President-elect Trump’s promise to “drain the swamp” of
Washington seems forgotten — like so many political
promises — as he meets with swamp creatures, such as
disgraced Gen. David Petraeus.
By Ray McGovern
The news that President-elect Donald Trump
called in disgraced retired Gen. David Petraeus for a
job interview as possible Secretary of State tests
whether Trump’s experience in hosting “The Celebrity
Apprentice” honed his skills for spotting an incompetent
phony or not.
Does Trump need more data than the continuing bedlam
in Iraq and Afghanistan to understand that one can earn
a Princeton PhD by writing erudite-sounding drivel about
“counterinsurgency” and still flunk war? Granted, the
shambles in which Petraeus left Iraq and Afghanistan
were probably more a result of his overweening careerism
and political ambition than his misapplication of
military strategy. But does that make it any more
excusable?
In 2007, Adm. William Fallon, commander of CENTCOM
with four decades of active-duty experience behind him,
quickly took the measure of Petraeus, who was one of his
subordinates while implementing a “surge” of over 30,000
U.S. troops into Iraq.
Several sources reported that Fallon was sickened by
Petraeus’s unctuous pandering to ingratiate himself.
Fallon is said to have been so turned off by all the
accolades in the flowery introduction given him by
Petraeus that he called him to his face “an ass-kissing
little chickenshit,” adding, “I hate people like that.”
Sadly, Petraeus’s sycophancy is not uncommon among
general officers. Uncommon was Fallon’s outspoken
candor.
The past decade has shown that obsequiousness to
those above him and callousness toward others are two of
Petraeus’s most notable character traits. They go along
with his lack of military acumen and his dishonesty as
revealed in his lying to the FBI about handing over
top-secret notebooks to his biographer/lover, an
“indiscretion” that would have landed a less
well-connected person in jail but instead got him only a
mild slap on the wrist (via a misdemeanor guilty plea).
Indeed, Petraeus, the epitome of a “political
general,” represents some of the slimiest depths of the
Washington “swamp” that President-elect Trump has vowed
to drain. Petraeus cares desperately about the feelings
of his fellow elites but shows shocking disdain for the
suffering of other human beings who are not so
important.
In early 2011 in Afghanistan, Petraeus shocked aides
to then-President Hamid Karzai after many children were
burned to death in a “coalition” attack in northeastern
Afghanistan by suggesting that Afghan parents may have
burned their own children to exaggerate their claims of
civilian casualties and discredit the US,
reported The Washington Post, citing two
participants at the meeting.
“Killing 60 people, and then blaming the killing on
those same people, rather than apologizing for any
deaths? This is inhuman,” one Afghan official said.
“This is a really terrible situation.”
Yet, on other occasions, the politically savvy
Petraeus can be a paragon of sensitivity – like when he
is in danger of getting crosswise with the Israel Lobby.
Never did Petraeus’s fawning shine through with more
brilliance, than when an (unintentionally disclosed)
email exchange
showed him groveling before arch-neocon Max Boot,
beseeching Boot’s help in fending off charges that
Petraeus was “anti-Israel” because his prepared
testimony to a congressional committee included the
no-brainer observations that Israeli-Palestinian
hostility presents “distinct challenges to our ability
to advance our interests” and that “this conflict
foments anti-American sentiment, due to a perception of
US favoritism for Israel. … Meanwhile, al-Qaeda and
other militant groups exploit that anger to mobilize
support.”
So, telling the truth (perhaps accidentally in
prepared testimony) made Petraeus squirm with fear about
offending the powerful Israel Lobby, but he apparently
didn’t hesitate to lie to FBI agents when he was caught
in a tight spot for sharing highly sensitive
intelligence with Paula Broadwell, his
mistress/biographer. But, again, Petraeus realized that
it helps to have influential friends. A court gave him a
slap on the wrist with a sentence of two years probation
and a fine of $100,000 – which is less than he usually
makes for a single speaking engagement.
Military Incompetent Without Parallel
And, if President-elect Trump isn’t repulsed by the
stench of hypocrisy – if he ignores Petraeus’s reckless
handling of classified material after Trump lambasted
Hillary Clinton for her own careless behavior in that
regard – there is also the grim truth behind Petraeus’s
glitzy image.
As a military strategist or even a trainer of troops,
Petraeus has been an unparalleled disaster. Yes, the
corporate media always runs interference for Official
Washington’s favorite general. But that does not equate
with genuine success.
The Iraq “surge,” which Petraeus oversaw, was
misrepresented in the corporate media as a huge victory
– because it was credited with a brief dip in the level
of violence at the cost of some 1,000 American lives
(and those of many more Iraqis) – but the “surge” failed
its principal goal of buying time to heal the rift
between Shiites and Sunnis, a division that ultimately
led to the emergence of the Islamic State (or ISIS).
Then, in early 2014, the crackerjack Iraqi troops
whom Petraeus bragged about training ran away from
Mosul, leaving their modern U.S.-provided weapons behind
for the Islamic State’s jihadists to play with.
In part because of that collapse – with Iraqi forces
only now beginning to chip away at ISIS control of Mosul
– the Obama administration was dragged into another
Mideast war, spilling across Iraq and Syria and adding
to the droves of refugees pouring into Europe, a crisis
that is now destabilizing the European Union.
You might have thought that the combination of
military failures and scandalous behavior would have
ended David Petraeus’s “government service,” but he has
never lost his skill at putting his finger to the wind.
During the presidential campaign, the windsock
Petraeus was circumspect, which was understandable given
the uncertainty regarding which way the wind was
blowing.
However, on Sept. 1, 2015, amid calls from the
mainstream US media and establishment think tanks for
President Obama to escalate the US proxy war to
overthrow the Syrian government, Petraeus spoke out in
favor of giving more weapons to “moderate” Syrian
rebels, despite the widespread recognition that
U.S.-supplied guns and rockets were ending up in the
hands of Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front.
The new harebrained scheme – favored by Petraeus and
other neocons – fantasized about Al Qaeda possibly
joining the fight against the Islamic State, although
ISIS sprang from Al Qaeda and splintered largely over
tactical issues, such as how quickly to declare a
jihadist state, not over fundamental fundamentalist
goals.
But more miscalculations in the Middle East would be
right up Petraeus’s alley. He played an important role
in facilitating the emergence of the Islamic State by
his too-clever-by-half policy of co-opting some Sunni
tribes with promises of shared power in Baghdad and with
lots of money, and then simply looking the other way as
the U.S.-installed Shia government in Baghdad ditched
the promises.
Surge? Or Splurge With Lives
The so-called “surges” of troops into Iraq and
Afghanistan are particularly gross examples of the way
American soldiers have been used as expendable pawns by
ambitious generals like Petraeus and ambitious
politicians like former Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
The problem is that overweening personal ambition can
end up getting a lot of people killed. In the speciously
glorified first “surge,” President George W. Bush sent
more than 30,000 additional troops into Iraq in early
2007. During the period of the “surge,” about 1,000 US
troops died.
There was a similar American death toll during
President Barack Obama’s “surge” of another 30,000
troops into Afghanistan in early 2010, a shift toward a
counterinsurgency strategy that had been pressed on
Obama by Petraeus, Gates and Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton. Despite the loss of those 1,000 additional US
soldiers, the counterinsurgency “surge” had little
effect on the course of the Afghan War.
The bloody chaos that continues in Iraq today and in
the never-ending war in Afghanistan was entirely
predictable. Indeed, it was predicted by those
of us able to spread some truth around via the Internet,
while being blacklisted by the fawning corporate media,
which cheered on the “surges” and their chief architect,
David Petraeus.
But the truth is not something that thrives in either
US politics or media these days. Campaigning early this
year in New Hampshire, then-presidential aspirant Jeb
Bush gave a short partial-history lesson about his big
brother’s attack on Iraq. Referring to the so-called
Islamic State, Bush said, “ISIS didn’t exist when my
brother was president. ‘Al Qaeda in Iraq’ was wiped out
… the surge created a fragile but stable Iraq. …”
Jeb Bush is partially right about ISIS; it didn’t
exist when his brother George attacked Iraq. Indeed, Al
Qaeda didn’t exist in Iraq until after the US
invasion when it emerged as “Al Qaeda in Iraq” and it
wasn’t eliminated by the “surge.”
With huge sums of US cash going to Sunni tribes in
Anbar province, Al Qaeda in Iraq just pulled back and
regrouped. Its top leaders came from the ranks of angry
Sunnis who had been officers in Saddam Hussein’s army
and – when the “surge” failed to achieve reconciliation
between Sunnis and Shiites – the US cash proved useful
in expanding Sunni resistance to Baghdad’s Shiite
government. From the failed “surge” strategy emerged the
rebranded “Al Qaeda in Iraq,” the Islamic State.
So, despite Jeb Bush’s attempted spin, the reality is
that his brother’s aggressive war in Iraq created both
“Al Qaeda in Iraq” and its new incarnation, Islamic
State.
The mess was made worse by subsequent US strategy –
beginning under Bush and expanding under President Obama
– of supporting insurgents in Syria. By supplying money,
guns and rockets to “moderate” Sunni rebels, that
strategy has allowed the materiel to quickly fall into
the hands of Al Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate, Nusra Front,
and its jihadist allies, Ahrar al-Sham.
In other words, US strategy – much of it guided by
David Petraeus – continues to strengthen Al Qaeda, which
– through its Nusra affiliate and its Islamic State
spin-off – now occupies large swaths of Iraq and Syria.
Escaping a ‘Lost War’
All this is among the fateful consequences of the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq 13 years ago – made worse (not
better) by the “surge” in 2007, which contributed
significantly to this decade’s Sunni-Shia violence. The
real reason for Bush’s “surge” seems to have been to buy
time so that he and Vice President Dick Cheney could
leave office without having a lost war on their résumés.
As author Steve Coll has put it, “The decision [to
surge] at a minimum guaranteed that his [Bush’s]
presidency would not end with a defeat in history’s
eyes. By committing to the surge [the President] was
certain to at least achieve a stalemate.”
According to Bob Woodward, Bush told key Republicans
in late 2005 that he would not withdraw from Iraq, “even
if Laura and [first-dog] Barney are the only ones
supporting me.” Woodward made it clear that Bush was
well aware in fall 2006 that the US was losing.
Indeed, by fall 2006, it had become unavoidably clear
that a new course had to be chosen and implemented in
Iraq, and virtually every sober thinker seemed opposed
to sending more troops.
The senior military, especially CENTCOM commander
Gen. John Abizaid and his man on the ground in Iraq,
Gen. George Casey, emphasized that sending still more US
troops to Iraq would simply reassure leading Iraqi
politicians that they could relax and continue to take
forever to get their act together.
Here, for example, is Gen. Abizaid’s answer at the
Senate Armed Services Committee on Nov. 15, 2006, to
Sen. John McCain, who had long been pressing vigorously
for sending 20,000 more troops to Iraq:
”Senator McCain, I met with every divisional
commander, General Casey, the corps commander, General
Dempsey, we all talked together. And I said, ‘in your
professional opinion, if we were to bring in more
American troops now, does it add considerably to our
ability to achieve success in Iraq?’ And they all said
no.
“And the reason is because we want the Iraqis to do
more. It is easy for the Iraqis to rely upon us do this
work. I believe that more American forces prevent the
Iraqis from doing more, from taking more responsibility
for their own future.”
The US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, sent a
classified cable to Washington warning that “proposals
to send more US forces to Iraq would not produce a
long-term solution and would make our policy less, not
more, sustainable,” according to a New York Times
retrospective on the “surge” published on Aug. 31, 2008.
Khalilzad was arguing, unsuccessfully, for authority to
negotiate a political solution with the Iraqis.
There was also the establishment-heavy Iraq Study
Group, created by Congress and led by Republican
stalwart James Baker and Democrat Lee Hamilton (with
Robert Gates as a member although he quit before the
review was competed). After months of policy review, the
Iraq Study Group issued a final report on Dec. 6, 2006,
that began with the ominous sentence “The situation in
Iraq is grave and deteriorating.”
It called for: “A change in the primary mission of US
Forces in Iraq that will enable the United States to
begin to move its combat forces out of Iraq responsibly…
By the first quarter of 2008…all combat brigades not
necessary for force protection could be out of Iraq.”
Rumsfeld’s Known-Knowns
The little-understood story behind Bush’s decision to
catapult Robert Gates into the post of Defense Secretary
was the astonishing fact that Donald Rumsfeld, of all
people, was pulling a Robert McNamara; that is, he was
going wobbly on a war based largely on his own
hubris-laden, misguided advice.
In the fall of 2006 Rumsfeld was having a reality
attack. In Rumsfeld-speak, he had come face to face with
a “known known.”
On Nov. 6, 2006, a day before the mid-term elections,
Rumsfeld sent a memo to the White House, in which he
acknowledged, “Clearly, what US forces are currently
doing in Iraq is not working well enough or fast
enough.” The rest of his memo sounded very much like the
emerging troop-drawdown conclusions of the Iraq Study
Group.
The first 80 percent of Rumsfeld’s memo addressed
“Illustrative Options,” including his preferred – or
“above the line” – options such as “an accelerated
drawdown of US bases … to five by July 2007” and
withdrawal of US forces “from vulnerable positions –
cities, patrolling, etc. … so the Iraqis know they have
to pull up their socks, step up and take responsibility
for their country.”
Finally, Rumsfeld had begun to listen to his generals
and others who knew which end was up.?The hurdle? Bush
and Cheney were not about to follow Rumsfeld’s example
in “going wobbly.” Like Robert McNamara at a similar
juncture during Vietnam, Rumsfeld had to be let go
before he caused a President to “lose a war.”
Waiting in the wings, though, was Robert Gates, who
had been CIA director under President George H. W. Bush,
spent four years as president of Texas A&M, and had
returned to the Washington stage as a member of the Iraq
Study Group. While on the ISG, he evidenced no
disagreement with its emerging conclusions – at least
not until Bush asked him to become Secretary of Defense
in early November 2006.
It was awkward. Right up to the week before the
mid-term elections on Nov. 7, 2006, President Bush had
insisted that he intended to keep Rumsfeld in place for
the next two years. Suddenly, the President had to deal
with Rumsfeld’s apostasy on Iraq. Rumsfeld had let
reality get to him, together with the very strong
anti-surge protestations by all senior uniformed
officers save one – the ambitious David Petraeus, who
had jumped onboard for the “surge” escalation, which
guaranteed another star on his lapel.
All Hail Petraeus
With the bemedaled Petraeus in the wings and guidance
on strategy from arch-neocons, such as retired General
Jack Keane and think-tank analyst Frederick Kagan, the
White House completed the coup against the generals by
replacing Rumsfeld with Gates and recalling Casey and
Abizaid and elevating Petraeus.
Amid the mainstream media’s hosannas for Petraeus and
Gates, the significance of the shakeup was widely
misunderstood, with key senators, including Sen. Hillary
Clinton, buying the false narrative that the changes
presaged a drawdown in the war rather than an
escalation.
So relieved were the senators to be rid of the
hated-but-feared Rumsfeld that the Senate Armed Services
Committee hearing on Dec. 5, 2006, on Gates’s nomination
had the feel of a pajama party (I was there). Gates told
them bedtime stories – and vowed to show “great
deference to the judgment of generals.”
With unanimous Democratic support and only two
conservative Republicans opposed, Gates was confirmed by
the full Senate on Dec. 6, 2006.
On Jan. 10, 2007, Bush formally unveiled the
bait-and-switch, announcing the “surge” of 30,000
additional troops, a mission that would be overseen by
Gates and Petraeus. Bush did acknowledge that there
would be considerable loss of life in the year ahead as
US troops were assigned to create enough stability for
Iraq’s Shiite and Sunni factions to reach an
accommodation.
At least, he got the loss-of-life part right. Around
1,000 US troops died during the “surge” along with many
more Iraqis. But Bush, Cheney, Petraeus, and Gates
apparently deemed that cost a small price to pay for
enabling them to blame a successor administration for
the inevitable withdrawal from America’s failed war of
aggression.
The gambit worked especially well for Gates and
Petraeus. Amid glowing mainstream media press clippings
about the “successful surge” and “victory at last” in
Iraq, Gates was hailed as a new “wise man” and Petraeus
was the military genius who pulled victory from the jaws
of defeat. Their reputations were such that President
Obama concluded that he had no choice but to keep them
on, Gates as Defense Secretary and Petraeus as Obama’s
top general in the Middle East.
Petraeus then oversaw the “surge” in Afghanistan and
landed the job of CIA director, where Petraeus
reportedly played a major role in arming up the Syrian
rebels in pursuit of another “regime change,” this time
in Syria.
Although Petraeus’s CIA tenure ended in disgrace in
November 2012 when his dangerous liaison with Paula
Broadwell was disclosed, his many allies in Official
Washington’s powerful neocon community are now pushing
him on President-elect Trump as the man to serve as
Secretary of State.
Petraeus is known as a master of flattery, something
that seemingly can turn Trump’s head. But the
President-elect should have learned from his days
hosting “The Celebrity Apprentice” that the winning
contender should not be the one most adept at sucking up
to the boss.
(Now, with the whole Middle East in turmoil, I find
some relief in
this brief parody by comedienne Connie Bryan of
Petraeus’s performance in training Iraqi troops.)
Ray McGovern works
with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical
Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He was
an Army infantry/intelligence officer and then as a CIA
analyst for a total of 30 years, from the administration
of John Kennedy to that of George H. W. Bush. He is
co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for
Sanity (VIPS).
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