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The revenge of history, Mr. Rumsfeld
by Jason
Vest, the Village Voice
Though many have forgotten it if they
ever noticed it Donald Rumsfeld once ran for president, modestly
declaring in 1988 that the he was the “best among the candidates to
assume the reigns of government.” It’s worth recalling this now
because even though eventual victory in Iraq seems assured, the strategy
formulated by the utterly confident, fawned-over-by-the-public,
deferred-to-by-the-press Rumsfeld didn’t worked as planned.
Iraqi forces were not “shocked and awed” into submission. Iraqi
citizens and soldiers did not turn on Saddam Hussein with the rapidity and
force the Iraqi exiles who have the Pentagon’s ear swore they would. The
initial invading force numerically larger than Rumsfeld and his
lieutenants deemed necessary turned out to be too small, requiring the
deployment of tens of thousands of reinforcements … whose deployment
time to the Gulf has been less than speedy, thanks to “micro-managing”
by Rumsfeld and his crew.
In this sense, “Operation Iraqi Freedom” bears some resemblance to a
previous British imperial incursion into Iraq. While that campaign was
ultimately successful, it was hallmarked by arrogance fused with an
initial impudence that produced results so deceptive and disastrous that
the British government later felt obliged to convene an inquiry. And much
of the blame, that commission found, could be put on a civilian imperial
leader with grandiose ambitions contrary to Britain’s national
interests, as well as two senior military officials one who was
convinced that any pressure exerted on the enemy would cause them to
crumble, and the other who knew planning was dangerously flawed but
proceeded anyway.
The exercise in “imperial overreach” now all but forgotten is the
first part of the British colonial Indian Army’s Mesopotamia campaign of
World War I, an endeavor that went horribly awry due to overconfidence,
and a fixation on Baghdad that led to going too far, too fast, with too
few, outpacing thinly stretched supply lines left vulnerable to a
marauding enemy. (Deja vu, anyone?) And rather like the confusing
political backdrop to today’s action are “coalition forces”
going in to disarm Saddam? Liberate Iraqis? Control oil? Beget “domino
democracy” in the region? British intentions were hopelessly tangled
due to competing internal influences as well.
In 1914, the British War Office in London simply wanted a defensive force
to protect British oil interests in Persia from possible attack by the
Ottoman Turks still neutral, but about to come in on the German side
in neighboring Mesopotamia. Yet rather like today’s crop of
neoconservatives on the Potomac, the imperial viceroy and his cronies in
India were keen to spread the empire or, perhaps more precisely, the
viceroy’s power beyond India and into Mesopotamia, which technically
fell into the viceroy’s area of operations.
Unlike the mandarins in London, the viceroy, Lord Hardinge, felt that war
against the Turks should occasion what was euphemistically referred to as
“forward defense” in essence an effort to rapidly take a
strategically unimportant but symbolically charged swath of the Ottoman
Empire. In October 1914, Hardinge dispatched units of the Indian Army
under the command of General Sir Arthur Barrett to secure the oil fields.
Unknown to London, however, orders were given to Barrett by Hardinge to
seize Basra in the event of war with the Turks. When the Turks joined the
war against the British on Nov. 5, Barrett’s forward forces quickly took
the Fao Peninsula and easily dispatched Turkish forces that futilely
counter-attacked at Abadan.
Though a larger Turkish force had assembled at Saihan to defend Basra,
Barrett decided to quickly take the fight to them. Thanks to the use of
18-pound artillery guns something like the “shock and awe” devices
of the day Barrett was able to take Basra in five days. But Barrett
seemed to confuse scattering Turkish troops with actually defeating them;
though outgunned on the heavy artillery front, the Turks took advantage of
heat mirages and heavy mud from rains to disperse. Acknowledging A.J.
Barker’s The Bastard War a neglected but definitive study of the
campaign Chris Baker of the Center for First World War Studies at the
University of Birmingham says: “Misled by the apparent fragility of
Turkish defenses into assuming this to be the case generally, the Indian
administration felt sufficiently encouraged to determine to extend
Anglo-Indian operations further beyond expectations previously established
in London.”
A few months later in 1915, Barrett was replaced by General Sir John
Nixon, who arrived bearing orders from the Indian Army’s commander in
chief that reflected Lord Hardinge’s grand aspirations. (Critically, the
orders had not been shared with the War Office, where they would have been
overruled.) The orders were to take Baghdad, and as far as Nixon was
concerned, even though the Anglo-Indian forces were comparatively small
and lightly equipped, they would be more than enough for the job, as the
taking Basra and repelling a subsequent attempt to reclaim it by the
Turks had been an easy affair.
Dizzied at the symbolic value of being able to take Baghdad, the
Anglo-Indian forces began an extraordinarily rapid sweep north along the
Tigris River, winning a series of battles at Qurna, Shaiba, Amara,
Nassiryeh and Kut. But by the time the Anglo-Indian forces had reached
Amara, they were just like the Anglo-American forces today racing
ahead of their support units, stretching their supply lines thin and
leaving them vulnerable to irregular but increasing attacks from local
Arab raiding parties who weren’t particularly fond of either the Turks
or the British.
Leading the Anglo-Indian forces from Amara on was Major General Charles
Townshend, who unlike Nixon, readily acknowledged that because supply
units were being outpaced, the combat force was in serious trouble. But
like Nixon, Townshend “regarded the Ottoman ability to conduct war with
contempt, and was complacent that further success could be achieved in
spite of growing difficulties.” Though taking Nasiriyah proved a bit
more difficult, Townshend marched on to take Kut, taking an ugly 12
percent casualty rate in the process.
At this point medical evacuation and supply was in an appalling shambles.
Yet eager for the glory of taking Baghdad, Townshend decided to press on,
and did so with the reluctant blessing of London, which, though opposed to
an advance that had taken place without the War Office’s imprimatur, was
finding it difficult to argue with apparent success. But at Baghdad’s
first line of defense the ancient city of Ctesiphon Townshend
encountered all the Turks he’d routed in previous months. Losing nearly
half of his division, Townshend was unable to hold his position, due in
part to unremitting harassment from both Turks and Arabs. Falling back to
Kut, Townshend’s force came under siege, requiring the dispatch of
scores of additional British troops nearly 3,000 of which died in a
futile attempt to rescue Townshend. Townshend surrendered, and the British
had to retool their plans delaying their entry into Baghdad by two
years.
Admittedly, the parallels between then and now aren’t precise,
especially given what seems an inevitable military victory over the Iraqis
much sooner rather than later (though drawing an enemy in, as opposed to
keeping him out especially when his supply line is stretched has
worked before). And it’s likely that any sober consideration of flawed
thinking will be swamped in a predictable deluge of post-combat pride, But
to policy specialists skeptical of the Rumsfeld Pentagon’s belief in the
US Army’s “transformation” to fight a “new kind of war” that
even by innovative standards dispenses with some key tenets, the apparent
ignorance of history is disturbing; one would think that the Mesopotamian
campaign would have merited at least a glance by the intellectuals
currently running the Pentagon.
Yet it’s possible that even the military officers whose counsel Rumsfeld
ignored aren’t familiar with the campaign: The only mention of it to be
found in any curricula of US military institutions of higher learning is
in one section of a paper on file at Air University devoted to Townshend
as an example of poor leadership. And perhaps the best study of the
campaign, Barker’s The Bastard War, has been out-of-print for over 30
years.
Yet there is at least one Defense Department analyst who gave some thought
to what the latest invasion might portend based on the past and even
though George C. Wilson, the National Journal military writer considered
the dean of Washington military reporters, advised Rumsfeld in a January
2001 column to make that analyst one of his first stops in the Pentagon,
the Secretary of Defense has yet to grace the threshold of his office.
Franklin Spinney is an ex-Air Force officer turned analyst, one of the few
remaining “reformers” left in the Pentagon who has spent most of his
career diagramming how entrenched, parochial interests in the military
establishment have beget everything from wasteful spending to problematic
doctrinal thinking (particularly that which relies too much on technology
and precision-bombing).
In a December interview, Spinney mentioned in passing that “I’m not
too concerned about the US military taking out Saddam so much as I am
about what comes afterward … provided, on the first point, we don’t
make the same mistake as the British did in World War I and send in a
light force that stretches its supply lines too thin from Basra.”
Last week, Spinney was rueful, but not entirely surprised, that a similar
lack of consideration had gone into the current operation.
“There are several parallels here, but perhaps the most important one is
the lack of appreciation not just for the soldiers, but the bureaucracy,
the British were facing,” he said. “It’s not just that both then and
now the assumption was the enemy would just fold and you could just march
to Baghdad without any heavy artillery or defense of your flanks …
It’s very similar to what we have going on today … some people around
here have really believed that we’d be welcomed with flowers and that
everyone would surrender. These guys are working on a set of assumptions
quite similar to the ones the British used, a sort of arrogance that
doesn’t reflect a real understanding of what we’re getting into.”
And not just in terms of war, but the occupation that follows.
Jason Vest is a contributor to The Nation
and The Village Voice.
http://www.aljazeerah.info
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