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The end of American military presence in Iraq is not the end of Iraq or the end of America’s interests in Iraq. The worst manifestation of the Vietnam complex that has informed so many decisions about American policy in Iraq is the inherent conviction that Iraq will disappear into the dustbin of history once America leaves, as Vietnam did. The differences, however, are so stark as to defy any comparison. Iraq continues to occupy vital geostrategic terrain in an area of central concern to the United States. It is the second-largest potential oil-producing state. It sits astride the Sunni-Shi’a divide in the Arab world (and hosts the most important Shi’a shrines anywhere in the world). It has the largest land border with Iran of any state and can make or break any sanctions regime the United States and its allies attempt to impose on Iran. American policy toward Iraq, in other words, continues to be of central importance to American policy, period.

We can use the occasion of the withdrawal of the last U.S. forces to relitigate the decision to invade in 2003, the way the war was conducted after that, or the most recent decision to withdraw. But what really matters—and what should be occupying our attention, but is not—is what our policy will be going forward. “End this war” was never a policy, still less a strategy. The president has accomplished that campaign promise. Now he must face an even harder question: What is our strategy for pursuing and achieving our vital national security interests and objectives in Iraq in the absence of a military presence? So far, the silence from the White House on that issue—apart from bromides about economic activities and friendship—has been deafening.

What do we need to achieve in Afghanistan in order to protect the security of the United States and its allies?

That core question should shape any discussion of our strategy in Afghanistan or the resources we devote to executing it. But that question is too often obscured.

Many say that pursuing any kind of “success” in Afghanistan, the supposed “graveyard of empires,” is sheer folly. Others say that is has become irrelevant, and that the death of Osama bin Laden has deprived the war in Afghanistan of continued meaning.

These facile assertions produce more palatable answers, but do not answer the core question. Presidents and candidates for president owe Americans a clear and cogent answer, at least, as well as an explanation for how their proposed strategy will accomplish the requirements for American security.

President Obama identified a number of reasons for the American presence in Afghanistan in his December 2009 speech announcing both the surge of forces there and the strategy that those forces would pursue—the strategy that continues in effect to this day. The clearest articulation of American interest in Afghanistan he offered was this one:

This is the epicenter of violent extremism practiced by al Qaeda. It is from here that we were attacked on 9/11, and it is from here that new attacks are being plotted as I speak. This is no idle danger; no hypothetical threat. In the last few months alone, we have apprehended extremists within our borders who were sent here from the border region of Afghanistan and Pakistan to commit new acts of terror. And this danger will only grow if the region slides backwards, and al Qaeda can operate with impunity. We must keep the pressure on al Qaeda, and to do that, we must increase the stability and capacity of our partners in the region.

He added later in that speech: “We’re in Afghanistan to prevent a cancer from once again spreading through that country.”

President Obama dismissed the notion that Afghanistan is simply another Vietnam.

“And most importantly, unlike Vietnam, the American people were viciously attacked from Afghanistan, and remain a target for those same extremists who are plotting along its border,” he said in that 2009 speech.

He rejected the notion that targeted strikes alone could defeat al Qaeda: “To abandon this area now—and to rely only on efforts against al Qaeda from a distance—would significantly hamper our ability to keep the pressure on al Qaeda, and create an unacceptable risk of additional attacks on our homeland and our allies.”

He thus articulated a series of objectives, the achievement of which, he argued, were vital to America’s national security:

Our overarching goal remains the same: to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and to prevent its capacity to threaten America and our allies in the future. To meet that goal, we will pursue the following objectives within Afghanistan. We must deny al Qaeda a safe haven. We must reverse the Taliban’s momentum and deny it the ability to overthrow the government. And we must strengthen the capacity of Afghanistan’s security forces and government so that they can take lead responsibility for Afghanistan’s future.

He did announce an 18-month timeline for the start of the withdrawal of the surge forces in Afghanistan, but added, “we will execute this transition responsibly, taking into account conditions on the ground. We’ll continue to advise and assist Afghanistan’s security forces to ensure that they can succeed over the long haul.”

Some in the White House and outside it, nevertheless, oppose continued efforts in Afghanistan, and thus advocate abandoning the current strategy or reducing force levels below what is needed to execute the mission there. The question they must answer is: What part of the objective President Obama enunciated in December 2009 has become unnecessary? Do we not need to “disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and to prevent its capacity to threaten America and our allies in the future?” Do we not need to prevent the Taliban from threatening the Afghan government? Do we not need to build the capacity of our partners and allies—including Afghanistan—so that they can take responsibility for Afghanistan’s future, thus preventing the “cancer” that had taken root there from returning? Do we seriously think that the killing of one man, however important, ends the threat to the United States and thus removes the entire region from the list of America’s national security interests?

Above all, if we abandon our current efforts in Afghanistan either by accepting defeat or by declaring success before actually achieving it, what will prevent al Qaeda and its affiliates from re-establishing their bases there and resuming their efforts to attack and kill Americans?

The American people deserve a serious, thoughtful, and detailed answer to those questions from anyone seeking the responsibility to keep them safe.

This item first appeared on CNN’s security clearance blog.

This post is part of an ongoing series preparing for the AEI/CNN/Heritage National Security & Foreign Policy GOP presidential debate on November 22nd. See the rest of the posts here.

President Obama’s decision to terminate negotiations extending the presence of U.S. forces in Iraq beyond the end of this year is a critical strategic inflection-point not only for Iraq, but for American national security and the global order. Its significance lies both in the important strategic victory it has handed to Iran and in the broad and unqualified statement of American retreatism and isolationism in which the president announced it to the world. This decision ensures that America’s next president will face significantly greater challenges in the tasks of protecting America’s interests in the Middle East and around the world, but will have fewer resources–both material and moral–with which to meet those challenges. Barack Obama appears to have indicated how he intends to respond to them in that statement. A central question for the Republican candidates for president must be: How will you respond, if elected, to the challenges emerging from this decision to retreat?

Many Americans are pleased at the prospect of “ending this war” that the president has promised, for the issue has always been framed in such isolation. Even pollsters generally frame their questions as if Iraq were disconnected from the rest of the world: “Do you think there are too many, too few, or just enough U.S. troops in Iraq? Do you think the U.S. can succeed/is succeeding in Iraq?” e.g. President Obama appears to have made policy decisions about Iraq in a similarly segmented fashion. The administration has never addressed, for instance, how it intends to maintain an intensified sanctions regime against Iran without having any support or assistance from the country that shares the longest land-border with the Islamic Republic.

But only Americans see Iraq as an isolated thing unto itself. Tehran has clearly seen Iraq as a larger part of a regional strategy whose aims include excluding the U.S. from the Middle East entirely and establishing Iran as the hegemon of the entire Persian Gulf and Mesopotamian area. Iran’s success in driving the U.S. out of Iraq opens new opportunities for the Islamic Republic in the region even as it causes America’s beleaguered allies there to lose confidence in the U.S. It undermines not only the sanctions regime, but also regional efforts to rein-in Iranian guerrilla and terrorist proxies such as Lebanese Hezbollah, which operates also in Iraq in conjunction with separate Iraqi-focused Shi’a militias.

Lest we imagine that those militias were of concern only while we were in Iraq, however, let us consider the key figure in the recently revealed plot by the Iranian Qods Force to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the U.S., Abdul Reza Shahlai. This Qods Force senior officer, known more commonly as Haji Yousef, also directed Iranian support to the most virulent and effective Shi’a militia and terrorist groups in Iraq. His connections to those groups, as well as to Lebanese Hezbollah, which was heavily involved in supporting them, is deep. He has just attempted to make a further connection to Mexican drug cartels in order to export Iranian terrorism directly into the U.S. That plot was foiled, but the Qods Force leadership, including Haji Yousef, remains at large and undeterred. Other plots will surely follow, and they will be able to draw from an increasing pool of militants trained in and based out of Iraq, a country with which the Obama administration claims to seek a friendly and mutually supportive relationship.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta have tried gamely to cover with words the enormous hole in any attempt to isolate Iran that this decision has created. The Iranians will not be deterred by their words in the face of our deeds, of course, but Tehran has additional reason to ignore their statements of defiance after the president enunciated a strategy of American withdrawal across the board. Why should Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, or Qods Force Commander Qassim Soleimani, believe statements of commitment by Panetta and Clinton when the president has declared his intention to withdraw our forces from commitments throughout the region as quickly as possible?

Iraq is almost certainly lost now. Already the tempo of purges of Sunnis and even Shi’a not loyal to Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki–or Iran–is accelerating. The prospects for renewed sectarian fighting are growing by the hour. Reports of Iranian efforts to consolidate their control of Iraq are piling up. It is impossible to know exactly what situation will face the president on January 20, 2013, but the questions any candidate must answer today are simply these:

Faced with the likelihood of spreading violence and Iranian influence in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, will you make the hard choices to confront those threats to American national security, or will you seek to remain aloof? Will you continue the process of ceding Iran hegemony in the Middle East or will you pursue a meaningful strategy of resisting or even pressing Iran, defeating or neutralizing its proxies, and re-creating space for America’s Arab partners and allies to join in that resistance? Will you have the stomach to pursue such a strategy even if Iran acquires nuclear weapons? Republican candidates have to answer these questions in debates. The president of the United States in 2013 will have to answer them in real life.

Frederick W. Kagan

Iran wins

By Frederick W. Kagan

October 27, 2011, 1:27 pm

President Obama’s decision to end negotiations to extend the presence of any U.S. military forces in Iraq after the end of this year has handed Iran a strategically important victory. The minutiae of the negotiations and the reasons for their failure have obscured this larger point. Iran has succeeded in a strategy to oust the United States from Iraq that it has been pursuing through bribery, murder, and military force since 2004, and it now poses an even greater danger to the United States and the world than ever.

Read our piece in today’s LATimes for more.

Frederick W. Kagan

Obama abandons Iraq

By Frederick W. Kagan

October 21, 2011, 1:29 pm

President Obama announced today that he has decided to abandon America’s interest in Iraq and damage our position in the Middle East by withdrawing all U.S. military forces by the end of this year.

This retreat will have great costs for the United States. It squanders the gains made by both American and Iraqi military forces over the last four years, but, even more important, it squanders the enormous opportunity to forge an alliance with Iraq at a time when such an alliance would be of tremendous value to the United States. It dramatically increases the likelihood that the new and unstable Iraqi democratic experiment—already under attack from an authoritarian prime minister and a hostile Islamic Republic of Iran—will fail. The withdrawal of American forces now serving as peacekeepers along the Arab-Kurd seam greatly increases the likelihood of ethnic civil war. The withdrawal of American military protection from a state helpless to defend itself on its own effectively throws Iraq into the arms of Iran, however the Iraqis feel about the matter.

It makes a mockery, moreover, of the notion that the United States is somehow isolating Iran and increasing pressure on the Islamic Republic mere days after the revelation of an elaborate Iranian plot to conduct attacks on American soil. What sort of sanctions regime can we maintain if Iraq is effectively a free-trade corridor with Iran? How can we argue that Iran is being isolated when its ability to operate terror groups and training areas within Iraq is growing unchecked?

How can we claim to be taking a firm line against Iran while giving Tehran the single most important demand it has pursued for years—the complete withdrawal of U.S. military forces from Iraq?

There is no benefit to the United States from this unnecessary decision, and likely much loss.

The killing of al Qaeda leader Anwar al Awlaki in Yemen was a good and important step forward in the war against terrorists.  Combined with the killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan and the subsequent killings of other al Qaeda leaders there, it deals a blow to the movement. The death of Awlaki is particularly important because it weakens al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which is emerging as the most effective and dangerous al Qaeda franchise with global aims.

We must not, however, see in these killings a strategy for dismantling and defeating al Qaeda and preventing it from re-establishing itself—the president’s apt exposition of our overall aims in this conflict.

Senior-most leadership is important in this terrorist franchise network, make no mistake. The succession from Bin Laden to Ayman al Zawahiri caused turmoil within al Qaeda and will probably have long-term effects on the shape and development of that movement. Awlaki’s death will likely have somewhat less of an impact on AQAP, since he was neither its founder nor its principal leader, although his spiritual and recruiting functions will be difficult for the group to replace.

But replace it they will if attacks against them are confined to strikes against the most high-profile and senior-most leadership. A number of al Qaeda franchises and fellow-traveller movements have gone through successful leadership transitions. U.S. forces killed al Qaeda in Iraq founder and leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi in June 2006. He was rapidly replaced by a deputy, Abu Ayyub al Masri, who led the organization into an even more lethal and effective strategy aimed at fomenting sectarian civil war in Iraq in 2006, at which he nearly succeeded. The Haqqani insurgent network has seen the leadership torch passed from its founder and patriarch, Jalaluddin Haqqani, to his son Sirajuddin, and the lethality and effectiveness of that group increased as well. The killing of Tehrik-e Taliban-e Pakistan founder and leader Beitullah Mehsud—who was responsible for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto—has had a more significant effect on that group, which has splintered under the pressure of his death, limited Pakistani operations, and resumed the tribal infighting that Beitullah Mehsud had worked hard to overcome.

The splinters, however, continue to fight both the U.S. and Pakistan, and that group is far from defeated.

The effect of Zawahiri’s succession to the leadership mantle of the core al Qaeda group remains to be seen, but that is the exception that proves the rule. The U.S. and Pakistan have been aggressively and effectively targeting senior- and mid-level leadership of the core al Qaeda group for a decade.

We have removed not only the founder and leader, but numerous operational commanders, facilitators, trainers, and others. In the case of operational commanders, we have killed successors to the successors many times.

Zawahiri thus takes control over a group that has been severely degraded by constant pressure against leadership at all levels, not just the top. His group, moreover, does not control territory within Pakistan any more, leading either a comfortable but hidden existence as bin Laden did, or a more flitting and migratory existence as most of the facilitators do. All of that pressure has been essential to reducing the effectiveness of the core al Qaeda group to its current level, and the killing of bin Laden, important though it was, was just another piece of a robust strategy that denied al Qaeda Central concentrated safe-havens and continually disrupted the network’s leadership at all levels. It is also worth noting that Pakistan has generally been very supportive of U.S. efforts directly focused against al Qaeda, debates over ISI knowledge or ignorance of bin Laden’s hideaway in Abbottabad notwithstanding.

The U.S. is pursuing no such strategy against AQAP.  The group currently has safe-haven within Yemen, and the chaos surrounding the spread of the Arab Spring to Sana’a has allowed it to expand that safe haven. Neither American nor Yemeni forces are seriously challenging the major support areas that AQAP has already established—the fighting in Southern Yemen against AQAP is aimed at limiting its expansion rather than reducing its base. We have not been able to muster the same kind of top-to-bottom pressure on AQAP through targeted strikes, moreover, as we have conducted against al Qaeda central.

We don’t have the bases or intelligence needed to do so in a theater with virtually no U.S. presence and very limited cooperation from local security forces. The prospects for developing that kind of infrastructure in Yemen are very poor.

The notion that the targeted killings of a handful of key leaders of al Qaeda franchises around the world will end the terror threat to the U.S. cheaply, quickly, and efficiently is seductive but wrong. We have far too much evidence to show that committed terrorist organizations can and do replace leaders faster than we can kill them, and that the replacements can lead the movements as well or sometimes better than their deceased predecessors. It takes the kind of sustained, high-tempo, focused operations we have directed against the core al Qaeda group to reduce the threat of such an enemy significantly, but we do not have the capabilities ourselves or the capable partners in Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere to repeat that exercise.

Killings of high-profile terrorist leaders are important both symbolically and practically. President Obama and his team are to be congratulated on their recent successes, and may they continue. But we must not confuse those successes with a strategy, or allow these news-grabbing positive events to conceal the reality that al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula remains a virulent organization that will continue to threaten the U.S. directly and indirectly until and unless we can develop, articulate, and implement a more comprehensive strategy to attack and defeat that network than we have yet done.

More on Anwar al-Awlaki at AEI’s Critical Threats Project

The death of Osama bin Laden is a wonderful moment for the United States. We have avenged ourselves upon him personally for the terrible damage he did to the United States and the world. The moment’s over, though, and it’s time to get back to work. Bin Laden’s death does not mean the end of al Qaeda Central, and it certainly does not spell the end of al Qaeda franchises in Yemen, Somalia, North Africa, and elsewhere. It does not eliminate the dreadful nexus of violent Islamist groups such as Lashkar-e Tayyiba, Jaish-e Mohammad, Tehrik-e Taliban-e Pakistan, Sipah-e Sahaba, and many others in Pakistan that continue to plot and prepare attacks against Pakistanis, Indians, and Westerners. It does not eliminate the funding streams from the Persian Gulf and around the world that support this terrorist movement. It does not mean that the insurgent groups in Afghanistan, such as the Haqqani Network, intimately tied in with Pakistani-based groups, including al Qaeda, that have larger ambitions than the seizure of a few Afghan provinces, will suddenly put down their weapons and take up farming.

Above all, it does nothing at all to address the real and important grievances of the tens of millions of Arabs who have risen against dictatorial regimes in Syria, Libya, Egypt, and elsewhere that are driving the most important potential transformation of the Middle East of our era. Americans who are desperately looking for shortcuts toward fiscal austerity and to “success,” by which is meant a way out of “foreign entanglements” and “Bush’s follies,” will attempt to argue that bin Laden’s death vindicates a strategy of targeted killings of terrorist leaders that justifies the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan, Iraq, and throughout the Middle East.

The truth is that this success does no such thing. The objective of our long struggle against violent Islamism was not, or should not have been, to kill a single man. It was to end the danger that organizations embodying this hateful and heretical ideology pose to Americans and decent people around the world. If, in fact, bin Laden’s death is followed by the collapse of the global Islamist movement, the fall of Arab dictatorships, and the blossoming of a new era of peace and stability in the Muslim world, then we can beat our swords into ploughshares. If not, then we will have to continue this difficult and painful effort until we have truly put an end to the danger that continues to face us. We will know soon enough.

This weekend, Pakistan’s leadership took its strongest action yet against extremists by launching a ground operation into South Waziristan, headquarters of the Pakistani Taliban and training ground for al Qaeda-linked operatives. Islamabad has adopted the unprecedented goal of eliminating the Taliban’s ability to carry out brazen acts of terrorism in Pakistan, of the kind that rocked the country in recent weeks. Pakistan’s fight in Waziristan now represents one element of the regional effort to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat terrorist and insurgent groups. The security responsibilities of the United States and NATO on the other side of the Durand line remain another element of that effort and also impact Pakistan’s commitment. The current operations in Waziristan may well shape future stability in Pakistan, the region, and beyond.

Pakistan’s assault targets the stronghold of the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, formerly led by Beitullah Mehsud and currently headed by Hakimullah Mehsud. The Pakistani military prepared for this ground phase in recent months with blockades and air strikes; a series of terrorist attacks—including one that penetrated the Pakistani army’s headquarters—increased the urgency for the South Waziristan offensive. This incursion aims to succeed where Pakistan’s previous attempts to defeat enemy groups in South Waziristan largely failed. The operation, Rah-e Nijat (Path to Salvation), faces several obstacles, including entrenched militants, a local extremist support network, challenging terrain, and tactical sophistication among the Taliban, al Qaeda, and allied Uzbek fighters.

AEI’s Critical Threats Project is tracking the operations in South Waziristan and providing continuous updates, consolidating data on the current situation and mapping the conflict as the campaign progresses. In addition, the team provides background analysis on the Pakistani military and the militant leaders in the area. Visit the criticalthreats.org site for these updates and more.

Yesterday’s suicide bombing in Lahore, Pakistan, could prove to be an important moment in Pakistan’s struggle with its own extremists. The bombing—which apparently involved 100kg of explosives aimed at the local ISI headquarters and killed at least 40 people—was conducted by the so-called Tehrik-e Taliban Punjab (TTP) as retaliation for the Pakistan military’s operations in Swat. They may also have been trying to free Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, leader of the Lashkar-e Taiba that was responsible for the Mumbai bombing last year—some reports claim that he and possibly other terrorists, linked to the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in March, were in the building when the bomb detonated.

The Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, led by Beitullah Mehsud and generally thought responsible for the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, also claimed responsibility for the attack. The two claims are compatible, since the Punjabi Taliban recognizes Beitullah Mehsud’s overall leadership and its own alliance with his TTP. What matters is that it seems clear that it was Punjabi terrorists who conducted this attack in the heart of Punjab itself.

Hitherto, although experts have known of the prevalence of indigenous terror groups in Punjab and Sindh, most discussions about Pakistan’s militants have focused on Pashtun groups along the Durand Line demarcating the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. The Pakistani government has generally tried to insist that such groups are the ones responsible for disturbances, calling loudly (and oddly) for Afghanistan to close the border to contain the Pashtuns (though they are Pakistani). Although some senior Pakistani officials remain keen to deny the existence of a Punjabi threat, President Asif Ali Zardari seems more serious. He has formed a new cabinet-level national security committee to review Pakistan’s security situation and called for the recruitment of at least 100,000 more Pakistani police. If this marks the beginning of  Islamabad’s recognition of the depth of Pakistan’s problems and Zardari’s own commitment to see the struggle through, then the United States might have a real opportunity here, if we can take advantage of it.

Check out our analysis of the bombing and more at AEI’s new Critical Threats Project site.


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