There is an old Jewish story about a man who lives in a very small house
with his wife, many children, no space, and very little money. So the man
goes to his rabbi for advice: "Rabbi, you are so wise, and here I am
living in a small house, with no light and little space. And I am so poor.
What can I do?" The rabbi listens and instructs the man: "Go to
the market, buy a goat, and put the goat inside the house with you for a
week and then come back to me." The man is shocked: "But, rabbi,
as I told you, I have very little space and money. If I buy a goat, I won't
have any space and I'll lose all my money." But the rabbi insists: "Get
that goat!" So the man buys the goat. He takes it home with him. The
goat eats the furniture. It's too big and takes up all the space in the small
home. The man's life is miserable. After a week, he goes to the rabbi and
cries: "Rabbi, I put a goat inside my house. There is really no space
anymore. Please help!" The rabbi responds: "Go to the market, sell
your goat, and come back to me in one week." The man sells the goat
and returns after a week to the rabbi. "Rabbi, this week my life was
great! With no goat in the house, it's really huge now and my family and
I have so much space to live in. And after selling the goat, I actually have
more money. You are a very wise man, rabbi!"
Recall that when President George W. Bush announced the "surge" in
the aftermath of the November 2006 midterm elections and against the backdrop
of the continuing mess in Iraq, most lawmakers and pundits in Washington, not
unlike the man in our story, were shocked. After all, the clear political message
from the elections, in which Republicans lost their majority in both the Senate
and the House, was that the American people wanted steps to withdraw U.S. troops
from Iraq. Moreover, the conclusion of the Iraq Study Group, chaired by former
Secretary of State James Baker and former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton, which
reflected the general consensus among the members of the foreign policy establishment,
was that the United States should start to disengage from Iraq and work together
with other regional players, including Iran and Syria, to bring stability to
Iraq.
Indeed, the conventional wisdom in Washington at that time was that for all
practical purposes, the United States lost the war in Iraq. The neoconservative
project was over. The foreign policy realists would now be in charge, and their
advice to Bush would be to declare victory and bring an end to America's costly
military intervention in the Middle East. The expectation on Capitol Hill,
in the media, and at the think tanks was that the White House would probably
start withdrawing a few thousand troops from Iraq and transfer the remaining
forces to strategic locations on Iraq's borders and employ them mostly for
training the Iraqi forces, and that on the diplomatic front, the Bush administration
would move ahead to "engage" Tehran and Damascus while putting new
emphasis on reviving the peace process in the Holy Land.
But instead, Bush, like the rabbi in our story, told his people that he was
going to make a messy situation messier. He rejected the recommendations of
the Iraq Study Group and instead followed roughly the recommendations of a
report prepared by leading neoconservative strategist Fredrick Kagan from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) to deploy tens of thousands more troops
to Iraq. With the exception of low-level diplomatic talks with Iranian diplomats
in Iraq and a brief exchange between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
her Syrian counterpart, no serious efforts were made to engage the Iranians
and the Syrians. If anything, the rhetoric coming out of Washington suggested
that the Bush administration still regarded these two governments as major
threats to U.S. interests in Iraq, with reports raising the possibility of
U.S. attack on Iranian nuclear installations. At the same time, growing military
tensions between Israel and Syria ignited fears of an armed conflict between
the two counties, which could bring about the intervention of the Lebanese
Hezbollah guerrillas and perhaps even lead to a confrontation between Iran
and the United States. Hence much of what Bush has been doing since November
2006, like the rabbi's advice to add a goat to the crowded house—seemed to
be counterintuitive: Add more troops in Iraq.
It's not surprising therefore that the question being in asked in Washington
this week is whether Bush, like our rabbi, would turn out to be a "very
wise man." With headlines in major daily newspapers and cable television
news reporting that Gen. David H. Petraeus, the senior U.S. commander in Iraq,
has suggested in his congressional testimony that the troop "surge" has
made enough "progress" and that these additional combat forces can
be pulled out of Iraq by next summer, is it possible that the response from
politicians, media, and the general public would echo the reaction of the man
in the story? The American people are doing away with the surge, like the man
in the story did away with the goat. What a relief, but, are the president
and the general really so wise?
Petraeus insisted in his testimony on Monday and Tuesday that he believed
that thanks to the surge, the United States was meeting most of its military
objectives in Iraq and that he had recommended to Bush a timetable that would
include withdrawal by next July, slightly ahead of schedule, of the nearly
30,000 additional troops that Bush has sent to Iraq since January. Petraeus'
plan would rotate 2,000 Marines out of Anbar Province in western Iraq this
month without replacing them, then begin pulling out 17,500 Army troops and
2,000 more Marines starting in mid-December. Together with the withdrawal of
support troops that would return force levels to the "pre-surge" numbers
of 130,000 by mid-July 2008, when new troop reductions will be considered.
All of this certainly sounds like good news for Republican lawmakers and pro-war
Democrats running for reelection in November 2008, who are under enormous pressure
from voters to end the U.S. military intervention in Iraq. They will now be
less likely to join the anti-war Democrats on Capitol Hill in supporting the
setting of a timetable for the withdrawal of troops. Bush is expected to make
the same points about "withdrawal" in a prime-time television address
this week.
The somewhat vague commitment to end the surge and Petraeus' credibility could
buy Bush more time to pursue his military offensive in Iraq and leave the mess
in that country to his successor in the White House. As a sign that the political
momentum in Congress may be favoring Bush now, Republican Sen. John Warner
of Virginia, who last month called on Bush to begin withdrawing troops by the
end of the year, called Petraeus' testimony "powerful, compelling, and
credible." Warner, a former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee
who is planning to retire next year, was regarded as one of the wavering Republican
lawmakers who might have backed a congressional call for changing the course
in Iraq. Similarly, Sen. Ben Nelson, Nebraska Democrat, also said after Petraeus'
testimony that he remained opposed to a congressionally mandated pullout, while
Rep. Jim Marshall of Georgia, one of 10 House Democrats to vote in July against
setting a timeline for withdrawal, called Petraeus' testimony "powerful
and persuasive," suggesting that he would not change his position on Iraq.
Anti-war critics have raised major questions about Petraeus' credibility,
arguing that he is not only identified with the failed U.S. strategy in Iraq
but also that for all practical purposes he has become a political ally of
Bush and of Republicans. In an article in the Washington Post that
was published less than six weeks before the 2004 presidential election, Petraeus
asserted that the Iraqi forces were making "tangible progress." The
anti-war group MoveOn.org, in an advertisement in the New York Times,
cited the 2004 article and accused Petraeus of "cooking the books for
the White House," and suggested that "General Petraeus is likely
to become General Betray Us." As a result, Democrats on Capitol Hill found
themselves on the defensive as they tried to disassociate themselves from MoveOn.org.
The Democrats seemed to have failed to mount a serious challenge to Petraeus
and allowed him, and by extension the Bush administration, to set the terms
of the current debate on Iraq. Most analysts predict that the Democrats will
applaud the proposed plan of withdrawal and will couple that with a few ineffectual
resolutions.
But the fact remains that very much like the rabbi in our story, General Petraeus
has failed to change reality on the ground. The man did sell the goat and feels
a temporary sense of relief. But in a week or so, he'll recognize once again
that he is living in poverty, in a very crowded house. As one anti-war Democrat,
Rep. Edward Markey of Massachusetts, has pointed out, the general's testimony
was a "Petraeus village" that was "just a façade to hide
from view the continuing failure of the Bush administration's strategy," and
that Petraeus was "delivering too much White House spin in hopes of adding
more time to what he calls the 'Washington clock,'" i.e., the election
season. In fact, the plan as outlined by Petraeus would still leave a main
body of at least 130,000 U.S. troops in Iraq next summer, and he stressed during
his testimony that it would be premature to discuss a timetable for further
withdrawals beyond those he outlined.
Sooner rather than later, the sense of relief among the American people that
the "surge" could be over and that 30,000 troops may be coming back
home will be replaced with the sentiment that will probably greet the next
president: We got rid of the goat. But it's still a big mess out there in Iraq.
Leon Hadar, a Washington-based journalist and contributor to Right Web (www.rightweb-online.org),
is author most recently of Sandstorm: Policy Failure in the Middle East (2006).
He blogs at globalparadigms.blogspot.com.