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IRAQ: Cowboys and Indians
By Niall Ferguson
Want the American troops out of Iraq now? Be careful what you wish for. By Niall Ferguson.
“I think that this could still fail.”
Those words—uttered by a senior American officer
in Baghdad in May—probably gave opponents of the war in Iraq,
particularly those clamoring for a hasty exit, a bit of a kick. They should
be careful what they wish for.
For history strongly suggests that a hasty American
withdrawal from Iraq would be a disaster. “If we let go of the
insurgency,” said another of the officers quoted anonymously last
spring, “then this country could fail and go back into civil war and
chaos.”
As many of the war’s opponents seem to have
forgotten, civil war and chaos tend to
break out when American military interventions have been aborted. Think not
only of Vietnam and Cambodia but also of Lebanon in 1983 and Haiti in 1996.
To talk glibly of “finding a way out of Iraq,” as if it were
just a matter of hailing a cab and heading for the Baghdad airport, is to
underestimate the danger of a bloody, internecine conflict among Kurds,
Sunni Arabs, and Shiites.
Instead of throwing up our hands in an irresponsible
fit of despair, we need to learn not just
from past disasters but also from historical victories over insurgencies.
Indeed, of all the attempts in the past century by irregular indigenous
forces to expel regular foreign forces, around a third have failed.
In 1917 British forces invaded Mesopotamia, got to
Baghdad, overthrew its Ottoman rulers, and sought—in the words of the
general who led them, Sir Stanley
Maude—to be its people’s “liberators.” The British
presence in Iraq was legitimized by
international law (it was designated a League of Nations mandate) and by a
modicum of democracy (a referendum was held among local sheiks to confirm
the creation of a British-style constitutional monarchy). Despite all this,
in 1920 there was a full-scale insurgency against the continuing British
military presence.
Some may object that warfare today is a very
different matter from warfare 85 years ago. Yet the striking thing about the events of
1920 is how very like the events of our own time they were. The reality of what is
sometimes called “asymmetric
warfare” is how very symmetrical it really is: An insurgency is about
leveling the military playing field and exploiting the advantages of local knowledge to stage hit-and-run attacks against the
occupiers, as well as anybody thought to be
collaborating with them. Indeed, if there is asymmetry it lies in the advantages enjoyed by the insurgents. The
cost of training and equipping an American
soldier is high; by contrast, life is tragically cheap among the young men of Baghdad and
Falluja. Even if the insurgents lose 10 men
for every 1 they kill, they may still be winning.
How, then, did the British crush the insurgency of
1920? Three lessons stand out.
The first is that, unlike the American enterprise in
Iraq today, they had enough men. In 1920, total
British forces in Iraq numbered around 120,000, of whom around 34,000 were trained for actual fighting.
During the insurgency, a further 15,000 men arrived as reinforcements.
Coincidentally, that is very close to the number of
American military personnel now in Iraq (around
138,000 at the time of writing). The trouble is that the population of Iraq was just over 3 million in
1920, whereas today it is around 24 million. Thus, back then the ratio of
Iraqis to foreign forces was, at most, 23 to 1. Today it is around 174 to
1. To arrive at a ratio of 23 to 1 today, about one million American troops
would be needed.
The United States also faces two other problems that
the United Kingdom did not have to worry about 85 years ago. The British were able
to be ruthless: They used air raids and
punitive expeditions to inflict harsh collective punishments on villages that supported the insurgents. The United States has not
been above brutal methods on occasion in Iraq,
yet humiliation and torture of prisoners have not yielded any significant
benefits compared with what they have cost the country’s reputation.
Today’s other problem has to do with timing and
expectations. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld has said that American forces should
aim to work to a “10-30-30” timetable: 10 days should suffice
to topple a rogue regime, 30 days to establish order in its wake, and 30
more days to prepare for the next military
undertaking. I am all in favor of a 10-30-30 timetable—provided the
measurement is years, not days. For it may well take around 10 years to establish order in Iraq, 30 more to
establish the rule of law, and quite possibly another 30 to create a stable
democracy.
Those American officers who say that it could take
years to succeed in Iraq are therefore right. But the Bush administration
has just three years left. Is it credible that American troops will still
be in Iraq for even another four years after that?
The insurgents don’t think so. They know that
American democracy puts time on their side. Once again, the contrast with the British
experience is instructive. Although Iraq was formally granted its
independence in 1932, there was still some form
of British presence in the country until the late 1950s.
So, if we acknowledge that the United States simply
does not have the luxury of time that the British enjoyed and cannot be
similarly ruthless, can it at least increase the manpower at its disposal
in Iraq?
The official answer from Washington is that Iraqi
security forces will soon be ready to play an effective role in policing.
Few who have seen those forces on the ground find this strategy realistic.
Some fear that the training that Iraqi soldiers are receiving may prove
useful only when they fight one another in an Iraqi civil war.
What, then, of America’s own resources? Almost
no one (least of all the Pentagon) wants to go back to the draft. So could
today’s all-volunteer force somehow be expanded to double (at least)
the troops available? That too seems unlikely. Indeed, the current system
is already showing alarming signs of stress and strain as more and more is
asked of the “weekend warriors” of the
reserves and National Guard, who together account for roughly two-fifths of the force in Iraq. In December last year, the Army
National Guard acknowledged that it had fallen 30 percent below its
recruiting goals in the preceding two months. Many members of the
Individual Ready Reserve have been contesting the Army’s right to
call them up.
How did the British address the manpower problem in
1920? The answer is by bringing in soldiers from India, who accounted for
more than 87 percent of troops in the counterinsurgency campaign. Perhaps,
then, the greatest problem faced by the Anglophone empire of our own time
is very simple: The United Kingdom had the Indian Army; the United States
does not. Indeed, by a rich irony, the only significant auxiliary forces
available to the Pentagon today are none other than . . . the British Army.
But those troops are far too few to be analogous to the Sikhs, Mahrattas,
and Baluchis who fought so effectively in 1920.
No one should wish for an overhasty American
withdrawal from Iraq. It would be the prelude to a bloodbath of ethnic
cleansing and sectarian violence, with inevitable spillovers into and
interventions from neighboring countries. Rather, it is time to acknowledge
just how thinly stretched American forces in
Iraq are and to address the problem: whether by finding new allies (send Condoleezza Rice to New Delhi?); radically
expanding the accelerated citizenship program for immigrants who join the
army; or lowering the (historically high)
educational requirements demanded by military recruiters.
Yes, as that anonymous officer said, the Bush
administration’s policy in Iraq could indeed still fail. But too few
American liberals seem to grasp how high the price will be if it does. That
is a point, unfortunately, that also eludes most of this country’s
allies. Does it also elude the secretary of defense? If
“10-30-30” are the numbers that concern him, I begin to fear
that it does. The numbers that matter right now are 174 to 1. That is not
only the ratio of Iraqis to American troops. It is starting to look
alarmingly like the odds against American success.
This essay appeared in the New York Times on May 24, 2005.
Available from the Hoover Press is Terrorism, the Laws of War, and the Constitution: Debating the Enemy Combatant Cases, edited by Peter Berkowitz. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Senior Fellow Niall Ferguson is also a professor of history at Harvard University and a professor of business administration at Harvard Business School. He is also a senior research fellow at Jesus College, Oxford University. He specializes in political and financial history and provides insight into understanding the complex interaction among politics, war, and national economies. His most recent book is The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West.
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