Secret Reports Dispute White House
OptimismBy Bob Woodward
Washington Post Staff Writer
10/01/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- On May 22, 2006,
President Bush spoke in Chicago and gave a
characteristically upbeat forecast: "Years from now, people
will look back on the formation of a unity government in
Iraq as a decisive moment in the story of liberty, a moment
when freedom gained a firm foothold in the Middle East and
the forces of terror began their long retreat."
Two days later, the intelligence division of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff circulated a secret intelligence assessment
to the White House that contradicted the president's
forecast.
Instead of a "long retreat," the report forecast a more
violent 2007: "Insurgents and terrorists retain the
resources and capabilities to sustain and even increase
current level of violence through the next year."
A graph included in the assessment measured attacks from
May 2003 to May 2006. It showed some significant dips, but
the current number of attacks against U.S.-led coalition
forces and Iraqi authorities was as high as it had ever been
-- exceeding 3,500 a month. [In July the number would be
over 4,500.] The assessment also included a pessimistic
report on crude oil production, the delivery of electricity
and political progress.
On May 26, the Pentagon released an unclassified report
to Congress, required by law, that contradicted the Joint
Chiefs' secret assessment. The public report sent to
Congress said the "appeal and motivation for continued
violent action will begin to wane in early 2007."
There was a vast difference between what the White House
and Pentagon knew about the situation in Iraq and what they
were saying publicly. But the discrepancy was not
surprising. In memos, reports and internal debates,
high-level officials of the Bush administration have voiced
their concern about the United States' ability to bring
peace and stability to Iraq since early in the occupation.
[The release last week of portions of a National
Intelligence Estimate concluding that the war in Iraq has
become a primary recruitment vehicle for terrorists --
following a series of upbeat speeches by the president --
presented a similar contrast.]
On June 18, 2003, Jay Garner went to see Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to report on his brief tenure
in Iraq as head of the postwar planning office. Throughout
the invasion and the early days of the war, Garner, a
retired Army lieutenant general, had struggled just to get
his team into Iraq. Two days after he arrived, Rumsfeld
called to tell him that L. Paul "Jerry" Bremer, a
61-year-old terrorism expert and protege of Henry A.
Kissinger, would be coming over as the presidential envoy,
effectively replacing Garner.
"We've made three tragic decisions," Garner told
Rumsfeld.
"Really?" Rumsfeld asked.
"Three terrible mistakes," Garner said.
He cited the first two orders Bremer signed when he
arrived, the first one banning as many as 50,000 members of
Saddam Hussein's Baath Party from government jobs and the
second disbanding the Iraqi military. Now there were
hundreds of thousands of disorganized, unemployed, armed
Iraqis running around.
Third, Garner said, Bremer had summarily dismissed an
interim Iraqi leadership group that had been eager to help
the United States administer the country in the short term.
"Jerry Bremer can't be the face of the government to the
Iraqi people. You've got to have an Iraqi face for the Iraqi
people."
Garner made his final point: "There's still time to
rectify this. There's still time to turn it around."
Rumsfeld looked at Garner for a moment with his
take-no-prisoners gaze. "Well," he said, "I don't think
there is anything we can do, because we are where we are."
He thinks I've lost it, Garner thought. He thinks I'm
absolutely wrong. Garner didn't want it to sound like sour
grapes, but facts were facts. "They're all reversible,"
Garner said again.
"We're not going to go back," Rumsfeld said emphatically.
Later that day, Garner went with Rumsfeld to the White
House. But in a meeting with Bush, he made no mention of
mistakes. Instead he regaled the president with stories from
his time in Baghdad.
In an interview last December, I asked Garner if he had
any regrets in not telling the president about his
misgivings.
"You know, I don't know if I had that moment to live over
again, I don't know if I'd do that or not. But if I had done
that -- and quite frankly, I mean, I wouldn't have had a
problem doing that -- but in my thinking, the door's closed.
I mean, there's nothing I can do to open this door again.
And I think if I had said that to the president in front of
Cheney and Condoleezza Rice and Rumsfeld in there, the
president would have looked at them and they would have
rolled their eyes back and he would have thought, 'Boy, I
wonder why we didn't get rid of this guy sooner?' "
"They didn't see it coming," Garner added. "As the troops
said, they drank the Kool-Aid."
What's the Strategy?
In the fall of 2003 and the winter of 2004, officials of the National
Security Council became increasingly concerned about the
ability of the U.S. military to counter the growing
insurgency in Iraq.
Returning from a visit to Iraq, Robert D. Blackwill, the
NSC's top official for Iraq, was deeply disturbed by what he
considered the inadequate number of troops on the ground
there. He told Rice and Stephen J. Hadley, her deputy, that
the NSC needed to do a military review.
"If we have a military strategy, I can't identify it,"
Hadley said. "I don't know what's worse -- that they have
one and won't tell us or that they don't have one."
Rice had made it clear that her authority did not extend
to Rumsfeld or the military, so Blackwill never forced the
issue with her. Still, he wondered why the president never
challenged the military. Why didn't he say to Gen. John P.
Abizaid at the end of one of his secure video briefings,
"John, let's have another of these on Thursday and what I
really want from you is please explain to me, let's take an
hour and a half, your military strategy for victory."
After Bush's reelection, Hadley replaced Rice as national
security adviser. He made an assessment of the problems from
the first term.
"I give us a B-minus for policy development," he told a
colleague on Feb. 5, 2005, "and a D-minus for policy
execution."
Rice, for her part, hired Philip D. Zelikow, an old
friend, and sent him immediately to Iraq. She needed ground
truth, a full, detailed report from someone she trusted.
Zelikow had a license to go anywhere and ask any question.
On Feb. 10, 2005, two weeks after Rice became secretary
of state, Zelikow presented her with a 15-page,
single-spaced secret memo. "At this point Iraq remains a
failed state shadowed by constant violence and undergoing
revolutionary political change," Zelikow wrote.
The insurgency was "being contained militarily," but it
was "quite active," leaving Iraqi civilians feeling "very
insecure," Zelikow said.
U.S. officials seemed locked down in the fortified Green
Zone. "Mobility of coalition officials is extremely limited,
and productive government activity is constrained."
Zelikow criticized the Baghdad-centered effort, noting
that "the war can certainly be lost in Baghdad, but the war
can only be won in the cities and provinces outside
Baghdad."
In sum, he said, the United States' effort suffered
because it lacked an articulated, comprehensive, unified
policy.
Lessons From Kissinger
A powerful, largely invisible influence on Bush's Iraq policy was
former secretary of state Kissinger.
"Of the outside people that I talk to in this job," Vice
President Cheney told me in the summer of 2005, "I probably
talk to Henry Kissinger more than I talk to anybody else. He
just comes by and, I guess at least once a month, Scooter
[his then-chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby] and I sit down
with him."
The president also met privately with Kissinger every
couple of months, making him the most regular and frequent
outside adviser to Bush on foreign affairs.
Kissinger sensed wobbliness everywhere on Iraq, and he
increasingly saw it through the prism of the Vietnam War.
For Kissinger, the overriding lesson of Vietnam is to stick
it out.
In his writing, speeches and private comments, Kissinger
claimed that the United States had essentially won the war
in 1972, only to lose it because of the weakened resolve of
the public and Congress.
In a column in The Washington Post on Aug. 12, 2005,
titled "Lessons for an Exit Strategy," Kissinger wrote,
"Victory over the insurgency is the only meaningful exit
strategy."
He delivered the same message directly to Bush, Cheney
and Hadley at the White House.
Victory had to be the goal, he told all. Don't let it
happen again. Don't give an inch, or else the media, the
Congress and the American culture of avoiding hardship will
walk you back.
He also said that the eventual outcome in Iraq was more
important than Vietnam had been. A radical Islamic or
Taliban-style government in Iraq would be a model that could
challenge the internal stability of the key countries in the
Middle East and elsewhere.
Kissinger told Rice that in Vietnam they didn't have the
time, focus, energy or support at home to get the politics
in place. That's why it had collapsed like a house of cards.
He urged that the Bush administration get the politics
right, both in Iraq and on the home front. Partially
withdrawing troops had its own dangers. Even entertaining
the idea of withdrawing any troops could create momentum for
an exit that was less than victory.
In a meeting with presidential speechwriter Michael
Gerson in early September 2005, Kissinger was more explicit:
Bush needed to resist the pressure to withdraw American
troops. He repeated his axiom that the only meaningful exit
strategy was victory.
"The president can't be talking about troop reductions as
a centerpiece," Kissinger said. "You may want to reduce
troops," but troop reduction should not be the objective.
"This is not where you put the emphasis."
To emphasize his point, he gave Gerson a copy of a memo
he had written to President Richard M. Nixon, dated Sept.
10, 1969.
"Withdrawal of U.S. troops will become like salted
peanuts to the American public; the more U.S. troops come
home, the more will be demanded," he wrote.
The policy of "Vietnamization," turning the fight over to
the South Vietnamese military, Kissinger wrote, might
increase pressure to end the war because the American public
wanted a quick resolution. Troop withdrawals would only
encourage the enemy. "It will become harder and harder to
maintain the morale of those who remain, not to speak of
their mothers."
Two months after Gerson's meeting, the administration
issued a 35-page "National Strategy for Victory in Iraq." It
was right out of the Kissinger playbook. The only meaningful
exit strategy would be victory.
Echoes of Vietnam
Vietnam was also on the minds of some old Army buddies of Gen. Abizaid,
the Centcom commander. They were worried that Iraq was
slowly turning into Vietnam -- either it would wind down
prematurely or become a war that was not winnable.
Some of them, including retired Gen. Wayne A. Downing and
James V. Kimsey, a founder of America Online, visited
Abizaid in 2005 at his headquarters in Doha, Qatar, and then
in Iraq.
Abizaid held to the position that the war was now about
the Iraqis. They had to win it now. The U.S. military had
done all it could. It was critical, he argued, that they
lower the American troop presence. It was still the face of
an occupation, with American forces patrolling, kicking down
doors and looking at the Iraqi women, which infuriated the
Iraqi men.
"We've got to get the [expletive] out," he said.
Abizaid's old friends were worried sick that another
Vietnam or anything that looked like Vietnam would be the
end of the volunteer army. What's the strategy for winning?
they pressed him.
"That's not my job," Abizaid said.
No, it is part of your job, they insisted.
No, Abizaid said. Articulating strategy belonged to
others.
Who?
"The president and Condi Rice, because Rumsfeld doesn't
have any credibility anymore," he said.
This March, Abizaid was in Washington to testify before
the Senate Armed Services Committee. He painted a careful
but upbeat picture of the situation in Iraq.
Afterward, he went over to see
Rep. John P. Murtha in the Rayburn House Office
Building. Murtha, a Pennsylvania Democrat, had introduced a
resolution in Congress calling for American troops in Iraq
to be "redeployed" -- the military term for returning troops
overseas to their home bases -- "at the earliest practicable
date."
"The war in Iraq is not going as advertised," Murtha had
said. "It is a flawed policy wrapped in illusion."
Now, sitting at the round dark-wood table in the
congressman's office, Abizaid, the one uniformed military
commander who had been intimately involved in Iraq from the
beginning and who was still at it, indicated he wanted to
speak frankly. According to Murtha, Abizaid raised his hand
for emphasis, held his thumb and forefinger a quarter of an
inch from each other and said, "We're that far apart."
Frustration and a Resignation
That same month, White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr. prepared
to leave the administration after submitting his resignation
to Bush. He felt a sense of relief mixed with the knowledge
that he was leaving unfinished business.
"It's Iraq, Iraq, Iraq," Card had told his replacement,
Joshua B. Bolten. "Then comes the economy."
One of Card's great worries was that Iraq would be
compared to Vietnam. In March, there were 58,249 names on
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington. One of
Kissinger's private criticisms of Bush was that he had no
mechanism in place, or even an inclination, to consider the
downsides of impending decisions. Alternative courses of
action were rarely considered.
As best as Card could remember, there had been some
informal, blue-sky discussions at times along the lines of
"What could we do differently?" But there had been no formal
sessions to consider alternatives to staying in Iraq. To his
knowledge there were no anguished memos bearing the names of
Cheney, Rice, Hadley, Rumsfeld, the CIA, Card himself or
anyone else saying "Let's examine alternatives," as had
surfaced after the Vietnam era.
Card put it on the generals in the Pentagon and Iraq. If
they had come forward and said to the president, "It's not
worth it," or, "The mission can't be accomplished," Card was
certain, the president would have said "I'm not going to ask
another kid to sacrifice for it."
Card was enough of a realist to see that there were two
negative aspects to Bush's public persona that had come to
define his presidency: incompetence and arrogance. Card did
not believe that Bush was incompetent, and so he had to face
the possibility that, as Bush's chief of staff, he might
have been the incompetent one. In addition, he did not think
the president was arrogant.
But the marketing of Bush had come across as arrogant.
Maybe it was unfair in Card's opinion, but there it was.
He was leaving. And the man he considered most
responsible for the postwar troubles, the one who should
have gone, Rumsfeld, was staying.
Bill Murphy Jr. and Christine Parthemore contributed
to this report.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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