March
24, 2005
We Are Winning in Iraq
By Austin
Bay
It was a very early morning in July 2004, and
after making myself a steamer-sized cup of hot tea at my desk
in Corps Plans, I walked into the coalition military's Joint Operations
Center (JOC) in Al Faw Palace, Baghdad.
Paul Bremer and the Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA) had left Baghdad a couple of weeks earlier, and Prime Minister
Iyad Allawi's interim Iraqi government was --as the bad pun went
-- an interim rocky government. But Allawi's government not only
had popular support, it had spine. Day by day, Allawi emerged
as a smart, adaptive and courageous leader. The Allawi government
was rapidly building a democratic Iraqi future.
I took a seat in the back of the JOC's eight-tiered
ampitheater. A huge plasma screen draped the JOC's front wall,
like a movie theater screen divided into ceiling-high panels capable
of displaying multiple computer projections. A viewer could visually
hopscotch from news to weather to war. In the upper right-hand
corner of one panel, Fox News flickered silently -- and for the
record, occasionally CNN or Al Jazeera would flicker there, as
well. Beneath Fox ran my favorite channel, live imagery from a
Predator Unmanned Aerial Vehicle circling somewhere over Iraq.
The biggest display, that morning and every morning,
was a spooling date-time list describing scores of military and
police actions undertaken over the last dozen hours, The succinct,
acronym-packed reports flowed like haikus of violence: "0331:
1/5 Cav, 1st Cavalry Division, arrests suspects after Iraqi police
stop car"; "0335 USMC vicinity Fallujah engaged by RPG,
returned fire. No casualties."
The spool spun on and on, and I remember thinking:
"I know we're winning. We're winning because -- in the big
picture -- all the opposition (Saddam's thugs and Zarqawi's Al
Qaeda) has to offer is the tyranny of the past. But the drop-by-drop
police blotter perspective obscures that."
Collect relatively isolated events in a chronological
list and presto: the impression of uninterrupted, widespread violence
destroying Iraq. But that was a false impression. Every day, coalition
forces were moving thousands of 18-wheelers from Kuwait and Turkey
into Iraq, and if the "insurgents" were lucky they blew
up one. However, flash the flames of that one rig on CNN and,
"Oh my God, America can't stop these guys," is the impression
left in Boise and Beijing.
Saddam's thugs and Zarqawi's klan were actually
weak enemies -- "brittle" is the word I used to describe
them at a senior planning meeting. Their local power was based
on intimidation -- killing by car bomb, murdering in the street.
Their strategic power was based solely on selling the false impression
of nationwide quagmire -- selling post-Saddam Iraq as a dysfunctional
failed-state, rather than an emerging democracy .
Only July 19, I attended a meeting in Najaf where
the governors of Najaf and Diwaniya told the corps commander that
they needed clean water and better sewer systems. Citizens in
the city of Najaf wanted Marines in the area to start spending
money. As I said, we were winning.
Were there
severe security issues? Absolutely -- in August Najaf was the
scene of a most curious battle. The Mahdi militia took over the
Imam Ali Mosque -- but were slowly chewed to bits by U.S. troops
and forced to leave the mosque by the political efforts of Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and the local populace.
In World War II, destroying Nazi divisions and
taking islands from the Japanese provided hard yardsticks to gauge
military success. Irregular warfare rarely offers such a clarifying
quantitative measure. Over the summer of 2004, I had the benefit
of anecdotal measures. Iraqis I talked to would tell me they intended
to vote in the January elections.
The elections would be "the big island,"
the defining moment in the post-Saddam political struggle, and
it would be the Iraqi people providing the public yardstick.
That's precisely what happened. The Jan. 30 election
provided the broad and deep perspective the police blotter obscures:
This is a war of liberty against tyranny, and it's a war we are
winning.
©
2005 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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