|
|
Why We're Fighting: "The War Over Iraq:
Saddam's Tyranny and America's Mission"
(Book Review)
By Michael Strickland
Front
Page Magazine
April 9, 2003
With
U.S. troops currently engaged in Baghdad, it would
be an understatement to call "The War Over Iraq:
Saddam's Tyranny and America's Mission" timely. The
frequency and vehemence of antiwar protests may
have lessened somewhat since hostilities commenced,
but Americans continue to question why the United
States is undertaking a regime change in Iraq. In
their compelling book, authors Lawrence F. Kaplan
and William Kristol handily answer this and similar
questions by first detailing the atrocities of
Saddam Hussein's regime, then comparing and
contrasting the different approaches that the past
three administrations have followed in dealing with
Iraq. Finally, they outline the post-9/11 foreign
policy of the Bush administration as expressed in
the "Bush Doctrine," contending that the war
against Iraq is just the first step in a
redefinition of America's role in the world. As
President Bush vowed before Congress on September
20, 2001, "this country will define our times, not
be defined by them."
Saddam's Tyranny
Since labeling the triumvirate of Iraq, Iran and
North Korea an "axis of evil" in his 2002 State of
the Union address, President Bush has received
frequent criticism for his use of moral terms like
"evil." However, a close study of Saddam Hussein's
regime suggests perhaps no better word with which
to describe the Iraqi leader. As Kaplan and Kristol
describe in detail in the first part of their book,
Saddam's regime has been marked by violence and
brutality since its very inception. In the 1970s,
the regime systematically persecuted and
slaughtered its Kurdish citizens. This persecution
continued after the Iran-Iraq War, when the Iraqi
government gassed over 100,000 Kurds with chemical
weapons, accusing them of collaborating with
Iranians. Before being expelled from Kuwait during
the Gulf War, Iraqi forces first brutalized Kuwaiti
citizens, then laid waste to the country's oil
wells as its armies retreated back into Iraq. The
first two chapters of "The War Over Iraq" detail
widespread torture, murder and countless other
violent acts by the regime of Saddam Hussein over
the years.
Of more concern to the United States,
particularly since the end of the Gulf War, have
been Iraq's efforts to acquire and stockpile
weapons of mass destruction. By the end of the
1980s, the Iraqi regime had acquired a variety of
"special munitions," including warheads, aircraft
drop-tanks and missiles filled with chemical and
biological agents. U.N. sanctions following the
Gulf War required Iraq to declare and destroy these
WMDs, but in the first year of inspections, weapons
inspectors discovered nearly 10 times the amount of
chemical weapons initially declared by
Saddamand still more WMDs, including 3.9 tons
of nerve gas and 25 missile warheads filled with
anthrax, were never located. The regime had also
made significant progress toward developing nuclear
weaponsby the efforts of a clandestine staff
20,000-strongbefore the secret program was
finally discovered by the International Atomic
Energy Agency. The efficacy of the inspection
scheme progressively deteriorated, until Saddam
finally expelled weapons inspectors in 1997.
Despite a fusillade of cruise missiles launched by
the Clinton administration, Saddam did not back
down until the U.N. agreed to accept mere
"cooperation" from Iraq, instead of explicit
"elimination" of its WMDs. Such capitulation
exemplified the approaches followed in dealing with
the ongoing crisis with Iraq.
America's Response
Kaplan and Kristol explore such approaches in
detail in the second part of "The War with Iraq."
By contrasting the ways in which the last three
presidential administrations have handled Saddam,
the authors demonstrate that each was ineffective
in its own way. It wasn't until President Bush
formulated his new vision in a post-9/11 world,
which he described as "the union of our values and
our national interests," that the U.S. finally
began to take a tough, no-nonsense stand against
Saddam Hussein.
The approach of the first Bush administration,
characterized by the authors as "narrow realism,"
involved a belief that foreign policy aims should
be achieved through a narrow pursuit of American
self-interests. Thus, by following this realpolitik
approach, the administration stopped short of
marching on Baghdad in the Gulf War, believing
stabilityeven under a dictator like
Saddamwas preferable to the instability that
could come from the potential fragmenting of Iraq
in the power vacuum created by the overthrow of
Saddam. During the Iran-Iraq War, the Bush White
House subscribed to the logic of "the enemy of my
enemy is my friend," providing assistance to
Saddam's regime as a counterbalance against the
radical theocracy in Tehran. This support included
advanced weapons technology, agricultural aid and
billions of dollars in credits and loan guarantees.
In short, the Bush administration believed that
U.S. interests in the Middle East were better
served by propping up a stable regime in Iraq, even
if that regime was ruled by a brutal and ruthless
dictator.
Under President Clinton, U.S. foreign policy
pursued a sort of "wishful liberalism," whereby the
U.S. deferred to the international community for
legitimacy. The Clinton administration pursued a
variety of diplomatic and incentive-based
approaches in conjunction with the United Nations
to try to modify Saddam's behavior, but the only
result was an increasing defiance on the part of
the Iraqi dictator. While the administration
ostensibly tried to enforce the post-Gulf War U.N.
sanctions, the net result of the its half-hearted
efforts was a "slow-motion capitulation" in which,
among other things, the U.S. agreed to abolish
altogether the U.N.-imposed ceiling on Iraqi oil
sales. Subordinating U.S. interests to the judgment
of the United Nations, the Clinton administration
similarly failed to act against the genocide in
Rwanda, almost sat out the conflict in Bosnia, and
made no response to the Khobar Towers and USS Cole
terrorist attacks. In the final analysis, as Kaplan
and Kristol point out, the political imperative of
the Clinton administration was not to contain or
disarm Saddam, but rather simply to keep Iraq "off
the President's desk."
The administration of George W. Bush began with
a similarly lackluster approach to dealing with
Iraq. But that changed after September 11. The
terrorist attacks focused the president's resolve
against Iraq, revealing an "urgent duty" to act
against the regime before the regime acted against
the U.S. or shared its WMDs with terrorist
organizations. This concept of preemption was one
of the key components of the so-called Bush
Doctrine, the codification of the president's
transformed foreign policy. In a small and
dangerous world standing at "the crossroads of
radicalism and technology," the principles of
containment and deterrence were no longer
effectiveif they ever had been for a country
like Iraq. Understanding the changed nature of
national security in the twenty-first century, the
president articulated the three principles of the
Bush Doctrine: preemption, regime change and
American leadership.
America's Mission
In spending the final part of "The War Over
Iraq" analyzing these principles, Kaplan and
Kristol make their most convincing arguments.
Recognizing the futility of deterrence when one
deals with undeterrable opponents, such as mentally
unstable dictators or stateless terrorists bent on
suicide, the Doctrine promoted preemption as its
primary tenet. Critics have railed against this
principle, calling preemptive attacks such as that
currently underway in Iraq violations of
international law. But scholars as far back as
Thomas More have supported the notion of
preemption. Especially in this day and age, when
one strike by a weapon of mass destruction could
deal another stunning blow to America, a policy of
reaction rather than preemption is folly. Critics
further allege that preemption is invalidated by
the very fact that it is unilateral. But, as Kaplan
and Kristol keenly rebut, the United Nations is not
a higher moral authority than the United States
because it is multilateral; on the contrary, it is
"simply a collection of sovereign states," one that
has become more of a hotbed of propaganda and
hypocrisy than of international diplomacy.
The Bush Doctrine's principle of regime change,
too, is odious to many on the liberal left.
However, in a world in which Islamic radicalism can
bring about such terrors as the World Trade Center
attacks, removing despots from power becomes a
matter of national security, not national egoism.
To the charge of hegemony, Kaplan and Kristol
answer that the ideals of freedom and democracy are
universal ideals, not strictly American ones. The
export of such notions promotes human rights and
dignity, not American dominance.
Finally, maintaining America's leadership role
as the sole superpower will influence stability
throughout the world. By taking proactive action in
undermining aggressive dictatorships and helping
oppressed peoples, America will send a message to
those who would act to destabilize the world. Most
importantly, the authors contend, if the U.S. does
not take such a strong leadership role in shaping
the world order, others will do so in ways that
will likely not reflect American interests or
values.
"September 11 and the threat from Iraq combined
to produce a national security doctrine that
responds to the broader dangers of the new
century," write Kaplan and Kristol. That doctrine
"transformed the war [against terror] from
a police action to round up the perpetrators of
September 11 into a campaign to uproot tyranny and
export democracy." The prior approaches of
engagement, containment and deterrence at best
preserved the status quo. The Bush Doctrine's
principles of preemption, regime change and
American leadership provide a blueprint for
protecting national security and achieving
international peace through democratization in the
twenty-first century. Though a regime change in
Iraq is a primary goal of the Bush administration,
it is only the first step in the implementation of
the Bush Doctrine.
Few people who read "The War Over Iraq" will
fail to see the logicno, the
imperativenessof this bold foreign policy.
Kaplan and Kristol lay a strong foundation in
support of the ideas expressed in the Bush
Doctrine, exposing the flaws in the arguments of
its detractors along the way. Their book should be
required reading for anyone wishing to express an
opinion on the future of U.S. foreign policy.
[Home]
©2003 Michael
Strickland
|
|

Recent Publications:
Why We're Fighting: "The War
Over Iraq: Saddam's Tyranny and America's
Mission"
Supreme
Court Upholds Copyright Term Extension in Eldred
v. Ashcroft
More
Writing Samples
Resume & Experience:
Resume
[PDF]
List
of Publications
Portfolio
Other Sites:
The
Daily Strick
Travels
to Distant
[Strick]Lands
StrickNet
Internet Consulting
Contact
|