change should have happened long before 2003, if not in Operation Desert Storm, then as soon as it became apparent that Saddam would not comply with Iraq's Gulf War ceasefire obligations. We should not have kept trying for over a decade(!) to convince a clearly intransigent Saddam to comply with the ceasefire terms as Iraq festered, all the while raising the cost and difficulty of regime change.

Knowing what we know now, the Iraqi regime change happened much later than it should have. But that's not President Bush's fault. It's mainly his father's fault. The lesson of Iraq is that a malignant cancer like the Saddam regime needs to be solved comprehensively as soon as possible. As is, it's better that the Iraqi regime change happened in 2003 than any later. The Saddam problem was already "far worse" (UN Special Rapporteur on Iraq, 18MAR04) than we knew, and it was only growing worse the longer we let it fester.


Duelfer:
I was also responsible for the Iraq Survey Group’s comprehensive report on Iraq WMD (so-called Duelfer Report) issued a month before the November 2004 presidential elections. That report has stood the test of time.

While the Iraq Survey Group is not technically a primary source of Operation Iraqi Freedom, as it's ex post to the President's determination for OIF, I cite the ISG report extensively and often as a 'chief corroborative source', more than I do many of OIF's primary sources.

That being said, the ISG report is not without fundamental flaws. Excerpt from the OIF FAQ retrospective #duelferreport section:

The whole ISG Duelfer report, including all 3 volumes, is worth reading. While doing so, it is critical for readers to take it upon themselves to apply the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) to the ISG findings because, although the Iraq Survey Group says it adhered to the UNSCR 687 standard, ISG fundamentally deviated from UNSCR 687 by inventing a distinction between WMD activities and "activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (ISG) that does not exist under the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441).

According to UNSCR 687, Iraqi "activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (ISG), such as the IIS "large covert procurement program ... for conventional weapons, WMD precursors, and dual-use technology" (ISG), were WMD activities. Yet ISG's inapposite arbitrary distinction between WMD activities and "activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (ISG) enabled OIF opponents to claim the Iraq Survey Group found Iraq WMD-free when in fact ISG's findings are rife with UNSCR 687 WMD violations.

As well as inapposite of UNSCR 687, the arbitrary distinction between WMD activities and "activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (ISG) is also impractical since the Iraq-induced "degradation" (ISG) of the "extensive, yet fragmentary and circumstantial, body of evidence suggesting that Saddam pursued a strategy to maintain a capability to return to WMD" (ISG) made it impossible for ISG to parse that distinction.


I hope you find this critique useful. I look forward to your response, and I invite you to review my work at https://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/. If you have questions about my work, please ask.

---------------
Comment:

Dr. [Mr.] Duelfer,

You're incorrect that "the Iraq WMD assessments were wrong" in terms of the US presidential determination for Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). The controlling law, policy, and precedent for the OIF decision plainly show the determination for enforcement with the Saddam regime pivoted on whether Iraq proved it complied and disarmed as mandated, not whether the US proved Iraq was armed as estimated.

I recommend to you (again), your fellow advocates for reviving responsible American leadership, and to the Trump administration, my OIF FAQ explanation that sets the record straight on the law and policy, fact justification of the Iraq intervention by synthesizing the mission's primary source authorities.

Contrary to your assertion that "the Iraq WMD assessments were wrong", in terms of the US presidential determination, the actual "reality" is that UNSCOM to UNMOVIC to the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) as well as non-armament fact findings, such as the Iraqi Perspectives Project (IPP) and UNCHR, "broadly" corroborate your assessment "that Iraq failed to comply with UNSCRs up to OIF" (ISG).

The legally prescribed and practically necessary determinative measurement for Saddam's WMD-related threat was not rooted in the intelligence estimates but rather the UNSCOM and UNMOVIC findings on Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441), inasmuch the WMD-related intelligence estimates were not themselves rooted in the UNSCR 687 inspections.

On law and fact, President Bush and the US (with Prime Minister Blair and the UK) demonstrably were right on Iraq. The OIF decision is a straightforward fact pattern with an exceptionally well developed, decade+ law, policy, precedent, fact record. Iraq's categorical "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire is confirmed by you and other fact-finding authorities.

Beyond the correct US presidential determination for OIF, the US-led, UN-mandated peace operations with Iraq were succeeding before President Obama's deviation.

At the dawn of the Arab Spring, the UN Security Council (on 15DEC10) and President Obama (on 19MAY11) benchmarked the historic opportunity to build a generational peace in the Middle East with the hard-won cornerstone where “In Iraq, we see the promise of a multiethnic, multisectarian democracy … poised to play a key role in the region if it continues its peaceful progress” (Obama).

However, the window to build a generational peace evident in 2010-2011 required American leadership to stay the course with Iraq and the Bush Freedom Agenda.

Instead, President Obama radically changed course with Iraq and dropped the Bush Freedom Agenda. Obama's deviant rationale has been based on the demonstrably false notion which you promote, that with Iraq, "Political leaders made decisions based on ... broadly wrong assessments of reality".

Your basic law-and-fact error, exploited by President Obama, has had a catastrophic ripple effect. OIF stigma — comprised largely of conjecture, distorted context, and readily debunked dis[mis]information — has been the keystone premise for President Obama's critical choices that sabotaged nascent post-Saddam Iraq and doomed the Syrian people by disqualifying American leadership of the free world at the very historical moment where the steadfast American leadership epitomized by President Bush with Iraq was most needed. Avid actors such as Iran and Russia have accepted Obama's effective invitation to fill the vacuum and alter the international order in their expected illiberal manner.

The 1990-2011 Iraq intervention, especially OIF and its peace operations, is paradigmatic as it embodied the principles of American leadership of the free world. As long as the stigmatization of the Iraq intervention prevails in domestic and international politics, your current advocacy for reviving responsible American leadership with Iraq, Iran, Syria, and indeed the rest of the world, will continue to be disqualified at the premise level of politics and policy.

The viability of your advocacy fundamentally depends upon you first de-stigmatizing the Iraq intervention. Before you can advocate on current events effectively, you must establish at the premise level of the politics that in principle and policy, President Bush and America were fundamentally right and by the same token, President Obama has been fundamentally wrong to deviate from President Bush with Iraq and the Freedom Agenda.

The following points are included in my OIF FAQ explanation. But as an introduction to setting the record straight on OIF's justification, note:

Iraq's guilt of UNSCR 687-proscribed armament was established by UNSCOM and decided by the UN Security Council. Upon the UNSCOM-established fact of Iraqi WMD, "the threat Iraq’s non-compliance with Council resolutions and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles poses to international peace and security" (UNSCR 1441) was presumed until Iraq proved it complied and disarmed as mandated. In other words, noncompliant Iraq was ipso facto a proscriptively armed threat irrespective of the intelligence estimates. The operative enforcement procedure for the Gulf War ceasefire, including the UNSCR 687 disarmament process, was built upon the burden of proof on Iraq. There was no operative burden of proof on the US, UK, and UN.

Therefore, the principal trigger for Operation Iraqi Freedom was not and could not be the intelligence estimates. By procedure, casus belli was primarily established by the 06MAR03 UNMOVIC report confirming Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" in "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire with the same operative enforcement procedure by which the 15DEC98 UNSCOM report triggered Operation Desert Fox in 1998.

The "assessments of reality" that established casus belli with Iraq from UNSCR 660 (1990) onward were the prescribed measurements of Iraq's compliance with the UNSCR 660 series, in particular Iraq's obligations under the Gulf War ceasefire pursuant to UNSCRs 687 and 688 and related resolutions.

The controlling law, policy, and precedent that defined the operative enforcement procedure plainly show that the moment that UNSCR 687 inspectors re-entered Iraq pursuant to UNSCR 1441, the intelligence estimates could not trigger enforcement to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (Public Law 105-235). Rather, the US-led, UN-mandated ceasefire enforcement with Iraq always pivoted on the prescribed measurement of Iraq's compliance with the "measures" mandated to satisfy "the need to be assured of Iraq's peaceful intentions [and] ... to secure peace and security in the area" (UNSCR 687).

Based on the determinative "assessments of reality" for the OIF decision, President Bush and Prime Minister Blair clearly were correct according to the operative context — eg, "The Security Council resolutions will be enforced -- the just demands of peace and security will be met -- or action will be unavoidable" (Bush at UNGA, 12SEP02), "Resolution 1441 gave Iraq one last chance, one last chance to come into compliance or to face serious consequences" (Powell at UNSC, 05FEB03), "ensure that Iraq abandons its strategy of delay, evasion and noncompliance and promptly and strictly complies with all relevant Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq" (Public Law 107-243), and "ensure full and immediate compliance by Iraq without conditions or restrictions with its obligations under resolution 687 (1991) and other relevant resolutions" (UNSCR 1441).

Contrary to your unfounded assertion that the OIF decision was based on "broadly wrong assessments of reality", the Saddam regime was evidentially in categorical breach of the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) for the Gulf War ceasefire in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441), especially with the disarmament mandates of UNSCR 687, terrorism mandates of UNSCR 687, and human rights mandates of UNSCR 688. [FYI, it's evident the pre-war assessments significantly under-estimated the Saddam regime's human rights abuses in breach of UNSCR 688 and "regional and global terrorism", including Saddam's "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with the al Qaeda network, in breach of UNSCR 687, which were also enforcement triggers.]

At the decision point for OIF upon UNMOVIC's 06MAR03 report, Saddam was far beyond the 'red line' with no intention of fully and immediately complying with the Gulf War ceasefire as was required to switch off the threat of regime change that enforced Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) . As you found, "the Iraqis never intended to meet the spirit of the UNSC’s resolutions" (ISG) per paragraphs 8 to 13 of UNSCR 687, let alone the spectrum of ceasefire mandates, especially on terrorism per UNSCR 687 and human rights per UNSCR 688.

... The assessment of reality is you are responsible for the current events and degraded US foreign policy that you protest.

You've used your preeminent reputation to validate the plainly false narrative of OIF that America's rivals — Russia and France chief among them — have employed to stigmatize the Iraq intervention and thereby disqualify the American leadership needed for current events.

For your current advocacy to be effective, it requires the re-normalization of the particular "strong horse" American leadership of the free world that manifested with OIF. Which first requires your mea culpa while you disabuse the myth, "Political leaders made decisions [for the Iraq intervention] based on ... broadly wrong assessments of reality".

Once you've set the record straight on OIF's law-and-fact justification at the premise level of our politics to de-stigmatize the Iraq intervention in order to re-qualify the OIF-embodied principles of American leadership in our policy, then — and only then — can your current advocacy hope to become viable.

Re-framing the discourse by establishing that President Bush and the US (with Prime Minister Blair and the UK) were right on Iraq — and by the same token that OIF critics, including yourself and President Obama, have been wrong — lays the foundation needed for the only real path for your current advocacy to succeed.

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Comment:

Mr. Duelfer,

Your premise that "Saddam didn’t have WMD" is clearly incorrect.

In fact, according to the operative definition or "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) for an Iraq WMD program set by paragraphs 8 to 13 of UNSCR 687 and related resolutions, the Iraq Survey Group -- you -- uncovered an active WMD program in Iraq.

In terms of ISG's affirmative findings, you reported, inter alia, "we have clear evidence of his [Saddam's] intent to resume WMD" with "preserved capability" that amounted to a ready chemical and biological weapon capability with an IIS undeclared covert "ideal, compartmented platform from which to continue CW agent R&D or small-scale production efforts", "secret biological work in the small IIS laboratories", "Iraq also possessed declarable equipment for chemical production, which it had not declared to the UN...it would have been possible for Iraq to assemble a CW production plant", and "The UN deemed Iraq’s accounting of its production and use of BW agent simulants...to be inadequate...the equipment used for their manufacture can also be quickly converted to make BW agent" (ISG). And, "until he was deposed in April 2003, Saddam’s conventional weapons and WMD-related procurement programs steadily grew in scale, variety, and efficiency" (ISG).

In addition, the WMD munitions confiscated by Operation Avarice outside of the ISG investigation reinforced your caveat that "ISG cannot discount the possibility that a few large caches of munitions remain to be discovered within Iraq" and "ISG cannot determine the fate of Iraq’s stocks of bulk BW agents...[which is] of particular concern, as they relate to the possibility of a retained BW capability".

In terms of the ISG non-findings that presumably underlie your misstatement "Saddam didn’t have WMD", you made clear in the ISG report's Transmittal Message, Scope Note, and throughout its various sections that severe practical limitations significantly handicapped the ISG investigation. Conclusions such as "it appears that Iraq, by the mid-1990s, was essentially free of militarily significant WMD stocks" (ISG) that are commonly valuated as unequivocal fact in political and scholarly treatments alike are in reality no better than heavily qualified guesses.

Or, as your predecessor David Kay cautioned the Senate Armed Services Committee on January 28, 2004: "I regret to say that I think at the end of the work of the [Iraq Survey Group] there's still going to be an unresolvable ambiguity about what happened. A lot of that traces to the failure on April 9 to establish immediately physical security in Iraq -- the unparalleled looting and destruction, a lot of which was directly intentional, designed by the security services to cover the tracks of the Iraq WMD program and their other programs as well, a lot of which was what we simply called Ali Baba looting. ... we're really not going to be able to prove beyond a truth the negatives and some of the positive conclusions that we're going to come to. There will be always unresolved ambiguity here."

The heavily qualified character of ISG's non-findings infers that absence of evidence in the ISG investigation is *not* evidence of absence, but rather evidence of Iraqi "denial and deception operations" (ISG) that in and of themselves violated the Gulf War ceasefire for casus belli.

It also infers that ISG's affirmative findings constitute a floor only, not a complete account of Saddam's WMD. ISG found many UNSCR 687 WMD violations. Yet what you found were just the scraps left over after Iraq rid presumably higher-value evidence of UNSCR 687-proscribed items and activities with "the unparalleled looting and destruction, a lot of which was directly intentional, designed by the security services to cover the tracks of the Iraq WMD program and their other programs as well" (Kay).

Properly understood, ISG's non-findings do not infer that missing WMD stocks and program elements did not exist or "Saddam didn’t have WMD". Rather, they infer that you were unable to account for them as mandated by UNSCR 687 due to the same Iraqi "denial and deception operations" (ISG) that denied the mandated account of Saddam's WMD to UNSCOM and UNMOVIC.

We're compelled by Iraq's UNSCR 707 violations to speculate about the "unparalleled" (Kay) mass of evidence that Saddam's agents successfully kept from you. At the same time, the Silberman-Robb WMD Commission, CIA WMD retrospective, and other influential sources are wrong to misinform the public by pretending the "unparalleled" (Kay) mass of missing evidence never existed at all.

Whatever was in the evidence "sanitized" (ISG) by Iraq, in terms of a floor, ISG demonstrated that Saddam covertly possessed at minimum the terrorist-level WMD capability that chiefly concerned Presidents Clinton and Bush, if not a ready battlefield-level WMD capability.

In concert with your confirmation of a ready Iraqi terrorist-level WMD capability, the Iraqi Perspectives Project (the ISG-equivalent investigation of Saddam's terrorism) showed that Saddam's UNSCR 687 terrorism violations (which also violated the UNSCR 949 aggression and UNSCR 688 humanitarian mandates) were significantly underestimated by pre-war analysts, including notably Saddam's "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with al Qaeda.

As a threat, Saddam didn't need to partner with bin Laden to stealthily deploy Iraq's ready terrorist-level WMD capability anywhere in the Middle East and the world. Saddam had developed a world-leading terror "cartel" (IPP) of his own, in which bin Laden's terrorists were in effect simultaneously Saddam's terrorists.

Worse, IPP's findings show that our intelligence agencies had significantly underestimated Saddam's terrorism at the same time that, as ISG's findings show, our intelligence agencies had failed to track Saddam's undeclared covert ready terrorist-level WMD capability.

Your IPP counterpart, Jim Lacey concluded when he weighed IPP and ISG's findings together, "Given the evidence, it appears that we removed Saddam’s regime not a moment too soon" (National Review, 14SEP11).

Again, your premise "Saddam didn’t have WMD" is clearly incorrect according to the operative definition or "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) for an Iraq WMD program.

The upcoming landmark 20th anniversary of Operation Iraqi Freedom is a distinctive opportunity for you to set the record straight on the UNSCR 687 disarmament element of OIF's justification.

Your special stature as an UNSCOM and Iraq Survey Group leader means that it's essential that you in particular correct the prevalent misconception "Saddam didn’t have WMD" (Duelfer) to the public, especially anywhere it has metastasized with compounding harmful consequences. For example, the Silberman-Robb WMD Commission's widely influential analysis is corrupted at foundation by its false core premise, "In retrospect, as found by the ISG, it is clear that the [Iraqi WMD] stockpiles and programs were not there to be found", which contradicts that UNMOVIC and ISG's findings are rife with UNSCR 687 WMD violations and ISG's non-findings are heavily qualified.

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Comment ("Your comment is awaiting moderation"):

Mr. Duelfer,

The law-and-fact record belies your belief that "Worse were the US decisions to disband the army and condemn Baathists to having no future in Iraq."

First, the de-Ba'athification process simply carried forward the standing human rights policy for Iraq, which is referenced in the UNSCR 1483, "Affirming the need for accountability for crimes and atrocities committed by the previous Iraqi regime".

Second, I suggest you see this clarification of the de-Ba'athification process and the CPA decision to build anew rather than reconstitute Saddam's security forces.

Third, knowing what we know now, de-Ba'athification was necessary. The UN Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR) post-war assessment of Saddam's Iraq found that the Saddam regime's "systematic, widespread and extremely grave violations of human rights and of international humanitarian law by the Government of Iraq, resulting in an all-pervasive repression and oppression sustained by broad-based discrimination and widespread terror" (19APR02) — already marked at the far end of the scale before the 2003 regime change — in fact "were far worse than originally reported to the Special Rapporteur in the past" (18-19MAR04). In other words, the Saddam regime's human rights violations were off the charts. As such, immediately incorporating Saddam's security forces, besides the practical obstacles of reconstituting them, would have been a diametric contradiction of the US-led, UN-mandated coalition's longstanding human-rights policies for Iraq per UNSCRs 688, 1483, etc, that were key components of the UNSCR 660-series compliance enforcement and set the guiding parameters for the occupation and peace operations.

In the same vein, we also know now that pre-OIF analysis vastly underestimated Saddam's "regional and global terrorism" wherein "[t]he predominant targets of Iraqi state terror operations were Iraqi citizens, both inside and outside of Iraq" (Iraqi Perspectives Project). IPP found Saddam's terrorism included "considerable operational overlap" with the al Qaeda network, which also carried forward to the terrorist insurgency. All of which of course breached the Gulf War ceasefire per UNSCRs 687 and 688 to add to OIF's casus belli on top of the UNMOVIC findings that by the operative procedure confirmed Iraq's "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) to trigger the OIF decision.

A case in point for the CPA's sensible decision to build anew rather than reconstitute Saddam's security forces is the 2003 assassination of UN envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello. Note that Vieira opted to retain the guards assigned by the Saddam regime in lieu of American military protection, a mistake that likely cost him and his team members their lives. I can imagine Vieira was swayed to his fatal choice by appeals like the April 2003 appeals described in your post.

Could the de-Ba'athification have been better calibrated and undertaken? Of course. But preemptive perfection in any complex endeavor is not the norm. Adjustment, including with necessary measures like de-Ba'athification, is normal.

Moreover, knowing what we know now, it's likely that the terrorist insurgency was principally a premeditated guerilla adaptation of Saddam's ceasefire-breaching, vastly underestimated domestic "widespread terror" (UNCHR) and "regional and global terrorism" (IPP) rather than a spontaneous post-war reaction to an over-broad de-Ba'athification process.

*** In nations, as well as in persons, curing an extreme malignant cancer is hard, even in the rare instance that doctors do everything right. Cancers are known to fight back. Even without understanding the far depths that Saddam had corrupted Iraqi society and the far extent of the terrorist danger he posed, the international community understood long before OIF that curing Iraq would be a generational endeavor. Yet in relatively short order, despite the zealous efforts of vicious enemies aided by cruel accomplices, the US-led peace operations responded resolutely to post-war setbacks with necessary adjustments on track with a normal pattern of competition.

If you're sincere about advocating your prescription for "Iraq – avoiding the next insurgency", then you must delineate the right track and the wrong track with Iraq. The wrong track is President Obama's disastrous, profoundly inhumane, radical course deviation that prematurely disengaged the vital US-led peace operations from Iraq. The keystone premise for Obama's deviation is the stigmatization of the Iraq intervention, for which you're complicit and which has been carried forward by the Trump administration. Therefore, to return the US to the right track with Iraq according to your advocacy, you must clarify in the politics that President Bush's decision on Iraq was correct in the first place and the US-led peace operations with Iraq were succeeding until President Obama deviated US policy onto the wrong track.

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Comment:

Mr. Duelfer,

Your equivalence of US decisions regarding Iraq's Saddam and north Korea's Kim is inapposite in that US policy on Saddam was based on the longstanding, well established, clearly spelled out UNSCR 660-series compliance enforcement whose "measures acting under Chapter VII of the Charter" (UNSCR 687) composed the purpose-designed "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) which the "Government of Iraq", eg, the Saddam regime, was mandated to fulfill in order to satisfy "the need to be assured of Iraq's peaceful intentions in the light of its unlawful invasion and occupation of Kuwait" (UNSCR 687).

As such, the operative context for US decisions regarding Saddam was founded on "Recognizing the threat Iraq’s non-compliance with Council resolutions and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles poses to international peace and security" (UNSCR 1441). The set condition meant Saddam's threat, including his WMD-related threat, was measured by Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441) per the manifold ceasefire terms purpose-designed to resolve Saddam's Gulf War-established manifold threat. The continuing "threat [of] Iraq's non-compliance with Council resolutions" (UNSCR 1441) related to aggression (UNSCR 949), WMD and conventional armament (UNSCR 687), terrorism (UNSCR 687), and repression (UNSCR 688). At the decision point for OIF, the WMD-related "threat [of] Iraq's non-compliance" (UNSCR 1441) was confirmed by UNMOVIC's measurement of "about 100 unresolved disarmament issues" for casus belli. Today, with corroboration of Iraq's noncompliance piled high from the UNSCR 1441 inspections and post-war ISG, IPP, IIC, and UNCHR investigations — eg, "[i]n addition to preserved capability, we have clear evidence of his [Saddam's] intent to resume WMD" (ISG), "the Saddam regime regarded inspiring, sponsoring, directing, and executing acts of terrorism as an element of state power" (IPP), and "[t]he new evidence, particularly that of eyewitnesses, added another dimension to the systematic crimes of the former regime, revealing unparalleled cruelty" (UNCHR) — Saddam's threatening breach of the Gulf War ceasefire can now be seen as categorical.

The UNSCR 660-series compliance enforcement since 1990 meant US leaders were not positioned to guess at Saddam's motivations via diplomacy near or far. Making decisions regarding Saddam as you would have had US leaders make them would have been remiss since Saddam's "intentions" (UNSCR 687) were objectively assessed according to the fact measurement of Iraq's mandated compliance in the operative context of "the threat Iraq’s non-compliance with Council resolutions ... poses to international peace and security" (UNSCR 1441). As such, President Bush's decision on Iraq responded to the mandated measurement of Saddam's "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) in good faith with the decade+ controlling law, policy, and precedent that defined the operative enforcement procedure for the Gulf War ceasefire mandates.

When a recidivist convicted manifold felon, who for some reason has been allowed to fester in society, continually, categorically, and flagrantly violates his terms of probation, including in his "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441), with escalating intransigence, threat, and harm until lesser enforcement measures have been exhausted and the compliance enforcement is on the verge of defeat, there's no burden on the compliance enforcement authority to guess at the felon's motivations on top of the felon's evidential "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) in order to impose the originally suspended sentence. President HW Bush, 27FEB91: "Iraq must comply fully with all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions. ... If Iraq violates these terms, coalition forces will be free to resume military operations."

As far as I know, there isn't a clear-cut compliance test for Kim's motivations comparable to the Gulf War ceasefire mandates "Determined to secure full compliance with its [UNSC] decisions, Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations" (UNSCR 1441) by which US leaders objectively measured Saddam's "intentions" (UNSCR 687). There ought to be a comparable compliance test that can ensure the US decision on north Korea's Kim will be as plainly correct as the US decision on Iraq's Saddam. Perhaps if the Iraq intervention is de-stigmatized and publicly upheld, while Saddam's accomplices who've obfuscated the actual why of the Iraq intervention are publicly discredited, then a comparable compliance test can be effectuated for north Korea's Kim.

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Comment:

Dr. [Mr.] Duelfer,

Last week on Twitter (original tweet was July 6), @BrunoTertrais and @mraillet (Michel Miraillet) claimed that there is no evidence France was complicit in Saddam’s breach of the Gulf War ceasefire involving the Oil for Food scandal and UNSCR 687-proscribed procurement. Mr. Miraillet claimed insider diplomatic knowledge that UNSCOM found no evidence of French suppliers among Iraq’s WMD-related items. I cited the Regime Finance and Procurement section of the ISG report. They dismissed it out of hand. Mr. Tertrais says he’s a longtime friend of yours; I suggested he should ask you about French complicity in the Oil for Food scandal and UNSCR 687-proscribed procurement.

I doubt Mr. Tertrais will actually reach out to you over a Twitter argument. Nonetheless, what do you think of their denials of French complicity in Saddam’s breach of the Gulf War ceasefire?

...

Dr. [Mr.] Duelfer,

Thank you.

I don’t have a paper copy or paginated electronic copy of the ISG report. I refer to the on-line version of the ISG report at https://www.cia.gov/library/reports/general-reports-1/iraq_wmd_2004/, which isn’t paginated as such, so I can’t match pages 93 and 111 to content. Section title and key word to search should work.

Since the supplier data isn’t public, Mr. Miraillet had the advantage of me when he said UNSCOM found no WMD-related materials of French origin. As a layman without his access to the subject material, I could only retort on that count with the 2nd-hand report at http://www.iraqwatch.org/suppliers/Iraq-oped-nyt-2003.htm:
The [supplier] data was given to United Nations inspectors in the late 1990’s, and was reconfirmed in Iraq’s 12,000-page declaration last fall. But the statistical material on which it is based remained confidential until recently.
The data reveals that firms in Germany and France outstripped all others in selling the most important thing — specialized chemical-industry equipment that is particularly useful for producing poison gas. Without this equipment, none of the other imports would have been of much use.
I mainly cited to the suspect Iraqi-French diplomacy and, related, UNSCR 687-proscribed conventional and WMD-related procurement activity you described in the ISG report. I was particularly offended that France would trade anti-aircraft items to the Saddam regime in contravention of UNSCR 687 despite that American and allied craft enforced the no-fly zones pursuant to UNSCR 688 under threat of Iraqi anti-aircraft fire.

My understanding of French complicity with Saddam’s noncompliance, the casus belli for OIF, is grounded in France’s opposition since the mid-1990s to the “hyperpower” US-led enforcement of the terms of the Gulf War ceasefire that was carried forward from Operation Desert Fox to Operation Iraqi Freedom. As you have explained, the opposition by France, Russia, and others to the US-led enforcement of Iraq’s mandated compliance factored prominently in Saddam’s calculation for declining to comply as mandated with the UNSCR 660 series, including and especially UNSCRs 687 and 688.

I was moved to respond on Twitter because your friends and Ambassador Gerard Araud (who wrote the original tweet) were derisive of President Bush’s decision for OIF, and I was dissatisfied with Professor Eliot Cohen’s retort. The argument took on a different light when I clarified the casus belli was the Saddam regime’s evidential categorical breach of the Gulf War ceasefire and spotlighted French complicity with Saddam’s noncompliance which triggered enforcement with OIF.

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Comment:

Mr. Duelfer,

For your information and review, this link goes to my criticism of Jon Schwarz's 10APR15 article in The Intercept, "Twelve Years Later, US Media Still Can’t Get Iraqi WMD Story Right", which quotes you yet is based on stark misrepresentation of Iraq Survey Group findings: https://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/p/miscellaneous.html#schwarztheintercept.

Set aside Schwarz's fundamental misrepresentation of ISG findings about UNSCOM/UNMOVIC's actual control over the al Muthanna site and the actual effect of Saddam's order to cooperate with the UNSCR 1441 inspections. I was struck by your insistence, as quoted by Schwarz, that Saddam didn't know about the WMD munitions confiscated by Operation Avarice, because that speculation isn't backed up by your ISG findings. Contrary to Schwarz's quote of you, ISG findings emphasize that Iraq's "denial and deception operations" and "concealment and deception activities" continued up to and even beyond the regime change. By the same token, ISG's failure to uncover WMD stocks is heavily qualified in the ISG report by the substantial limitations of the ISG investigation, e.g., Saddam's agents systematically rid evidence practically unfettered even in the midst of the ISG investigation.

P.S. Comments no longer show on your blog, so please respond by e-mail. Or show the comments again.



Also see Decision Points suggests President Bush has not read key fact findings on Iraq carefully and Criticisms and suggestions for "International Law and the War in Iraq" (John Yoo, 2003).

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Critique of the Iraq portion of chapter one of Anne Pierce's A Perilous Path

PREFACE: Political scientist Anne Pierce is the author of A Perilous Path: The Foreign Policy Legacy of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John Kerry. I critiqued her treatment of the Iraq issue in chapter one.



Dr. Pierce,

With President Truman as your standard for American leadership of the free world, it’s worth noting that the Korean War is the usual analog for Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). You’re right to emphasize hard-earned lessons from the 20th century. Past is prologue. However, although they’re important background, they’re not the relevant premise for current events.

Your present tack of reiterating WW2 and Cold War lessons isn’t sufficient by itself to make a difference in the politics because the piece of the past that’s prologue for current events is OIF, not WW2 and the Cold War. The 1990-2011 Iraq intervention was paradigmatic for post-Cold War American leadership of the free world. The stigmatization of OIF has been regressive for American leadership across the board.

The status quo ante to reach for is the American leadership of 2007-2008, not 1947-1948.

Re-normalizing American leadership of the free world requires discrediting Obama’s keystone premise — OIF stigma — and replacing it with the operative premise that Bush and the US were right on Iraq, with all that implies for re-orienting American leadership.

For your advocacy to penetrate, it requires re-laying the foundation of the current discourse by de-stigmatizing the Iraq intervention at the premise level. Apply the lessons of WW2 and the Cold War to setting the record straight on OIF’s justification, and then upon the reset foundation, methodically reassess the path-setting controversies of OIF. Then you’ll be able to tackle current issues in the re-framed political discourse.

The format for my response takes Iraq-related quotes from chapter one of A Perilous Path and interjects my comments and topical references.

Pierce:
It must be stipulated that America’s greatest successes came when its influence was used, but was not misused, overused, unwisely used.
_I assess whether “influence was used, but was not misused, overused, unwisely used” according to, ‘What’s the policy?’ and ‘Are means sufficiently matched to the policy’s ends?’.

Regarding Iraq, the 1st question is well answered in the HW Bush, Clinton, and Bush administration policy.

For the 2nd question, the answer is the cost for OIF was driven high because President Bush’s predecessors, especially his father, did not sufficiently match means (influence) to the policy ends with Iraq, including with Operation Desert Storm. Presidents HW Bush and Clinton kicked the can until the Iraq intervention reached its breaking point and coda with OIF.

Of the four US presidents who were tasked to enforce the UNSCR 660 series with Iraq, President Bush stands out as the most ethical.

These key UNSCRs, US laws, and US presidential policy statements are listed in chronological order:
United Nations Security Council Resolutions on Iraq, 1990-2002:
https://web.archive.org/web/20140701184550/http://www.fas.org/news/un/iraq/sres/index.html
Public Law 102-1, Authorization for Use of United States Armed Forces pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 678, 14JAN91:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/STATUTE-105/pdf/STATUTE-105-Pg3.pdf
Section 1095 (Iraq and the Requirements of Security Council Resolution 687) and Section 1096 (Iraq and the Requirements of Security Council Resolution 688) of Public Law 102-190 are addenda to Public Law 102-1, 05DEC91:
http://www.lawandfreedom.com/site/historical/PL102-190.pdf
President HW Bush letter to Congressional Leaders reporting on Iraq's compliance with United Nations Security Council resolutions, 19JAN93:
http://bush41library.tamu.edu/archives/public-papers/5191
Secretary of State Albright speech on President Clinton’s 2nd term policy on Iraq, 26MAR97:
https://web.archive.org/web/20140701184550/http://fas.org/news/iraq/1997/03/bmd970327b.htm
Public Law 105-235, Iraqi Breach of International Obligations, 14AUG98:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-105publ235/pdf/PLAW-105publ235.pdf
President Clinton letter to Congress on the legal authority for Operation Desert Fox, 18DEC98:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1998/12/1998-12-18-text-of-a-letter-from-president-on-iraq.html
President Bush remarks to the United Nations General Assembly, 12SEP02:
http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2002/09/20020912-1.html
Public Law 107-243, Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002, 16OCT02:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-107publ243/pdf/PLAW-107publ243.pdf
President Bush letter to Congress on the determination and legal authority for Operation Iraqi Freedom, 18MAR03:
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CDOC-108hdoc50/pdf/CDOC-108hdoc50.pdf


Pierce:
I am not arguing for or against the Iraq War, and it should be clear that I take the war's unforeseen consequences very seriously.
_If you won’t argue that the Iraq War was justified, then you can’t effectively advocate for revival of American leadership of the free world whose principles manifested with the Iraq intervention. OIF and its peace operations especially embodied the principles you advocate.

OIF FAQ: Was Operation Iraqi Freedom a strategic blunder or a strategic victory:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#blunderorvictory


Pierce:
Although many focused on the "preemptive"' character of the Iraq War ... Still, in the case of Iraq, we made war, which is very different from joining a war in progress.
_Saddam was a terrorist; thus, the preemptive character came from the counter-terrorism element of OIF’s casus belli.

That being said, the legal basis for OIF was enforcement responding to Iraq’s breach of ceasefire, not preemption. We didn’t 'make war' with Iraq in 2003 anymore than we made war with Iraq in 1998 and with every other invasive action that enforced Iraq’s compliance with the Gulf War ceasefire. Iraq’s “material breach” (UNSCR 1441) of the ceasefire resumed the Gulf War, which had only been suspended in 1991 contingent on Iraq’s mandated compliance.

E-International Relations: The Myth of George W. Bush’s Foreign Policy Revolution by Chin-Kuei Tsui, 02DEC12:
http://www.e-ir.info/2012/12/02/the-myth-of-george-w-bushs-foreign-policy-revolution-reagan-clinton-and-the-continuity-of-the-war-on-terror/
OIF FAQ: Was Operation Iraqi Freedom legal:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#wasOIFlegal


Pierce:
The Iraqi president was considered to be exceptionally inhumane and aggressive — even by twentieth-century standards.
Rice notes his "established pattern of recklessness, particularly in failing to anticipate the international community's strong response to his 1990 invasion of Kuwait..."
... Despite the later critical take on the Bush administration's fearful assessment of Saddam Hussein…
_The Bush administration’s “fearful assessment” was rooted in standing policy. The Gulf War ceasefire was purposed to satisfy "the need to be assured of Iraq's peaceful intentions [and] ... to secure peace and security in the area" (UNSCR 687). According to UNSCR 688, Saddam's human-rights violations "threaten[ed] international peace and security in the region". UNSCR 1441 reiterated "the threat Iraq’s non-compliance with Council resolutions and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles poses to international peace and security".

In other words, there was no burden on the US and UN to prove Iraq was a threat. Iraq’s threat, established with the Gulf War, was the operative premise of the Gulf War ceasefire, whereupon the burden was on Saddam to prove Iraq’s “peaceful intentions”. Assessing Iraq’s threat wasn’t guesswork. It was objectively measured by Iraq’s compliance. Noncompliant Iraq was ipso facto a threat. A presidential dismissal of Saddam’s threat absent the mandated compliance and disarmament would have been an irresponsible contravention of the Gulf War ceasefire.

OIF FAQ: Did Iraq failing its compliance test justify the regime change:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#wasregimechangejustified


Pierce:
As Professor Frank Harvey shows, Bill Clinton and Al Gore were among the most concerned about Hussein's excesses and potential to do harm.
_Bush carried forward Clinton’s case and enforcement procedure versus Saddam. The Clinton administration was responsible for enforcing the same Gulf War ceasefire that they handed off to the Bush administration and thus upheld the same policy on Saddam’s threat.

President Clinton announcement of Operation Desert Fox, 16DEC98:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1998/12/1998-12-16-president-statement-on-iraq-air-strike.html


Pierce:
As one example: The idea that "Bush lied" in order to force America to war is itself a distortion. The administration declassified pieces of intelligence in order to build the case for presenting Iraq with an ultimatum. Part of the evidence turned out to be exaggerated, while another part turned out to be based on the misleading testimony of a terrorist. The assumption that Iraq had an active WMD program turned out to be wrong...
_ Your conception of the WMD issue is also distorted. Iraq’s WMD-related “material breach” (UNSCR 1441) of UNSCR 687 was established by UNSCOM, decided by UNSC, confirmed by UNMOVIC which triggered OIF, and corroborated by ISG. Saddam was far beyond the ‘red line’ on WMD-related matters – with a confirmed active program.

There was no burden on the US and UN “to build the case for presenting Iraq with an ultimatum”. There was no obligation to present pre-war intelligence or demonstrate Iraqi WMD, let alone prove Iraq was armed as estimated. Iraq’s guilt of proscribed armament was established. The burden was on Iraq to cure its guilt by proving it was compliant and disarmed as mandated. The decision for enforcement and threat assessment of Iraq’s “continued violations of its obligations” (UNSCR 1441) were keyed in on the prescribed measurement of Iraq’s compliance and disarmament.

The “ultimatum” for Iraq was self-induced: Iraq’s categorical failure to comply and disarm as mandated. The pre-war intelligence estimates did not and could not trigger OIF. By procedure, the 06MAR03 UNMOVIC report of “about 100 unresolved disarmament issues” triggered OIF, like the 15DEC98 UNSCOM report triggered Operation Desert Fox in 1998.

UNMOVIC Clusters document: Unresolved Disarmament Issues Iraq’s Proscribed Weapons Programmes 6 March 2003:
http://www.un.org/depts/unmovic/new/documents/cluster_document.pdf
OIF FAQ: Did Bush lie his way to war with Iraq – note parts 5-7:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#didBushlie
10th anniversary of OIF post: criticism and explanation of Bush officials’ error of presentation with the pre-war intelligence:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#intelnotevidence


Pierce:
Although not in itself a reason for America's ultimate decision to go to war, there was wide concern regarding the regime's extreme cruelty to the Iraqi people and Saddam Hussein's expansionist thirst for power.
_Incorrect. Both reasons were triggers for OIF. Enforcing the humanitarian mandates of UNSCR 688 was always a priority for the US. UNSCRs 688 and 949 were specified with UNSCR 687 in PL 107-243, which mandated the President to enforce Iraq’s full compliance with all the UNSCR 660 series. Saddam was evidentially in breach across the board, including UNSCRs 687, 688, and 949.

While UNSCR 1441 was focused on paragraphs 8 to 13 of UNSCR 687, the 2002 resolution didn’t switch off the rest of the UNSCR 660 series. The WMD-related disarmament was merely the 1st step for “full and immediate compliance by Iraq without conditions or restrictions with its obligations” (UNSCR 1441). In 2002-2003, Saddam again, and for the last time, failed to comply with even the 1st step – a total verified declaration of Iraq’s entire WMD program — of the 1st step required to switch off enforcement.

President HW Bush remarks on assistance for Iraqi refugees and a news conference, 16APR91:
http://bush41library.tamu.edu/archives/public-papers/2882
10th anniversary of OIF post: a listing of UNSCR 688-related law and policy:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#unscr688
Explaining the grounds for Operation Iraqi Freedom to a human rights law professor:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2015/12/explaining-the-grounds-for-operation-iraqi-freedom-to-a-law-professor.html


Pierce:
After 9/11, the Bush administration tried to forge foreign policy that combined defense strategy with the advocacy of universal democratic principles.
_ Bush didn’t try to forge that kind of foreign policy with Iraq. He didn’t need to. Bush inherited the combination of “defense strategy with the advocacy of universal democratic principles” that characterized the Iraq intervention, especially OIF and its peace operations. By the time Bush took office, the Gulf War ceasefire enforcement was a decade old. The law, policy, and precedent that controlled the OIF decision and set the guideposts for the peace operations were well mature.

Joint statement by Vice President Gore and leaders of the Iraqi National Congress, 26JUN00:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/2000/06/2000-06-26-joint-statement-by-vp-and-leaders-of-iraqi-national-congress.html
OIF FAQ: The reasons seemed to change — was Operation Iraqi Freedom about WMD or democracy:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#whatOIFabout
10th anniversary of OIF post: foundational legal documents for the OIF peace operations:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#law


Pierce:
[Clinton] expressed particular outrage and disdain for Iraq's oppressive, WMD-producing regime, even going so far as to express the opinion that Saddam would eventually have to be "forced out."
_That was more than an opinion. It was US law and policy. Within the scope of enforcing Iraq’s mandated compliance, regime change had been active US policy since May 1991 at the latest and implicit in the multifaceted UNSCR 688 enforcement since April 1991. The regime change policy begun under HW Bush progressed under Clinton. The statutory codification with PL 105-338 (Iraq Liberation Act of 1998) evolved from the maturation of the law and policy on Iraqi regime change.

National Security Advisor Scowcroft response to Congressman Murtha's letter on Iraq, 14NOV91:
https://bush41library.tamu.edu/files/persian-gulf/41-CO072-287965ss-365241/41-co072-302096-2.pdf
Los Angeles Times: Hussein Torpedoed CIA Plot Against Him, Officials Say, 08SEP96:
http://articles.latimes.com/1996-09-08/news/mn-41835_1_king-hussein
President Clinton letter to Congress on Iraq's compliance, 08MAY97:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1997/05/1997-05-08-president-letter-on-activities-re-iraq.html


Pierce:
Although Iraq was not connected with the 9/11 terrorists, notorious terrorists had been harbored in the country.
_Paragraph 32 of UNSCR 687 didn't require an Iraqi connection to 9/11 or a link to al Qaeda. Saddam’s terrorism in its own right was at least on par with al Qaeda. That being said, Saddam's terrorism included a degree of “considerable operational overlap” (IPP) with the al Qaeda network that apparently was unknown to US officials.

Pre-OIF conception of Saddam’s terrorism was already sufficient to make it a principal element of the OIF casus belli, yet it appears pre-war intelligence analysis significantly under-estimated Saddam’s terrorism. Which helps to explain why the terrorist insurgency initially caught the US off guard. Contra the “Camp Bucca” narrative, the terrorist insurgency wasn’t based on a sectarian spontaneous uprising. Rather, it was based on the strategic conversion of Saddam’s terrorism to guerilla operations.

US Joint Forces Command Iraqi Perspectives Project: Saddam and Terrorism: Emerging Insights from Captured Iraqi Documents, November 2007:
http://fas.org/irp/eprint/iraqi/
Kyle W. Orton: A Myth Revisited: “Saddam Hussein Had No Connection To Al-Qaeda”, 21JUN15:
https://kyleorton1991.wordpress.com/2015/06/21/a-myth-revisited-saddam-hussein-had-no-connection-to-al-qaeda/
10th anniversary of OIF post: clarification of the link between 9/11 and OIF:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#911


Pierce:
The terrorist attacks brought about hypervigilance regarding potential threats, and exponentially increased the seriousness with which those threats were seen. It wasn't just WMD that concerned policymakers; it was WMD in the hands of fanatics and the fact that traditional strategies of deterrence didn't work with fanatics.
_You’re correct that the 9/11 attacks ”increased the seriousness with which those threats were seen”. However, the terrorism-WMD threat was already established as a priority by the Clinton administration with particular concern over the relationship between Saddam and the al Qaeda network.

President Clinton address to Joint Chiefs of Staff and Pentagon staff, 17FEB98:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1998/02/1998-02-17-president-remarks-on-iraq-to-pentagon-personnel.html
Presidential Decision Directive/NSC-39, 21JUN95:
http://fas.org/irp/offdocs/pdd39.htm
9-11 Commission: Statement of William S. Cohen to The National Commission On Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States March 23, 2004:
http://www.9-11commission.gov/hearings/hearing8/cohen_statement.pdf


Pierce:
But what was striking during the Bush years was the exclusive focus of numerous Democratic Party leaders on America's own faults and America's own setbacks combined with their whitewashing of the faults and setbacks of America's enemies.
… Bush's domestic critics portrayed the president as a cowboy extremist who was completely out of touch with the intelligent class in his assessment of Saddam Hussein's Iraq and in his decision to issue the ultimatum that led to war.
_What was striking was that Democratic leaders, including several who had worked on the Gulf War ceasefire enforcement under Clinton, attacked Bush by adapting the disinformation that they had confronted when foreign rivals had used it against Clinton’s Iraq enforcement, despite that President Bush faithfully carried forward President Clinton’s case and enforcement procedure versus Saddam. The same disinfo coming from American leaders, amplified by media partisans, inflicted far more damage to the credibility of American leadership than the original Iraqi, Russian, and French propaganda.

A problem of definition in Iraq: regarding the foreign opposition to the US-led Gulf War ceasefire enforcement:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2012/05/problem-of-definition-in-iraq.html#hyperpower
OIF FAQ: Why did resolution of the Saddam problem require a threat of regime change:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#whyregimechange
OIF FAQ: Did Bush allow enough time for the inspections:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#inspectionsenoughtime


Pierce:
As we shall see, however, there was far too little calculation about the effect of the Iraq War upon Iran. ... The United States also failed to predict the reaction of Syria.
_Perhaps. US troops didn’t stay in Iraq following major combat operations because neighborly interference wasn’t anticipated.

The second-order problem of Iran and Syria invading post-Saddam Iraq doesn’t change that the proximate Saddam problem had come to a head by 2001 and compelled a solution.

The alternative to OIF was overtly or passively allowing an Obama-type course-setting failure of American leadership by which an unreconstructed, categorically noncompliant, ambitious Saddam who was evidently rearming, a terrorist, and a tyrant broke free of the US-enforced Gulf War ceasefire. The US law and policy enforcing the Gulf War ceasefire didn’t allow for that, and especially after 9/11, Bush was too dutiful as President to allow it to happen.

OIF FAQ: Why did Bush leave the ‘containment’ (status quo):
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#whyleavecontainment
OIF FAQ: Why not free a noncompliant Saddam:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html#whynotfreeSaddam


Pierce:
US policy mistakes — foremost among them the very consequential failure to reach out to defeated Sunnis, or to prepare for an insurgency, or to give adequate attention to post-invasion stability operations — would contribute to a reversal of US gains.
_It’s not true the US didn’t reach out to Sunnis. The US constantly reached out to the Sunni community. The Sunnis miscalculated by not buying in earlier than they did, possibly because of US domestic OIF opponents who manufactured the perception that the US would irresponsibly disengage like Obama later did.

OIF wasn’t the first instance in military history that an enemy managed to blow up a Plan A and compel adjustment. The OIF Surge wasn’t the first instance where the US military made the adjustment needed to win following catastrophic setback. In the zealous competitions of war and peace, the US has usually won with adjustment rather than perfection.

The planning for the peace operations (PO) was extensive. The notion that the US did not plan for the PO seems based on a misinterpretation of the initial "light footprint" post-war plan which was intended to, one, avoid a WW2-type "heavy footprint" military-centered occupation and, two, feature the international community in the nation-building of post-Saddam Iraq. The initial post-war plan assigned the military a support role tasked to "secure access" and facilitate the collaboration of civilian GOs and IOs, and under their umbrella, NGOs, who would work with the Iraqis on the bulk of nation-building tasks.

However, the military failed to "secure access" versus the terrorist insurgency. With the necessary foundation of security and stability denied, the rest of the initial post-war plan was shattered. The civilian GOs, IOs, and NGOs were severely restricted or run out of Iraq altogether, and their Iraqi nation-building partners were terrorized. The military was forced to shift drastically from its initially assigned limited post-war support role to the lead PO role and take on the bulk of nation-building tasks dropped by terrorized civilians. As such, what's often characterized incorrectly as a lack of post-war planning by the US was really the terrorist insurgency successfully breaking the initial "light footprint" PO plan, which compelled a new "heavy footprint" military-centered PO plan to be developed on the fly.

Bush White House: Briefing on humanitarian reconstruction issues, 24FEB03 (framework of the initial post-war plan):
http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2003/02/20030224-11.html
Feith (War and Decision): Selected documents on Post-War Planning for Iraq, 2008:
https://web.archive.org/web/20111011170445/http://www.waranddecision.com/misconceptions/selected-documents-on-post-war-planning-for-iraq
10th anniversary of OIF post: discussion of the failure of the initial post-war plan from a policy and military perspective:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#postwar


Pierce:
There is a reason that President George W. Bush’s Axis of Evil speech (which could rightly be criticized as inaccurate given that the three powers were not clearly aligned) drew ridicule.
_If I recall correctly, the Axis of Evil speech was about illicit armament in the context of their malfeasant positions in the world order rather than a formal trilateral alliance. The Iraq Survey Group confirmed that Iran and north Korea were illicitly cooperating with Iraq in violating sanctions. Add the AQ Khan network and Iran’s prolific arms relationship with north Korea. Unless I’ve forgotten that he claimed the three nations were in a formal trilateral alliance, Bush was essentially correct about their “axis” of illicit activities, including armament activity.

[Note: The reference for "President George W. Bush’s Axis of Evil speech" is the 2002 State of the Union address, 29JAN02. While Bush used the phrase "axis of evil", he warned about north Korea, Iran, and Iraq separately and did not characterize an alliance between the three nations. In fact, the "axis" nations were (and in the case of Iran and north Korea are) cooperating in various illicit armament activities.]

Iraq Survey Group: Regime Finance and Procurement:
https://www.cia.gov/library/reports/general-reports-1/iraq_wmd_2004/chap2.html
Naval Post-Graduate School: The A. Q. Khan Network: Causes and Implications by Christopher Clary, December 2005:
http://fas.org/irp/eprint/clary.pdf
Congressional Research Service: Iran-North Korea-Syria Ballistic Missile and Nuclear Cooperation, 26FEB16:
https://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/nuke/R43480.pdf


Pierce:
They [Bush41 foreign policy team] saw the fact that the United States and the Soviet Union stood together in denouncing the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait as symbolizing a "hopeful new spirit"...
_That was one of the profoundly mistaken assumptions by President HW Bush in the original formulation of the Gulf War ceasefire enforcement that are obvious in hindsight, apparent in 1991 transcripts, and whose consequences were full blown by the middle-late 1990s.

President HW Bush news conference on the Persian Gulf conflict, 01MAR91:
https://bush41library.tamu.edu/archives/public-papers/2755
Los Angeles Times: Allies Sit on Sidelines for Desert Fox, 18DEC98:
http://articles.latimes.com/1998/dec/18/news/mn-55387
10th anniversary of OIF post: why HW Bush is the US president most responsible for OIF:
http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2013/03/10-year-anniversary-start-Operation-Iraqi-Freedom-thoughts.html#hwbush


Pierce:
This [Clinton February 1998 remarks] was considered by the press a "backing down" from his previous, more direct threat to take military action.
_The notion of Clinton “backing down” in February 1998 makes no sense. Military threat and action were integral in the UNSCR 660-series enforcement from the outset. Clinton had taken, not just threatened, significant military action with Iraq multiple times by February 1998. Clinton’s 1998 push to bring Iraq into the mandated compliance was based on the military threat of “severest consequences for Iraq”.

House Resolution 322, Sense of House Regarding Iraq, 13NOV97:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CREC-1997-12-15/html/CREC-1997-12-15-pt1-PgE2414-2.htm
President Clinton statement regarding UNSCR 1154, 02MAR98:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1998/03/1998-03-02-statement-by-the-president-on-un-security-council-vote.html
Response to attempted assassination of President HW Bush, June 1993:
http://fas.org/irp/agency/doj/oig/fbilab1/05bush2.htm
Operation Vigilant Warrior, October 1994:
http://fas.org/man/eprint/herr.htm
Operation Desert Strike, August 1996:
http://www.afhso.af.mil/topics/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=18633
Congressional Research Service: Iraq: Post-War Challenges and U.S. Responses, 1991-1998, 31MAR99:
https://web.archive.org/web/20130719023223/http://fas.org/man/crs/98-386.pdf


Pierce:
Bush administration officials generally agree that foreign policy was not a top priority, and that they paid too little attention to emerging threats, including intelligence warnings that even America was vulnerable.
_That’s not false, but it is suggestively misleading. According to the 9-11 Commission, Bush officials paid heightened attention to intelligence warnings in a normal manner for the pre-9/11 context. The 9/11 attacks radically changed the operative context to provide the view of “too little attention to emerging threats”.

9-11 Commission report archive:
http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/911/report/index.htm


Pierce:
Nevertheless, who could have predicted that a few years later America would be caught in the crossfire in Iraq…
_Anyone tracking the progression of the Gulf War ceasefire enforcement could have predicted it. By 2000-2001, Saddam had broken the ‘containment’ and was “out of the box” and evidently rearming. With or without 9/11, the Gulf War ceasefire enforcement had come to a head. The final confrontation with Saddam was a question of when, not if; in the wake of 9/11, Saddam’s distinctive WMD-terrorism threat assured it.

After Operation Desert Fox cleared the penultimate enforcement step and completed the set of law, policy, and precedent for the ultimate enforcement step, there was only one more option left for the US president to compel Saddam’s compliance.

President Clinton letter to Congress on Iraq's compliance, 19MAY99:
http://clinton6.nara.gov/1999/05/1999-05-19-text-of-a-letter-on-report-to-congress-on-iraq.html
New York Times: With Little Notice, U.S. Planes Have Been Striking Iraq All Year, 13AUG99:
http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/mideast/081399iraq-conflict.html
Donald Rumsfeld working paper re: Iraq, 27JUL01:
https://web.archive.org/web/20120912105032/http://waranddecision.com/docLib/20080403_RumsfeldmemoIraq.pdf

I encourage you to review my explanation of the law and policy, fact basis of Operation Iraqi Freedom at http://operationiraqifreedomfaq.blogspot.com/2014/05/operation-iraqi-freedom-faq.html. It’s essentially a cheat sheet that synthesizes the situation, controlling law, policy, and precedent that defined the operative enforcement procedure for the “governing standard of Iraqi compliance” (UNSCR 1441) and, in the operative context, the determinative facts that confirmed Iraq’s “material breach” (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire to trigger enforcement with OIF.

The OIF decision is a straightforward fact pattern. President Bush and the US demonstrably were right on Iraq. Setting the record straight on the Iraq issue is essential for your advocacy.