Saturday, January 15, 2022

Critique of the Iraq-related portions of Miller Center's revised "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs"

PREFACE: Gary Gregg holds the Mitch McConnell Chair in Leadership at the University of Louisville and is director of the McConnell Center. He authored the Miller Center history, "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs". Sheila Blackford is the Scripps librarian and managing editor of the Miller Center’s American President. I entreated Professor Gregg and Miller Center to correct the substantial flaws in the original essay. In December 2021, Ms. Blackford revised the essay. This is my critique of the December 2021 revised version. Enjoy:



from: [Eric LC]
to: [Sheila Blackford]
date: Jan 15, 2022, 3:12 AM
subject: Critique of the Iraq-related portions of Miller Center's revised "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs"

Sheila,

I appreciate your consideration of my feedback on the draft revisions of Miller Center's "life in depth essay" George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs. I hope it helped to clarify the justification of President Bush's determination to "enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq" (Public Law 107-243) and resolve "the threat Iraq’s non-compliance with Council resolutions and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles pose[d] to international peace and security" (UNSCR 1441).

This is a fresh review of the Iraq-related portions of the revised essay, which presumes the conceit of ignoring Professor Gregg's original version, my criticism of the original version, your draft revisions, and my feedback on the draft revisions.

Nonetheless, you should find the substance to be consistent with my criticism of the original essay and feedback on the draft revisions. My commentary embodies the basic law, policy, precedent, and facts that define the Iraq issue, and they can't change.

Please share this review with Professor Gregg, Dr. Antholis, and Dr. Perry. You're welcome to share it with others as well. I look forward to your feedback.

Miller Center:
The United Nations approved a resolution for rigorous new arms inspections in Iraq in November 2002, and inspectors began working in Iraq at the end of that month; they left the country shortly before the invasion began. On March 17, 2003, Bush ordered Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq within 48 hours. In a speech to the nation, Bush noted: “Should Saddam Hussein choose confrontation, the American people can know that every measure has been taken to avoid war, and every measure will be taken to win it.”

To clarify "inspectors began working in Iraq at the end of that month; they left the country shortly before the invasion began", see the OIF FAQ answer to "Did Bush allow enough time for the inspections".

The order of my comments generally correspond to the order of their excerpts in the essay.

However, I placed this excerpt first because of the key position it occupies in the Iraq issue, i.e., the fact finding that principally established casus belli and President Bush's official determination on Iraq, and the excerpt's glaring omission of the primary sources.

In place of the fact finding that by procedure principally triggered OIF, i.e., the 06MAR03 UNMOVIC Clusters document, the essay substitutes the uninformative "they left the country shortly before the invasion began".

In place of President Bush's official determination on Iraq, i.e., the President's 18MAR03 letter and 21MAR03 addendum to Congress per AUMF, the essay substitutes the uninformative "Bush ordered Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq within 48 hours" and "the American people can know that every measure has been taken to avoid war" (Bush, 17MAR03).

The absence of UNMOVIC's determinative fact finding and President Bush's official determination on Iraq from the Miller Center history of President Bush's determination on Iraq is an obvious fundamental flaw. The glaring omission is all the more puzzling given that the primary sources are public domain and readily accessed on-line.


Miller Center:
The CIA had developed an operation to quietly neutralize bin Laden prior 9/11, but it was never implemented as bin Laden had not been considered a threat to homeland security.

"[Osama] bin Laden had not been considered a threat to homeland security" is incorrect.

According to the 9-11 Commission, bin Laden and al Qaeda were considered a threat to homeland security by the Clinton and Bush administrations, which had "significant continuity in counterterrorism policy" (9-11 Commission).

The 9-11 Commission describes the sundry reasons that counterterrorism policy was inadequate prior to the 9/11 attacks despite the threat assessment. Relevant to Iraq, one reason that "neutralize bin Laden" was not a singular priority for counterterrorism officials is they understood that neutralizing bin Laden could not by itself solve the terrorist threat.

The pre-9/11 understanding was corroborated by the post-war Iraqi Perspectives Project investigation that revealed the pre-war analysis significantly underestimated Saddam's terrorism. IPP found that Saddam and bin Laden's respective terrorist "cartels" "increased the aggregate terror threat" by "seeking and developing supporters from the same demographic pool". More, "the Saddam regime regarded inspiring, sponsoring, directing, and executing acts of terrorism as an element of state power", "the regime was willing to co-opt or support organizations it knew to be part of al Qaeda", and "Saddam’s use of terrorist tactics and his support for terrorist groups remained strong up until the collapse of the regime" (IPP).

In effect, bin Laden's terrorists were simultaneously Saddam's terrorists. The dramatic growth of bin Laden's terrorist threat largely owed to its "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with Saddam's state-level development of the "same demographic pool" (IPP) that supplied al Qaeda.

We know now that Saddam's illicit investments in "regional and global terrorism, including a variety of revolutionary, liberation, nationalist, and Islamic terrorist organizations" (IPP) and "conventional weapons and WMD-related procurement programs" (Iraq Survey Group) were escalating with his victory over the UN sanctions.

Albeit bin Laden was "considered a threat to homeland security", "neutraliz[ing] bin Laden prior 9/11 [sic]" would not have solved the "aggregate terror threat" (IPP) as long as the Saddam regime remained in power and noncompliant with paragraph 32 of UNSCR 687.


Miller Center:
His cabinet was divided on the issue [the scope of the military response to 9/11], even within itself: Colin Powell publicly opposed expansion to Iraq, but Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld favored ousting Saddam Hussein as part of the reaction.

This is one of several suspect characterizations, including "bin Laden had not been considered a threat to homeland security", that highlight the shortfall of sources, let alone primary sources, cited in the essay.

I want to see the reference for "Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld favored ousting Saddam Hussein as part of the reaction" because the 9-11 Commission history does not show that.

Rather, within the limited scope of the immediate military reaction to the 9/11 attacks, the 9-11 Commission shows the Bush cabinet considered including Iraq due to "Iraq's long-standing involvement in terrorism...along with its interest in weapons of mass destruction" (9-11 Commission) but only if Saddam had a direct hand in the 9/11 attacks.

That being said, the 9-11 Commission shows that Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld's deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, did advocate for including Iraq in the immediate military reaction to the 9/11 attacks. However, Dr. Wolfowitz was not a cabinet-level official.


Miller Center:
After 9/11, the war cabinet quickly acted to target al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, but, by late September, the Bush administration had yet to determine the scope of the military response to 9/11. Some of his advisors argued for broad military action in both Afghanistan and Iraq.
... Congress passed a joint resolution authorizing the use of force against those responsible for the September 11 attacks, and Bush signed it on September 18, 2001.

I clarify the link between 9/11 and Operation Iraqi Freedom in the #911 section of my retrospective "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts".

The ambiguous characterization "by late September, the Bush administration had yet to determine the scope of the military response to 9/11" is compounded by the reductive characterization of the 2001 authorization as "the use of force against those responsible for the September 11 attacks".

In fact, the US mandate induced by 9/11 set immediate and broader objectives "to determine the scope of the military response to 9/11".

"Bush initially ruled out expanding the war to Iraq" is consistent with the immediate objective to "use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he [the President] determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001" (P.L. 107-40).

At the same time, "Some of his advisors argued for broad military action in both Afghanistan and Iraq" is consistent with the broader objective to "deter and prevent acts of international terrorism against the United States" (P.L. 107-40), which encompassed Saddam's terrorist threat:
In the period after the 1991 Gulf War, the regime of Saddam Hussein supported a complex and increasingly disparate mix of pan-Arab revolutionary causes and emerging pan-Islamic radical movements ... many terrorist movements and Saddam found a common enemy in the United States. At times these organizations worked together, trading access for capability. [IPP]
In other words, although Dr. Wolfowitz improperly lumped Iraq into the immediate objective, the Saddam regime was properly considered for the broader objective of the US mandate induced by 9/11.


Miller Center:
Bush initially ruled out expanding the war to Iraq, but he expected to revisit the question once the situation in Afghanistan was under control.

The "expanding the war to Iraq" framing in the "Afghanistan" section is not wholly wrong because the Afghanistan and Iraq interventions were related in the broader War on Terror rubric based on Saddam's UNSCR 687 terrorism violations. However, the framing is misleading due to the essay's neglect to clarify and distinguish the immediate and broader objectives of the US mandate induced by 9/11 and the older standing US mandate to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235), including paragraph 32 of UNSCR 687.

Historically, Operation Iraqi Freedom could not be an 'expansion' of Operation Enduring Freedom because the UNSCR 660-series, Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement was founded over a decade before the 9/11 attacks. President Bush's enforcement of Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) with the Gulf War ceasefire mandates was the coda of the decade-plus continuum to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235), which had come to a head by 2001 in its own right.


Miller Center:
In his State of the Union speech in January 2002, President Bush called out an “Axis of Evil” consisting of North Korea, Iran, and Iraq, and he declared all a threat to American security. British and French allies did not receive Bush’s declaration enthusiastically because they believed Bush’s language to be overly aggressive.

The 2002 State of the Union is often misrepresented in the politics.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that "Bush's declaration" merely reiterated the standing view of north Korea, Iran, and Iraq's respective illicit activities and warned about each rogue state separately. Despite the "axis of evil" phrase, Bush did not characterize an alliance between them.

In fact, contrary to "British and French allies...believed Bush’s language to be overly aggressive", the 2002 SOTU undersold the collective threat posed by the three rogue states. We know now that north Korea, Iran, and Iraq were illicitly cooperating to a greater degree than Bush discussed. north Korea and Iran still are.

For example, ISG found:
Iran had reportedly assisted Iraq’s oil smuggling operations in the Arabian Gulf region throughout the 1990s and up to OIF.
... Illicit trade between Iraq and Iran was also problematic. Smuggling occurred on the road linking the Iraqi city of Al-Basrah and the Iranian city of Khorramshahr. ... A former employee of the MIC [Iraq military-industrial complex] declared that the smuggling was under the protection of both the Iraqi SSO and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
See the Iraq Survey Group's Regime Finance and Procurement section, Congressional Research Service report Iran-North Korea-Syria Ballistic Missile and Nuclear Cooperation, and Professor Christopher Clary's paper The A. Q. Khan Network: Causes and Implications.


Miller Center:
Before a joint session of Congress on September 20, 2001, President Bush declared a new approach to foreign policy in response to 9/11: “Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped, and defeated.” Bush declared that the United States considered any nation that supported terrorist groups a hostile regime.
... These remarks later matured into the policies known as the Bush Doctrine, officially traceable to September 2002, when the White House released the National Security Strategy of the United States. The doctrine generally focused on three points. The first was preventive war in which the United States would strike an enemy nation or terrorist group before they had a chance to attack the United States. It focused on deterring any potential attacker. The second point was unilateral action in which the United States would act alone if necessary to defend itself either at home or abroad. The third point embraced spreading democracy and freedom around the world, focusing on concepts such as free markets, free trade, and individual liberty.
... Neoconservatives within and outside his administration strongly supported the idea of the United States acting on its own to ensure the country’s security and to protect the American people—preemptively, if necessary. Some opponents believed the doctrine was overly bellicose and its emphasis on preemptive war was unjust. Others believed the emphasis on spreading democracy around the world was naïve and unrealistic.

"President Bush declared a new approach to foreign policy in response to 9/11" is inaccurate.

The characterization of the "Bush Doctrine" as novel policy "officially traceable to September 2002" contradicts that its "three points" are 'traceable' to standing US law and policy and international convention established prior to the Bush administration. Preventive counterterrorism, the inherent right of defense, and liberal international leadership -- also known as post-WW2, post-Cold War American leadership of the free world -- were not novel policy in September 2002.

Rather than "a new approach to foreign policy", an accurate description of the "response to 9/11" would be 'reinforcement' of the "significant continuity" (9-11 Commission) between the Clinton and Bush administrations.

For example, "Bush declared that the United States considered any nation that supported terrorist groups a hostile regime" reiterates President Clinton's 21JUN95 Presidential Decision Directive/NSC-39:
Furthermore, the United States shall seek to identify groups or states that sponsor or support such terrorists, isolate them and extract a heavy price for their actions.
... The United States shall seek to deter terrorism through a clear public position that our policies will not be affected by terrorist acts and that we will act vigorously to deal with terrorists and their sponsors.
Also see President Clinton's 24APR96 statement on signing P.L. 104-132, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996.

As for the "naïve and unrealistic...emphasis on...spreading democracy and freedom around the world, focusing on concepts such as free markets, free trade, and individual liberty", that was standing US policy that pre-dated the Clinton, let alone Bush, administration.

President HW Bush, 01OCT90:
The world remains a dangerous place; and our security and well-being often depends, in part, on events occurring far away.
... But the world also remains a hopeful place. Calls for democracy and human rights are being reborn everywhere, and these calls are an expression of support for the values enshrined in the United Nations Charter. They encourage our hopes for a more stable, more peaceful, more prosperous world.
... The United States is committed to playing its part, helping to maintain global security, promoting democracy and prosperity. ... International peace and security, and international freedom and prosperity, require no less.
Professor Chin-Kuei Tsui's The Myth of George W. Bush’s Foreign Policy Revolution, which aligns President Bush's foreign policy with Presidents Clinton, HW Bush, and Reagan's foreign policies, provides a helpful illustration of the in reality orthodox nature of the "Bush Doctrine".


Miller Center:
The Bush administration inherited a policy toward Iraq that was shaped by the country’s refusal to abide by the ceasefire agreement that went into effect in the early 1990s after the Persian Gulf War.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that the ceasefire resolution did not "[go] into effect in the early 1990s after the Persian Gulf War" because technically there was no "after the Persian Gulf War...in the early 1990s".

The Gulf War was only suspended in 1991 and remained live until Iraq fulfilled the conditions mandated to convert the conditional suspension of the Gulf War into a permanent ceasefire.

President HW Bush explained at inception:
I am pleased to announce that at midnight tonight eastern standard time, exactly 100 hours since ground operations commenced and 6 weeks since the start of Desert Storm, all United States and coalition forces will suspend offensive combat operations. It is up to Iraq whether this suspension on the part of the coalition becomes a permanent cease-fire.
Coalition political and military terms for a formal cease-fire include the following requirements:
... Iraq must comply fully with all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions.
Twelve years later:

UNSCR 1441:
Recalling that in its resolution 687 (1991) the Council declared that a ceasefire would be based on acceptance by Iraq of the provisions of that resolution, including the obligations on Iraq contained therein ... Iraq has been and remains in material breach of its obligations under relevant resolutions, including resolution 687 (1991) ...
President Bush, 18MAR03:
On April 6, 1991, Iraq communicated to the UNSC its acceptance of the conditions for the cease-fire. ... Since almost the moment it agreed to the conditions of the cease-fire, Iraq has committed repeated and escalating breaches of those conditions.
Saddam chose war by denying the "acceptance by Iraq of the provisions of that resolution [UNSCR 687]" in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441).

Clarifying that the Gulf War was only suspended, not ended, is a key to understanding the continuum of the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement across the HW Bush, Clinton, and Bush administrations and that Operation Iraqi Freedom was not in fact a new war but rather a resumption of the Gulf War caused by Iraq's ultimate failure to accept the ceasefire terms mandated for "the need to be assured of Iraq's peaceful intentions [and] ... to secure peace and security in the area" (UNSCR 687).


Miller Center:
Since Iraq refused to comply with U.N. disarmament requirements and had the potential to produce weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), the administration considered Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq a dangerous threat.

"Since Iraq refused to comply with U.N. disarmament requirements and had the potential to produce weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), the administration considered Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq a dangerous threat" is not wrong, but it is critically omissive.

Iraq's Gulf War ceasefire obligations were purpose-designed to resolve Iraq's Gulf War-established manifold threat. So all of Iraq's ceasefire violations, not limited to its WMD-related violations, each added to the threat evaluation of the categorically noncompliant Saddam regime.

That being said, a minimum fair representation of the US threat evaluation of noncompliant Iraq must include Saddam's UNSCR 687 terrorism and disarmament violations.

President Clinton, 17FEB98:
[T]his is not a time free from peril -- especially as a result of reckless acts of outlaw nations and an unholy axis of terrorists, drug traffickers and organized international criminals. We have to defend our future from these predators of the 21st century. ... And they will be all the more lethal if we allow them to build arsenals of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, and the missiles to deliver them. We simply cannot allow that to happen.
There is no more clear example of this threat than Saddam Hussein's Iraq. His regime threatens the safety of his people, the stability of his region, and the security of all the rest of us.
... In the next century, the community of nations may see more and more the very kind of threat Iraq poses now: a rogue state with weapons of mass destruction, ready to use them or provide them to terrorists, drug traffickers, or organized criminals, who travel the world among us unnoticed.
President Bush, 28JAN03:
Before September the 11th, many in the world believed that Saddam Hussein could be contained. But chemical agents, lethal viruses and shadowy terrorist networks are not easily contained. ... Some have said we must not act until the threat is imminent. Since when have terrorists and tyrants announced their intentions, politely putting us on notice before they strike? If this threat is permitted to fully and suddenly emerge, all actions, all words, and all recriminations would come too late. Trusting in the sanity and restraint of Saddam Hussein is not a strategy, and it is not an option.
Public Law 107-243:
Whereas the United States is determined to prosecute the war on terrorism and Iraq’s ongoing support for international terrorist groups combined with its development of weapons of mass destruction in direct violation of its obligations under the 1991 cease-fire and other United Nations Security Council resolutions make clear that it is in the national security interests of the United States and in furtherance of the war on terrorism that all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions be enforced, including through the use of force if necessary;
For more detail on the evaluation of Saddam's distinctive combined terrorism-WMD threat, see part three of the OIF FAQ answer to "Why did Bush leave the ‘containment’ (status quo)".


Miller Center:
In the Gulf War, the United States had successfully driven Iraqi forces out of Kuwait, but stopped short of crossing into Iraq, leaving Saddam Hussein’s regime in power.

"[United States forces] stopped short of crossing into Iraq" is incorrect.

US air and ground forces invaded Iraq proper during Desert Storm, e.g., "By midafternoon on the first day of battle, elements of the 101st and 82d Airborne Divisions were deep into Iraq, in one case just twenty-four miles south of the Euphrates River" (US Army).

After US ground forces were withdrawn from Iraq, US air and naval forces continued to invade Iraq mainly to enforce the UNSCR 688 humanitarian and UNSCR 687 disarmament mandates.


Miller Center:
Many senior policymakers had wanted to include Iraq in the immediate response to the attacks of 9/11, but President Bush decided to focus on Afghanistan.

I want to see the reference for "Many senior policymakers had wanted to include Iraq in the immediate response to the attacks of 9/11" because that's inconsistent with the 9-11 Commission history.

With the noted exception of Dr. Wolfowitz, the 9-11 Commission shows "senior policymakers" only considered "includ[ing] Iraq in the immediate response to the attacks of 9/11" if Iraq had a direct hand in the 9/11 attacks.


Miller Center:
The administration temporarily put Iraq on the back burner while it turned its attention to al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Once the Taliban was in retreat by November 2001, Bush and his advisers returned to their concerns about Iraq.

Again, the Miller Center ought to clarify and distinguish the immediate and broader objectives of the US mandate induced by 9/11 and the older standing US mandate to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235), including paragraph 32 of UNSCR 687.


Miller Center:
Although Bush denied that a specific invasion plan for Iraq was underway, he began receiving briefings from U.S. Central Command on a war plan.

I want to see the reference for "Bush denied that a specific invasion plan for Iraq was underway" because I haven't seen that denial in my study of the Iraq issue.

The notion that "Bush denied that a specific invasion plan for Iraq was underway" doesn't make sense because it contradicts the operative precedent constantly affirmed throughout the UNSCR 660-series enforcement that credible threat and military action were necessary to induce any measure of Iraq's cooperation.

President Bush, 18MAR03:
Diplomatic efforts have not affected Iraq's conduct positively. Any temporary changes in Iraq's approach that have occurred over the years have been in response to the threat of use of force.
Obviously, if Bush had denied the military planning, that would have undercut the credibility of the threat needed to "enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq" (P.L. 107-243) in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441).

I suspect the assertion "Bush denied that a specific invasion plan for Iraq was underway" misconstrued a statement that conditioned military action on Iraq's behavior, which was standard form in the UNSCR 660-series, Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement.

President HW Bush, 08JAN91:
Let me be clear about the upcoming deadline. January 15 is not a ``date certain'' for the onset of armed conflict; it is a deadline for Saddam Hussein to choose, to choose peace over war. The purpose of declaring this deadline was to give Saddam fair warning: Withdraw from Kuwait, without condition and without delay, or -- at any time on or after that date -- face a coalition ready and willing to employ ``all means necessary'' to enforce the will of the United Nations.
Every one of us, each day of this crisis, has held out hope for a peaceful solution. Even now, as the deadline draws near, we continue to seek a way to end this crisis without further conflict.
President Clinton, 19MAY99:
We will continue to maintain a robust posture and have established a rapid reinforcement capability to supplement our forces in the Gulf, if needed ... to deter Iraq and respond to any threat it might pose to its neighbors, the reconstitution of its WMD program, or movement against the Kurds in northern Iraq.
President Bush, 07OCT02:
America is challenging all nations to take the resolutions of the U.N. Security Council seriously. And these resolutions are clear. In addition to declaring and destroying all of its weapons of mass destruction, Iraq must end its support for terrorism. It must cease the persecution of its civilian population. It must stop all illicit trade outside the Oil For Food program. It must release or account for all Gulf War personnel, including an American pilot, whose fate is still unknown. By taking these steps, and by only taking these steps, the Iraqi regime has an opportunity to avoid conflict. Taking these steps would also change the nature of the Iraqi regime itself. America hopes the regime will make that choice. ... I hope this will not require military action, but it may. ... I have asked Congress to authorize the use of America's military, if it proves necessary, to enforce U.N. Security Council demands. Approving this resolution does not mean that military action is imminent or unavoidable. The resolution will tell the United Nations, and all nations, that America speaks with one voice and is determined to make the demands of the civilized world mean something.

Miller Center:
Blair preferred to wait for additional U.N. weapons inspections, but those could not take place without Saddam’s cooperation.

The Miller Center ought to clarify the requirement to induce "Saddam’s cooperation": "Finally and only under threat of military action, Saddam permitted Inspectors to return" (Prime Minister Blair, 06JUL16).


Miller Center:
Cheney argued for a quicker move to war while Powell, the former U.S. Army General, counseled an approach involving the United Nations. ... Bush opted for further U.N. action with the knowledge that Iraq would likely not comply and then the United States would pursue war with Iraq.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that with or without another redundant UNSC resolution added to the pile "stretching back over 16 previous resolutions and 12 years" (Secretary of State Powell, 05FEB03) the United Nations was inherently involved in any US military action with Iraq because the US mandate was to enforce the UN mandates for Iraq "Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter" (UNSCR 678). And, Saddam's failure to accept Iraq's ceasefire obligations necessitated the "war with Iraq" to fulfill the US mandate to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235).


Miller Center:
The Bush administration asserted that the United States could not trust Saddam Hussein with WMDs as Iraq continued to violate U.N. Security Council Resolution 687...

The Miller Center ought to clarify that the reasons the US and international community could not trust Saddam Hussein with WMDs were not based on assertion by the Bush administration but rather on premises codified in UNSCR 687 and restated by the Bush administration, particularly the "threats made by Iraq during the recent conflict to make use of terrorism against targets outside Iraq" (UNSCR 687) and "the statements by Iraq threatening to use weapons in violation of its obligations under the Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, signed at Geneva on 17 June 1925, and of its prior use of chemical weapons" (UNSCR 687).


Miller Center:
...Iraq continued to violate U.N. Security Council Resolution 687 that required the country to destroy its weapons capabilities, among other requirements.

"Iraq continued to violate U.N. Security Council Resolution 687 that required the country to destroy its weapons capabilities, among other requirements" is unclear.

The Miller Center ought to clarify the "other requirements" and that the mandate to "destroy its weapons capabilities" was joined with the "other requirements".

UNSCR 707:
3. Demands that Iraq
... (iii) cease immediately any attempt to conceal, or any movement or destruction of any material or equipment relating to its nuclear, chemical or biological weapons or ballistic missile programmes, or material or equipment relating to its other nuclear activities without notification to and prior consent of the Special Commission,
Richard Butler (UNSCOM), 25JAN99:
3. For the conduct of this work [mandated by "Paragraphs 8 and 9, in section C of resolution 687 (1991)"], the resolutions of the Council established a three-step system: full disclosure by Iraq; verification of those disclosures by the Commission; destruction, removal, or rendering harmless, under international supervision, of all proscribed weapons, materials and facilities.
4. From the inception of the relevant work, in 1991, Iraq's compliance has been limited. Iraq acknowledges that, in that year, it decided to limit its disclosures for the purpose of retaining substantial prohibited weapons and capabilities.
5. Actions by Iraq in three main respects have had a significant negative impact upon the Commission's disarmament work:
Iraq's disclosure statements have never been complete;
contrary to the requirement that destruction be conducted under international supervision, Iraq undertook extensive, unilateral and secret destruction of large quantities of proscribed weapons and items;
it also pursued a practice of concealment of proscribed items, including weapons, and a cover up of its activities in contravention of Council resolutions.
Hans Blix (UNMOVIC), 27JAN03:
The substantive cooperation required relates above all to the obligation of Iraq to declare all programmes of weapons of mass destruction and either to present items and activities for elimination or else to provide evidence supporting the conclusion that nothing proscribed remains.
Paragraph 9 of resolution 1441 (2002) states that this cooperation shall be "active". It is not enough to open doors. Inspection is not a game of "catch as catch can".
[UNMOVIC Clusters document, 06MAR03:
UNMOVIC must verify the absence of any new activities or proscribed items, new or retained. The onus is clearly on Iraq to provide the requisite information or devise other ways in which UNMOVIC can gain confidence that Iraq’s declarations are correct and comprehensive.
... Little of the detail in these [Iraq's] declarations, such as production quantities, dates of events and unilateral destruction activities, can be confirmed. Such information is critical to an assessment of the status of disarmament. Furthermore, in some instances, UNMOVIC has information that conflicts with the information in the declaration.]
Especially with a trusted public resource like Miller Center, it's important to be a stickler about clarifying the disclosure, verification, and supervision elements of the UNSCR 687 disarmament "three-step system" (Butler) and correct the disinformation that Iraq's unverified unsupervised unilateral destruction of proscribed items constitutes proof of false accusation by President Bush and exoneration of Saddam. In fact, Iraq's unverified unsupervised unilateral destruction was a critical ceasefire breach that prevented the mandated account of Saddam's WMD.


Miller Center:
The President went to Congress with his case to have the power to go to war if he found it necessary. A passionate debate ensued that ended with Congress passing a resolution authorizing the President to go to war with Iraq if Iraq did not comply with the terms of the U.N. resolutions.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that the 2002 AUMF was redundant with the 1991 "resolution authorizing the President to go to war with Iraq if Iraq did not comply with the terms of the U.N. resolutions".

See my Clarification of the Iraq issue in Congressional Research Service report "Declarations of War and Authorizations for the Use of Military Force: Historical Background and Legal Implications".


Miller Center:
The international community later learned that the regime had disposed of much of its WMD capabilities, but had not been open about its actions.

"The international community later learned that the regime had disposed of much of its WMD capabilities, but had not been open about its actions" is not wrong, but it is critically omissive.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that "The international community later learned", inter alia, that "In addition to preserved capability, we have clear evidence of his [Saddam's] intent to resume WMD" with "reconstitution efforts starting in 1997" (ISG), "By 2000-2001, Saddam had managed to mitigate many of the effects of sanctions and undermine their international support" (ISG), "As UN sanctions eroded there was a concomitant expansion of activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (ISG), "The IIS ran a large covert procurement program" (ISG), "until he was deposed in April 2003, Saddam’s conventional weapons and WMD-related procurement programs steadily grew in scale, variety, and efficiency" (ISG) under cover of "denial and deception operations" (ISG), "Prohibited goods and weapons were being shipped into Iraq with virtually no problem" (ISG), "the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) maintained throughout 1991 to 2003 a set of undeclared covert laboratories" (ISG), "The [Saddam] Regime’s strategy was successful to the point where sitting members of the Security Council were actively violating the resolutions passed by the Security Council" (ISG), and "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" (Iraq Watch).

As far as "the regime had disposed of much of its WMD capabilities", "The international community later learned" that systematic Iraqi "concealment and deception activities" (ISG), much unfettered, later rid evidence of proscribed armament, e.g., "many of these [WMD-related] sites were either sanitized by the [Saddam] Regime or looted prior to OIF", "M23 [Directorate of Military Industries] officers also were involved in NMD [National Monitoring Directorate] document concealment and destruction efforts", and "extensive looting and destruction at military facilities during OIF" (ISG).

Furthermore, David Kay (ISG), 28JAN04:
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.
The inference of "A lot of that traces to the failure on April 9 to establish immediately physical security in Iraq" (Kay) is that the "regime had disposed of much of its WMD capabilities" after the regime change.


Miller Center:
Critics charged that the Bush administration did not have an adequate plan for Iraq after the initial war was won and Saddam Hussein was ousted from power.

See the #postwar and #postwarmil sections of my retrospective "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts" for exposition about the initial post-war plan, insurgency setback, and COIN adjustment.

The US entered post-war Iraq with a credible "humanitarian reconstruction" plan. But as usual the axiom proved true: "No plan survives first contact with the enemy."

"Critics" have obfuscated that the demanding learning curve the US experienced in post-war Iraq is normal in military history. The modern analogue for the Iraq intervention is the Korea intervention in which US soldiers continue to serve. Comparing the two missions, all the competitive challenges of OIF combined are dwarfed by any single really hard week or even the single hardest days that the US-led coalition experienced in the Korean War.

Victory over capable adversaries has typically followed grim perseverance and in-competition adaptation compelled by harsh setbacks, not preemptive perfection. Whereas the standard of perfect preemptive anticipation, preparation, cost accounting, and execution that "critics" apply to OIF is ahistorical. I agree we should do what we can beforehand to prepare. However, that the learning curve for victory in post-war Iraq was driven by necessity on the ground is consistent with military history.

The defeat of the initial post-war plan by the terrorist insurgency and the recovery of the mission via the COIN adjustment to the early setback followed a normal competitive pattern. The only fundamental strategic blunder that the US committed in OIF was President Obama's irresponsible exit in contravention of the US-Iraq Strategic Framework Agreement.


Miller Center:
Yet the goal [reduce the U.S. military presence as Iraq’s stability improved] proved unattainable, owing in part to the power vacuum left by the dismantling of the Iraqi army and the rise of sectarian violence within the two dominant strains of Islam in Iraq.

The Miller Center ought to clarify that the Coalition Provisional Authority did not really 'dismantle' the Iraqi army. The Iraqi army dissolved on its own.

Dan Senor and Walter Slocombe (CPA), 17NOV05:
When the American-led coalition "disbanded" the Iraqi Army in May 2003, it was simply recognizing the fact that the army had long since dissolved itself -- in the Pentagon's jargon, "self-demobilized" -- as the mass of (mostly Shiite) conscripts fled the brutality of their (mostly Sunni) officers.
The CPA's choice was not actually between retaining or demobilizing the Iraqi army. The choice was between building the post-Saddam security forces anew or trying to reconstitute the security forces that had applied Saddam's extreme tyranny to the Iraqi people.

What if the CPA had chosen to try reconstituting Saddam's security forces instead? The microcosm case is the 2003 assassination of United Nations envoy to Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello. Vieira opted to retain the guards assigned by the Saddam regime in lieu of American military protection. It was a fatal mistake.

It's likely that the US choosing to reconstitute Saddam's security forces would have been an exponentially greater mistake as well as a conflict with the Gulf War ceasefire humanitarian mandates.


Miller Center:
After the United States toppled the government, Iraq soon began to descend into chaos with increasing instability and violence from suicide attacks, car bombs, kidnappings, and beheadings. Sectarian violence racked the country as religious and ethnic sects battled for control.

Correlating "Sectarian violence racked the country" and "chaos with increasing instability and violence" to "the United States toppled the government" is problematic.

Based on what "The international community later learned", the "Sectarian violence [that] racked the country" and "chaos with increasing instability and violence" were caused by Saddam's "government", not by toppling the Saddam regime.

"The international community later learned" that the Saddam regime converted from secular Baath to radical sectarian Islamist.

See Professor Amatzia Baram's From Militant Secularism to Islamism: The Iraqi Ba’th Regime 1968-2003 and Kyle Orton's The Islamic State Was Coming Without the Invasion of Iraq.

"The international community later learned", as I commented above, Saddam's terrorism was significantly worse than it was estimated before OIF, including its "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with al Qaeda. To identify the root cause of the "chaos with increasing instability and violence from suicide attacks, car bombs, kidnappings, and beheadings", note that IPP found "The predominant targets of Iraqi state terror operations were Iraqi citizens, both inside and outside of Iraq".

"The international community later learned" that Saddam's rule by “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” (UN Commission on Human Rights, 19APR02) -- already assessed as genocidal by outside observers -- was actually "far worse" (UN Special Rapporteur on Iraq, 18MAR04) than had been believed outside of Iraq.

Even expert Iraqi expats like Professor Kanan Makiya, who advised the US planning for post-war Iraq, talk about their shock at the extreme corruption of Iraqi society that had been inflicted by Saddam, degrading the nation far from Iraq of the 1970s and 1980s.

In short, the "Sectarian violence [that] racked the country" and "chaos with increasing instability and violence" were not caused by "the United States toppled the government" or "power vacuum left by the dismantling of the Iraqi army". Rather, based on what "The international community later learned" about the Saddam regime's governance, they were caused by Saddam's extreme corruption of Iraqi society, exploited by Saddamists who smoothly converted their radical sectarian terrorist rule of Iraq and "regional and global terrorism" (IPP) to their radical sectarian terrorist insurgency against Iraq.

Inasmuch "the Bush administration did not have an adequate plan for Iraq", that was not due to lack of planning. Rather, the initial post-war plan was overwhelmed by the surprising terrorist insurgency in part because pre-war analysts like Richard Clarke and Daniel Byman severely underestimated Saddam's radical sectarian turn, extreme corruption of Iraqi society, and deep domestic, regional, and global terrorism.

Based on what "The international community later learned", we should not have allowed the noncompliant Saddam regime to fester as long as we did. In hindsight, knowing what we know now, the solution is the Iraqi regime change should have happened as soon as it became apparent that Saddam would not comply with Iraq's Gulf War ceasefire obligations.

-----

Beyond the Miller Center page for President Bush, I assume the UNSCR 660-series, Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement is featured in the Miller Center pages for at least Presidents HW Bush, Clinton, and Obama. However, I deliberately have not surveyed the Miller Center's representation of the Iraq issue outside of "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs".

Instead, I hope you utilize the OIF FAQ and my critical reviews of "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs" and feedback on the draft revisions to learn the defining elements of the Iraq issue. I hope you utilize that knowledge to inspect and correct the representation of the Iraq issue throughout Miller Center's public interface.

I hope when I do read the Miller Center more widely, I won't see the misrepresentation by omission and commission of the Iraq issue that degraded "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs".

It matters: As I said, the Miller Center's on-line resource is the kind of reputable, assumed credible, readily accessible source that high school students typically cite with the approval of their social science teachers, college underclassmen often cite with the approval of their instructors, and the public in general relies upon to be accurate.

Again, I look forward to your feedback. If you have questions about my work, please ask.



from: [Eric LC]
to: [William Antholis], [Barbara Perry]
cc: [Gary Gregg]
date: Oct 25, 2021, 2:35 PM
subject: Please correct flaws in Iraq portion of Miller Center's George W. Bush Presidency Page

Dr. Antholis, Dr. Perry, and Miller Center,

I clarify the Iraq issue at Operation Iraqi Freedom FAQ by organizing the primary source authorities, i.e., the set of controlling law, policy, and precedent and determinative facts that define OIF's justification, to lay a proper foundation and correct for the prevalent conjecture, distorted context, and misinformation that have obfuscated the Iraq issue.

As such, I am writing you to entreat the Miller Center to correct the flaws in the Iraq portion of "life in depth essay" George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs by Gary L. Gregg II on your George W. Bush Presidency Page. The Miller Center's on-line resource is the kind of reputable, assumed credible, readily accessible source that high school students typically cite with the approval of their social science teachers, college underclassmen often cite with the approval of their instructors, and the public in general relies upon to be accurate.

In 2017, I reached out to Professor Gregg with corrective criticism of his work, which you may read at OIF FAQ post Correcting the Iraq section of Miller Center's "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs" (20OCT17). Professor Gregg recently responded that he'll "rewrite the work they [Miller Center] contracted with me to do" only if the Miller Center requests it. So, for the public good, I'm asking you to make that request of Professor Gregg, or else correct the flaws in "George W. Bush: Foreign Affairs" without him.

I won't repeat all my corrective criticism of Professor Gregg's work. Again, you may read it in the afore-linked 20OCT17 OIF FAQ post.

Rather, I'll point out that the pervading flaw seems to be a basic misconception of the operative context of the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement. And I'll highlight two representative examples that stand out for their misleading character and ready correctability: "President Bush had personally decided on the need to go to war, long before congressional or U.N. action" and "It later was discovered that the regime had actually disposed of its WMD stockpile as requested, but had hid its actions from the world."

For detailed clarification of the former, see the #ultimatumoptions section of the OIF FAQ's retrospective survey, "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts". For detailed clarification of the latter, see my "Sun, Dec 10, 2017 at 11:44 AM" e-mail to Professor Gregg appended in the afore-linked 20OCT17 OIF FAQ post.

The OIF FAQ at large should be helpful. If you have questions about my work or revising Professor Gregg's work, please ask.
...

P.S. I will repeat this entreaty on the Miller Center's contact form.

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

In praise of Helen Fein and Milton Leitenberg for Institute for the Study of Genocide Newsletter #28, Spring 2002

PREFACE: Helen Fein is the Chairwoman of the Board of Directors of the Institute for the Study of Genocide and served as Executive Director of ISG for over three decades. Milton Leitenberg is a Senior Research Associate at the Center for International & Security Studies at Maryland. I praised their articles, Editorial: Intervention and Responsibility - Afghanistan and Iraq Reconsidered (Fein) and Saddam is the Cause of Iraqis' Suffering (Leitenberg), in ISG Newsletter #28, Spring 2002, for their astuteness and providing contemporary context for President Bush's decision on Iraq. Mr. Leitenberg and Professor Verdeja's e-mails in our respective exchanges are omitted. Professor Fein didn't respond to my e-mail, so I don't know whether she's read it.



from: [Eric LC]
to: [Institute for the Study of Genocide]; Fwd: [Milton Leitenberg]
cc: [Ernesto Verdeja], [Joyce Apsel], [Alex Hinton]
date: Oct 19, 2021, 6:00 PM
subject: In praise of Helen Fein and Milton Leitenberg for ISG Newsletter #28, Spring 2002

Professor Fein, Mr. Leitenberg, and Institute for the Study of Genocide,

I clarify the Iraq issue at Operation Iraqi Freedom FAQ by organizing the primary source authorities, i.e., the set of controlling law, policy, and precedent and determinative facts that define OIF's justification, to lay a proper foundation and correct for the prevalent conjecture, distorted context, and misinformation that have obfuscated the Iraq issue.

I am writing you to appreciate Professor Fein's Editorial: Intervention and Responsibility - Afghanistan and Iraq Reconsidered and Mr. Leitenberg's Saddam is the Cause of Iraqis' Suffering in ISG Newsletter #28, Spring 2002.

The articles are included in the OIF FAQ's table of sources. While the Institute for the Study of Genocide is not a primary source authority, ISG Newsletter #28 nonetheless gives valuable contemporary context for President Bush's case against the Saddam regime that year and determination for Operation Iraqi Freedom the next year.

And, Professor Fein and Mr. Leitenberg's articles stand out today as remarkably astute knowing what we know now.

For example, you were skeptical then of Saddam's child mortality claims versus the sanctions, i.e., the diplomatic coercive alternative to military enforcement of Iraq's compliance with the Gulf War ceasefire terms, at the same time that American and British leaders bought the con hook, line, and sinker. You observed the child mortality stratagem undermining the sanctions.

We know now the Saddam regime fabricated the reported rise in Iraqi child mortality, which Saddam's international accomplices amplified to effectively defeat the sanctions by 2000-2001, which enabled the rise of "concomitant" Iraqi violations of UNSCR 687: "The Regime’s strategy was successful to the point where sitting members of the Security Council were actively violating the resolutions passed by the Security Council ... As UN sanctions eroded there was a concomitant expansion of activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (Iraq Survey Group).

Saddam's victory over the sanctions impelled the ceasefire enforcers to fall back to military enforcement with Operations Desert Fox and Iraqi Freedom.

[You warned then of the growing harm and danger of tolerating the noncompliant unreconstructed Saddam regime to counterpoint the "safer" alternative of a "humanitarian intervention" where "Values, human rights and national interest coincided".]

We know now the Saddam regime's "regional and global terrorism" (Iraqi Perspectives Project), which included "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with al Qaeda, in violation of UNSCRs 687 and 949 and its sectarian tyranny in violation of UNSCR 688, already considered genocidal by outside observers, were "far worse" (UN Special Rapporteur on Iraq) than we knew before OIF.

You warned then that "toleration of Iraq's defiance of sanctions diminishes the credibility of any arms-control regime that is negotiated" much as President Clinton had warned, "If we fail to respond today, Saddam and all those who would follow in his footsteps will be emboldened tomorrow by the knowledge that they can act with impunity".

We know now the Saddam regime's "material breach" (UNSCR 1441) of the Gulf War ceasefire was categorical and "the Iraqis never intended to meet the spirit of the UNSC’s resolutions" (Iraq Survey Group).

President Bush heeded your warning and acted correctly upon receipt of the determinative UNMOVIC report that confirmed Iraq did not resolve the "continued violations of its obligations" in Saddam's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441). The subsequent principled, resolute adaptive American leadership with Iraq was necessary corrective to revitalize competitive American-led enforcement of liberal international order. The compliance enforcement and peace operations with Iraq were evidently succeeding at the pivot point that President Bush's successor chose to deviate course with an irresponsible exit from Iraq that has marginalized humanitarian liberal policy and degraded American leadership of the free world with still-compounding harmful consequences. President Obama should have heeded your warning like his predecessor did.

Finally, a comment on Mr. Leitenberg's article in particular:

I assume he and perhaps the Institute for the Study of Genocide by association were negatively impacted by the post-war criticism of the pre-war analysis of Iraq's UNSCR 687 violations based on that Mr. Leitenberg's analysis aligned with the stigmatized 2002 National Intelligence Estimate.

I reiterate, knowing what we know now, his pre-war analysis was astute.

Whereas the 09JUL04 Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Report on the U.S. intelligence community's prewar intelligence assessments on Iraq, while informative, is inapposite of OIF's justification because the SSCI report improperly shifted the burden of proof from Iraq to US Intelligence and dismissed Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441) probationary status and established dual-use WMD method as preconceived bias.

In other words, the basic logic of the 09JUL04 SSCI critique of US Intelligence analytical tradecraft, although appropriate for the general case, is inappropriate for the particular case of Iraq's mandated disarmament pursuant the Gulf War ceasefire "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441).

The basic logic of the 09JUL04 SSCI critique is akin to if the 9/11 hijackers escaped death on 9/11 and reiterated the established 'dual use' pattern that preceded 9/11 -- e.g., entering the US, flying lessons, packing utility blades in carry-on bags, etc. -- yet alternative nonthreatening explanations were prioritized and red-line threat analysis was deemed "overstated" (SSCI) until the unreconstructed recidivists again drew their 'dual use' knives in flight.

Suffice to say, UNSCRs 687, 707, 1441, etc. and the US law, policy, and precedent that enforced the Gulf War ceasefire mandates did not work that way.

Judged properly according to the operative context of the Gulf War ceasefire compliance enforcement that's eschewed by the 09JUL04 SSCI critique, Mr. Leitenberg's and CIA's respective pre-war analyses of the indicators of Iraqi disarmament violation were responsible and proper.

It's critical to note that the Iraq Survey Group's non-findings are heavily qualified in the ISG report's Transmittal Message, Scope Note, and various sections. As David Kay clarified to the Senate Armed Services Committee on 28JAN04, "at the end of the work of the [Iraq Survey Group] there's still going to be an unresolvable ambiguity about what happened ... [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". Which infers the ISG's findings -- rife with UNSCR 687 violations such as undeclared covert IIS biological laboratories and readily convertible BW production capability as is -- in effect constitute a floor only, not a complete account of Saddam's WMD. That key qualification is commonly missing in the discourse. For example, the false premise that ISG's non-findings are "clear" is a core premise of the Silberman-Robb Commission's 31MAR05 criticism of the pre-war analysis. Yet ISG's heavily qualified non-findings amount to an "unresolvable ambiguity" (Kay), not the "clear" premise on which the Silberman-Robb Commission's criticism depended.

The prevalent revisionism that has obfuscated OIF's justification since you published ISG Newsletter #28 does not change that Professor Fein and Mr. Leitenberg were right on Iraq in the first place.

I hope you find the OIF FAQ and these appreciative comments useful. If you have questions about my work, please ask.

---------------

from: [Eric LC]
to: [Milton Leitenberg]
date: Oct 21, 2021, 12:36 PM
subject: Re: In praise of Helen Fein and Milton Leitenberg for ISG Newsletter #28, Spring 2002

Mr. Leitenberg,

You're welcome.
...

I'll say this again because I suspect you don't hear (read) it much elsewhere: Knowing what we know now, your prewar analysis on Iraq was astute.

After UNMOVIC confirmed Iraq's "continued violations of its obligations" (UNSCR 1441) to establish casus belli per procedure, the Iraq Survey Group found incriminating, if not all of it definitive, evidence of an active Iraqi biological weapons program.

Just as significant, what ISG did not find was attributed to the "degradation" (ISG) of the "sanitized" (ISG) evidence. As such, ISG characterized those BW questions as unresolved, not an exoneration of the Saddam regime.

ISG found enough to conclude Saddam had an active BW program, but we can't know the extent of the BW reconstitution because Iraq rid evidence.

Yet the Silberman-Robb Commission, among others, have mischaracterized absence of evidence in the ISG investigation as evidence of absence. On the basis of that false premise and other inapposite premises the Saddam regime has wrongly been exonerated and prewar analyses like yours have wrongly been discredited.

I assume I'm not saying anything you don't know already and better than I do. But you should know you're not the only one who has recognized the false narrative discrediting your work.

Again, you were right on Iraq in the first place.

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Protecting Our Earned Freedom: Remembering 9/11 on the 20 year anniversary

PREFACE: In the days and weeks immediately following 9/11, I was frustrated and angry at the weak pro-America response by the student body while the organized anti-American groups took over as the voice of Columbia. I made my own flyers to put up around campus, no organization behind them. I sent a long essay to the New York Times, no response.

I eventually figured out to send an opinion piece to the school newspaper, the Columbia Spectator.

Protecting Our Earned Freedom
by [Eric LC]
September 26, 2001

I am a Columbian now, but five months ago I was serving with the United States Army in South Korea. It was a different world then. When I joined the Army over four years ago, I gave an oath to defend the Constitution. With it, I inherited a lot of pride and responsibility. Being a soldier meant that I accepted sacrificing my life, if necessary, so that my country could provide the conditions in which Americans could sustain the Constitution's freedoms and their way of life. Any illusions I may have had that our freedoms were not earned were drilled out of me very quickly in Basic Training.

The first priority of any country has to be the protection of its citizens and itself as a viable nation-state. If our freedoms are the pinnacle of our country, then our security is its foundation. Our security was ripped from us on Sept. 11. We had been safe for so long that we had forgotten that the freedoms we value so highly are actually hard-earned luxuries. As they do in all societies, issues of life and death have always superceded our freedoms. The horrific wounds inflicted on our nation forcibly reminded us of the price of those freedoms.

The defense of our Constitution cannot be separated from the defense of our homeland. The concepts that we hold so dear in our Constitution are like water. They both take on the form of the vessels that contain them. With enough damage to its vessel, water will change form or even drain away. In the same way, our American freedoms and way of life depend on the integrity of our country.

A childish part of me wants to believe that the United States is so inviolable that nothing could affect our power to define ourselves as a nation. An even more childish part of me wants to believe that if we just heal our disturbed spirits, preach world peace, and move on with our lives, we can somehow return to the country we were on Sept. 10. The part of me that was analyzing the North Korean military five months ago, however, forces me to think harder.

Clearly, we need to change our international policies, and we have to accept some responsibility for what has happened. Our priority, though, must be to eliminate the terrorist threat and reestablish our strength, our ability as a nation to dictate our own fate, our way of life. If we accept the terrorist threat, then our nation loses that ability. The allied mistreatment of Germany after the First World War contributed greatly to the creation of Nazi Germany, but we had to destroy the threat before we could rectify our mistakes.

We face a similar situation now. As an American, I dread the prospect of the United States on the international stage, grievously wounded, fearful, unable to respond to a savage attack on its own heart, and stripped of any illusion of potency. As a soldier, the prospect holds great shame for me.

Each of us now needs to reexamine his commitment to our country and to himself as an American. We are at war with an enemy who believes Americans have become a weak, irresolute people; that belief feeds his confidence to attack us. This enemy is the great test of our generation. We must remember that our freedoms have never been free, nor have they ever existed wholly unto themselves. They were earned, if not by us, then by our fathers, or our fathers' fathers.

Our generation must now take its turn earning our freedoms and protecting the country we love. If we fail, the nation that we inherited, that we have known our entire lives, will change forever. We face a skilled, determined enemy whose will is undeniable. He will use his expertise at psychological warfare to divide us, to sow doubt, fear, and chaos among us. He will attack our resolve, our willingness to sacrifice for our country. Our every show of weakness will feed his strength. To defeat this enemy, our generation must respond to his challenge with both strength and the utmost faith in our cause.

We at Columbia University are considered the future leaders of our country. We have been nourished on privileges commensurate to our standing as the best and brightest of our generation. In exchange for all that has been given to us, we have been entrusted with a great responsibility. The people of our wounded nation will look to us to lead them in the dark times to come. It is time now for us to put away our childish fears and doubts, and to embrace the mantle of leadership. The crisis is upon us, and we are involved. Our country needs us now.

The closing paragraph stings today because Barack Obama manifested my prognostication of a fellow Columbian future leader of our country entrusted with a great responsibility. Except President Obama did not embrace the mantle of leadership by responding to the challenge with both strength and the utmost faith in our cause like Yalie President Bush did. Instead, Obama chose to radically deviate from American leadership of the free world with an irresponsible exit from Iraq, which has metastasized with President Biden's choice to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks with an irresponsible exit from Afghanistan.

These references from Ambassador Ryan Crocker, Alan Dowd, Thomas Joscelyn, and Brian Dunn have informed my view on our Afghanistan withdrawal.



Related: Thoughts on the 10 year anniversary of 9/11.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Critique of Matt Latimer's "The Don Rumsfeld the Obituaries Won’t Write About"

PREFACE: Matt Latimer served as deputy director of speechwriting to President George W. Bush and chief speechwriter to former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. My critique of Mr. Latimer's treatment of the Iraq issue in his 30JUN21 Politico article, The Don Rumsfeld the Obituaries Won’t Write About, followed up my recommendation to Mr. Latimer and the Rumsfeld Foundation on how to effectively advocate for Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy. Neither Mr. Latimer nor the Rumsfeld Foundation responded to my e-mails, so I don't know whether they've read them.



from: [Eric LC]
to: [Matt Latimer], [Sarah Tonucci]
cc: [Rumsfeld Foundation], [Keith Urbahn]
date: Jul 7, 2021, 4:54 PM
subject: Follow-up critique of Matt Latimer Re: To advocate for Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy, you need to clarify Operation Iraqi Freedom's justification

Ms. Tonucci, Mr. Latimer, and the Rumsfeld Foundation:

These critical comments respond to Mr. Latimer's treatment of the Iraq issue in The Don Rumsfeld the Obituaries Won’t Write About and follow up my 02JUL21 recommendation (e-mail below).

I use a quote and comment format.

Latimer:
To be sure, he was not blameless over the Iraq War and its management. These are arguments that will outlive us all. But it also wasn’t true that it was solely his idea to invade Iraq— constitutionally it wasn’t even his decision ...
. . . When Rumsfeld left government in 2006, he took all the weight of the Bush administration’s failure in Iraq onto his shoulders and bore it into exile. Though he offered some defense of his actions, he also protected colleagues by refusing to reveal in his books some of the more damning information he knew that could have justified some of his decisions. He refused many opportunities to make a McNamara-esque apology for Iraq that would make him look good or to fault President Bush or others for the decisions he took part in.

Effective advocacy of Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy requires you to explain to the public that Operation Iraqi Freedom was justified. That President Bush and Secretary Rumsfeld were right on Iraq in the first place and their detractors have been wrong all along. Setting that keystone premise establishes the necessary frame for vindicating Rumsfeld while simultaneously discrediting his detractors.

Whereas your current tack of making excuses for Rumsfeld and spreading blame in accordance with the specious narrative of "the Bush administration’s failure in Iraq" only validates his detractors and exacerbates their smear. Stop accepting their misinformation and empowering them. Turn the tables on them instead and politically prosecute their cynical adoption of misinformation.

For example, my Critical response to John Rentoul's "Chilcot Report: Politicians" criticizes Professor Rentoul's self-defeating tack of making excuses for Prime Minister Blair and spreading the blame in accordance with the same specious narrative used against Secretary Rumsfeld.


Latimer:
Joyce spoke first. She pointed out that her husband had taken heat for a lot of people over the Iraq War. She didn’t mention any names, but she asked, “Where are they now?” None were coming to his defense or taking any share of the blame.
. . . No one, after all, was exactly jumping to his defense as he became the premier target of a barrage of books and publicity critical of the conduct of the Iraq War, as if every senior official on the national security team hadn’t been closely involved in it. The Iraq War? Oh, that was just Rumsfeld and Cheney’s deal.

This criticism of Bush officials is basically right and applies to Secretary Rumsfeld. Effective defense has required President Bush, Vice President Cheney, Secretary Powell, Secretary Rice, Secretary Gates, Secretary Rumsfeld, and "every senior official on the national security team" to immediately, constantly, persistently, and zealously set the record straight versus the specious narrative of "the Bush administration’s failure in Iraq". However, they inexplicably have not, and their negligence has allowed otherwise readily correctable misinformation to metastasize in the politics and policy.

I'm mystified by the failure of Bush officials to clarify the Iraq issue because it's straightforward. The elements are practically pre-assembled. To set the record straight, I simply synthesized the primary sources of the mission. Excerpt from the preface to the OIF FAQ post:
Here is my latest attempt to set the record straight on Operation Iraqi Freedom by synthesizing the primary sources of the mission, including the Gulf War ceasefire UN Security Council resolutions that set the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441), the US law and policy to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235), the conditions and precedents that set the stage for OIF, and the determinative fact findings of Iraq's breach of ceasefire that triggered enforcement, to explain the law and policy, fact basis — i.e., the why — of the decision for OIF.
Anyone with a basic legal and policy background, let alone Mr. Latimer and other experts at the Rumsfeld Foundation, can reproduce what I did. The controlling law, policy, precedent, and determinative facts that define OIF's justification are public, plain, and readily accessible. They're compiled in the OIF FAQ's comprehensive table of sources, Perspective on Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Forewarned: Clarifying the Iraq issue for the public involves correcting Bush officials, including President Bush. For example, OIF FAQ post Decision Points suggests President Bush has not read key fact findings on Iraq carefully.


Latimer:
They blamed him for pushing for the invasion of Iraq in the first place (regime change had been official U.S. policy since the late 1990s, and numerous Democrats and Republicans in Congress called for and voted to authorize Saddam Hussein’s removal. If there’s guilt on that score, it’s a collective one).

Clarify that the regime change policy codified by the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, Public Law 105-338, did not mandate regime change for the sake of regime change. Rather, P.L. 105-338 enforced Iraq's compliance with the Gulf War ceasefire "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) with the standing authorization for "the use of all necessary means" (P.L. 102-190) to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235).

Excerpt from President Clinton's signing statement on P.L. 105-338:
My Administration has pursued, and will continue to pursue, these objectives through active application of all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions. The evidence is overwhelming that such changes will not happen under the current Iraq leadership.
The regime change measure was necessary to "bring Iraq into compliance with its international obligations" (P.L. 105-235) because every non-military and lesser military enforcement measure was used up during the Clinton administration with Iraq intransigently noncompliant. Saddam's attack on Irbil in August 1996 effectively broke the US-backed Iraqi threat to his regime. When the Saddam regime triggered Operation Desert Fox in December 1998 by failing to comply and disarm with the UNSCR 1205 inspections, the bombing campaign "on Saddam's weapons of mass destruction programs, on the command structures that direct and protect that capability, and on his military and security infrastructure" (Clinton) used up the penultimate military enforcement measure. President Clinton determined with ODF that "Iraq has abused its final chance".

Saddam defeated the sanctions-based 'containment' by 2000-2001 with "concomitant expansion of activities that could support full WMD reactivation" (Iraq Survey Group): "From 1999 until he was deposed in April 2003, Saddam’s conventional weapons and WMD-related procurement programs steadily grew in scale, variety, and efficiency ... Prohibited goods and weapons were being shipped into Iraq with virtually no problem" (ISG).

President Bush entered Office with one last enforcement measure remaining, the credible threat of regime change, to compel Iraq's compliance with the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441). With the heightened assessment of Saddam's terrorist threat after the 9/11 attacks, Bush activated the last enforcement measure in 2002-2003 to enforce Saddam's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) with the Gulf War ceasefire terms.

In March 2003, with Iraq already in categorical breach of the Gulf War ceasefire, Saddam chose to not comply and disarm in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations" (UNSCR 1441). Instead, with the encouragement of his accomplices on the UN Security Council, Saddam chose to call the ceasefire enforcers' bluff with "about 100 unresolved disarmament issues" (UNMOVIC) in violation of UNSCR 687. At the decision point for OIF, the real alternative to regime change was compromising the "governing standard of Iraqi compliance" (UNSCR 1441) and discrediting the last remaining leverage to let noncompliant and unreconstructed, ambitious and aggressive, practically uncontained and rearming, sectarian terrorist and tyrant Saddam slough off Iraq's international obligations, which was not an option permitted by the US law and policy on Iraq.

See the OIF FAQ answer to "Did Iraq failing its compliance test justify the regime change" and the #ultimatumoptions section of my "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts" for exposition about the credible threat of regime change that enforced Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441).


Latimer:
They blamed him for claiming there were Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq (an assertion also made by the Clintons, by foreign leaders with their own intelligence agencies, by foreign policy experts like Joe Biden, to the U.N. by Colin Powell, who personally examined the intelligence himself, and by almost all the punditry who would later pretend they hadn’t said that).
. . . But somehow their [State Department and National Security Council] leaders largely escaped the condemnation of their friends in the pundit class when WMD weren’t found and Iraq descended into a vicious civil war ...

I unpack Secretary Powell's 05FEB03 UNSC speech at Regarding Secretary of State Powell's speech at the UN Security Council on February 5, 2003. The main points are validated nearly across the board.

"They blamed him for claiming there were Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq":
Clarify that Saddam's WMD was established fact by UNSCOM in the UNSCR 687 disarmament process. Upon the established fact, Saddam was presumed armed until Iraq proved it disarmed in accordance with UNSCR 687. In Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441), UNMOVIC took up from UNSCOM and confirmed Iraq did not disarm as mandated, which by procedure established casus belli.

"when WMD weren’t found":
Clarify that the 06MAR03 UNMOVIC report that principally triggered OIF and the ex post Iraq Survey Group findings are rife with UNSCR 687 WMD violations. Also clarify that ISG's non-findings are heavily qualified, often evidentiary gaps rather than evidence of absence. See the OIF FAQ answer to "Did Bush lie his way to war with Iraq" and note especially parts 5 to 7 of the answer.

"Iraq descended into a vicious civil war":
Apparently not. The vicious Saddamist insurgents and their Iran-led counterparts can be credited for creating a semblance of civil war pursuant to their insecurity-based plan. However, an actual Iraqi civil war likely would not have been deflated so expeditiously by the counterinsurgency adjustment. In fact, the success of the COIN "surge" depended on the cooperation of supposed "civil war" combatants, e.g., the Sahwa "awakening".


Latimer:
... democracy did not take root across the Middle East as was promised ...
. . . Privately he didn’t believe the Middle East could be turned into a democracy almost overnight, as some ideologues in and out of the administration naively did.

Clarify that President Bush's policy statements do not show an expectation, let alone a promise, that the "Middle East could be turned into a democracy almost overnight" via the Iraq intervention like the expectation for "democracy [to] take root across the Middle East" via the 2010-2011 Arab Spring.

Rather, Bush carried forward the hope from his predecessors that a democratically reformed Iraq would set a constructive example for the Middle East. Indeed, that hope was being realized before President Obama deviated course. To wit, President Obama's remarks on the Middle East and North Africa, 19MAY11:
Indeed, one of the broader lessons to be drawn from this period is that sectarian divides need not lead to conflict. In Iraq, we see the promise of a multiethnic, multisectarian democracy. The Iraqi people have rejected the perils of political violence in favor of a democratic process, even as they’ve taken full responsibility for their own security. Of course, like all new democracies, they will face setbacks. But Iraq is poised to play a key role in the region if it continues its peaceful progress. And as they do, we will be proud to stand with them as a steadfast partner.
At first, I guessed you mixed up the post-9/11 Freedom Agenda with the policy on Iraqi democratic reform per UNSCR 688 that President Bush carried forward from Presidents HW Bush and Clinton. However, the Freedom Agenda was also more measured than your characterization.

Perhaps Bush officials independently speculated that "the Middle East could be turned into a democracy almost overnight". But that expectation wasn't an element of President Bush's actual policy on Iraq.


Latimer:
And that’s what most every obituary or essay on Rumsfeld you will read in the wake of his death will get wrong. They’ll tell you the story of the ferocious, take-no-prisoners Washington operator whose headstrong tactics got us into an unwinnable war.

Correct the false premise that the Iraq intervention was an "unwinnable war". Demonstrate that OIF was succeeding while it lasted. Focus on the consequences of President Obama's pivotal decision to end the OIF peace operations prematurely.

When Secretary Rumsfeld and President Bush left office, respectively, the contest for Iraq was winnable. The major combat operations that deposed the ceasefire-breaching Saddam regime were successful. Then the peace operations that began under Secretary Rumsfeld, adapted to the competition, and evolved to the counterinsurgency "surge" were succeeding until President Obama's course deviation.

The only way to make the Iraq intervention seem "unwinnable" was for the American president to contravene seven decades of hard-earned wisdom and normal practice by the American leader of the free world, two decades of US law and policy on Iraq, and the US-Iraq Strategic Framework Agreement by prematurely ending the vital OIF peace operations and leaving nascent post-Saddam Iraq to the avid competition. Unfortunately, President Obama chose to do just that with An irresponsible exit from Iraq.

For a model correction of the false "unwinnable war" premise, see the OIF FAQ epilogue answer to "Was Operation Iraqi Freedom a strategic blunder or a strategic victory", which features the 15DEC10 United Nations victory statement, Security Council Takes Action to End Iraq Sanctions, Terminate Oil-For-Food Programme as Members Recognize 'Major Changes' Since 1990.


Latimer:
Contrary to the image he cultivated as a tough micromanager, he had perhaps to his peril learned from LBJ’s experience in Vietnam to trust and often defer to the generals on the ground in overseeing a war. Those generals, or many of them, told him to stay the course even when a course correction seemed obvious. I heard this myself. Rumsfeld had a habit of forming strong opinions of people. When he liked you, he let you get away with almost anything, and he liked some of the generals running the war in Iraq a lot.

Secretary Rumsfeld was not wrong to heed the generals on the ground.

The "stay the course" recommendations were consistent with the initial postwar plan and concomitant 'light footprint' approach, which were designed to prioritize the civil political aspect of nation-building. In that light, recall that Iraq met its early political benchmarks, e.g., elections and restored sovereignty, sooner than expected. In other words, Rumsfeld and his generals were succeeding according to plan.

But the enemy competes, too. The problem is our civil political-based postwar plan was effectively counteracted by the enemy's insecurity-based plan. Once it became clear that the enemy's plan was outmatching our initial postwar plan, the US adjusted the mission -- successfully -- with a security-based plan and concomitant 'heavy footprint' approach: the counterinsurgency "surge".

Secretary Rumsfeld suffered politically for the insurgency setback versus the initial postwar plan. It wasn't his fault, but such is the nature of competition.

To defend Rumsfeld, clarify that the COIN adjustment didn't start from scratch. He adjusted to the competition, too. Achievements with Rumsfeld, albeit overshadowed, laid the groundwork for the success of the COIN "surge". Emphasize that setback and adjustment are the normal path to success and the standard of preemptive perfect victory applied by Rumsfeld's detractors is abnormal. Clarify that the adaptive course from the early postwar setbacks to the COIN "surge" matched a normal competitive pattern.

In terms of assigning "share of the blame" for the early postwar setbacks, the US officials who bear the most responsibility are analysts like Richard Clarke and Dan Byman who significantly underestimated Saddam's "regional and global terrorism" (Iraqi Perspectives Project), which included "considerable operational overlap" (IPP) with al Qaeda.

The extent of Saddam's human rights violations was also underestimated. UN Special Rapporteur on Iraq Andreas Mavrommatis found Saddam's sectarian tyranny was "far worse" than we knew.

The Saddamist insurgents knew what we did not. Clarke and Byman's deep underestimation of Saddam's terrorism, which was converted to the insurgency with surprising rapidity and reach, and the underestimation of Saddam's corruption of Iraqi society were exploited by the enemy and undermined the initial postwar plan.

Of course, Saddam's worse-than-known terrorism and human rights violations also breached the Gulf War ceasefire in Iraq's "final opportunity to comply" (UNSCR 1441) and added to the urgent justification for regime change.

See the #postwar and #postwarmil sections of my "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts" for exposition about the initial postwar plan, insurgency setback, and COIN adjustment.


Latimer:
... it certainly wasn’t his plan to stay there forever.

As I like to say, building a nation to secure the peace does not happen faster than raising a child. US forces continue to serve in Europe and Asia in the wake of World War II. Contemporary to Iraq, US forces served in Kosovo and Afghanistan before and after OIF. In other words, the OIF peace operations were cut off historically early.

For decades around the world, the military of the American leader of the free world has stayed as long as needed to secure the peace while evolving prudently with the host nation's progress. The US was following the same constructive course with Iraq until President Obama broke from that cardinal precedent with disastrous consequences.


Latimer:
They were masters at toppling the regimes in Kabul and Baghdad, which they did brilliantly and quickly, but none of them were—nor was Rumsfeld —cut out for a long drawn out occupation of a foreign land. Neither, it turns out, were the members of the State Department and National Security Council who played major roles in that occupation, or were supposed to.

The World War II leaders who laid the foundation for American leadership of the free world were "cut out for a long drawn out occupation of a foreign land". If OIF exposed that the stuff of American leadership has diminished since then, then Operation Iraqi Freedom served as an essential crucible for America to relearn the fundamentals of international leadership.

See the #americanprimacy section of my "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts" where I explain that the ethical, principled, resolute, adaptive leadership that rose to the competition in Iraq constituted a critical corrective for American international leadership. However, the constructive lessons of Iraq can only be ingrained if the public understands that President Bush and Secretary Rumsfeld were right on Iraq in the first place and their detractors have been wrong all along.

I hope you find the OIF FAQ and these comments useful. Again, if you have questions about my work, please ask.


On Fri, Jul 2, 2021 at 4:43 AM Eric LC ... wrote:

Ms. Tonucci, Mr. Latimer, and the Rumsfeld Foundation:

I clarify the Iraq issue at Operation Iraqi Freedom FAQ by organizing the primary source authorities, i.e., the set of controlling law, policy, and precedent and determinative facts that define OIF's justification, to lay a proper foundation and correct for the prevalent conjecture, distorted context, and misinformation that have obfuscated the Iraq issue.

As such, I am writing you in reaction to the self-defeating treatment of the Iraq issue in the Rumsfeld Foundation's 30JUN21 statement, American Statesman, 13th and 21st Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld Dies, and Mr. Latimer's 30JUN21 Politico article, The Don Rumsfeld the Obituaries Won’t Write About.

The prevalent, yet readily correctable, misrepresentation of OIF's justification is keystone premise in the commentary castigating Secretary Rumsfeld on his passing. For example, George Packer's 30JUN21 The Atlantic article, How Rumsfeld Deserves to Be Remembered.

Logically therefore, you need to clarify the Iraq issue at the premise level of the public discourse in order to effectively advocate for Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy. Demonstrate, as I do, that President Bush and Secretary Rumsfeld's determination on Iraq was correct in the first place: That in fact the actual case against Saddam is substantiated.

Yet the Rumsfeld Foundation statement conspicuously ignores the Iraq issue and thus utterly neglects to counteract the Iraq-based degradation of Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy.

Mr. Latimer's Politico article does worse. Where the Rumsfeld Foundation passively failed to vindicate Secretary Rumsfeld, Mr. Latimer actively abased Secretary Rumsfeld by adopting -- thereby validating -- the specious stigmatization of the Iraq intervention used to damn him.

If you're sincere about competing for Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy, then utilize the OIF FAQ's 3 methods to clarify the Iraq issue to the public.

In addition, I recommend explaining that the early post-war setback and adjustment under Secretary Rumsfeld matched a normal pattern for any competitive endeavor, let alone an epochal contest of war and peace. For reference we need look no further than the comparatively greater setbacks and adjustments featured in victories throughout our military history, including for the post-World War II American leader of the free world. See the #postwar and #postwarmil sections of my "10 year anniversary of the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom: thoughts".

Further, explain that the abnormal, anti-competitive, harmful deviation was the historically premature end of the vital OIF peace operations under President Obama. See the sources and commentary at An irresponsible exit from Iraq.

Operation Iraqi Freedom FAQ should provide the basic corrective content necessary to reconstruct the Iraq-based narrative defining Secretary Rumsfeld's legacy. I may follow up this e-mail with a detailed criticism of Mr. Latimer's treatment of the Iraq issue. If you have questions about my work, please ask.


P.S. Make sure to read the OIF FAQ epilogue answer to "Was Operation Iraqi Freedom a strategic blunder or a strategic victory".



Related: How Republicans should talk about the Iraq issue.