Fog Facts: Petraeus’ Fog of War

By Larry Beinhart, www.CommonDreams.org

General Petraeus is being promoted. Now in charge of the war in Iraq, he will take charge of the wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Here’s a quick summary of the media’s opinion of the man, as taken from Wikipedia:

“Time has named Petraeus one of the 100 most influential leaders and revolutionaries of 2007 as well as one of its four runners up for Time Person of the Year. He was also named the second most influential American conservative by The Daily Telegraph as well as The Daily Telegraph’s 2007 Man of the Year, and “America’s most respected soldier” by Der Spiegel in 2008. In 2005, Petraeus was selected as one of America’s top leaders by US News and World Report.”

Here are the facts.

Petraeus’ primary job in Iraq was to train Iraq’s police and army. So that they could stand up and we could stand down.

The facts speak for themselves. They can’t stand up and we haven’t stood down.

No matter how often people say he’s brilliant and how many charts he brings to Senate hearings, the bottom line is that his efforts failed completely.

He went back to the US to rewrite the army’s counter-insurgency manual.

It’s available on line, at www.npr.org/documents/2008/may/counterinsurgency_manual.pdf or at www.cfr.org/publication/12257 or you can buy it on Amazon. It’s clear, clean, well-written and makes a lot of sense.

So it is even more of a shame that neither anybody on the Senate committees that questioned him nor anybody in the media seems to have read it. The most salient idea is the force ratio that’s called for. Twenty to twenty-five soldiers for every 1000 in the population. Which is a peculiar way to say a bare minimum of 1:50. It is also the same force ratio that was called for in the old counter-insurgency manual.

Iraq’s population is 27,500,000. That means, according to both the new and the old counter-insurgency manuals, according to General Petraeus himself, that a successful operation in Iraq requires a minimum of 550,000 troops.

Over half a million pairs of boots on the ground.

Why then, would he eagerly take command of “the surge,” which brought troops levels up to merely 169,000 troops? About 381,000 short of the minimum. Half a million soldiers short of the more ideal ratio 25:1,000.

The goal of the surge was: (1) to bring stability so that, (2) Iraqi political progress could be made and (3) Iraq’s police and armed forces could stand up! So that we could stand down!

The current level of conflict shows that Petraeus and “the surge” failed to bring stability. No significant political progress has been made. The recent operation in Basra, in which Iraqi troops refused to fight, deserted, or went over to the other side, shows that once again Petraeus failed at the same task he’d failed at initially.

What was the result, for him, of his clear cut second round of failures? Another promotion.

That explains why he would take a job that his own numbers said must fail, publicly pretend that it could succeed, and tell the Senate that it was sort of, kind of like, maybe succeeding. Because it didn’t matter if it succeed or failed. He was going to move on up.

It is widely presumed that the US failed to plan for an insurgency because the people at the top, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, et al, didn’t think there’d be one. Anyone who said there might be, like General Shinsheki, was moved out of the way, demoted, or dismissed.

But by the time Petraeus went back — promoted upwards based on his initial failure — there was no doubt that there was an insurgency. There, at hand, was the text book on how to fight one, written by the man himself. So why put in just a third of the troops needed to do the job?

Presuming that they’re rational, not just loony toons, there was, and is, no intent to “win” in Iraq.

The intent was to create a political situation in which we would stay, month by incremental month, until Bush was gone. Then someone else would have to withdraw.

Bush will then commit the propaganda mill he’s creating in the guise of a presidential library into pounding out the myth that had we stayed his course, we would have won, and his successor was responsible for the defeat. Plenty of others will join in. A fair number of people will believe it. As they currently believe the media and the hippies lost Vietnam. Which they did not. Bad policy, bad strategy, bad tactics, and a ferocious commitment of an enemy fighting on their home territory caused the US to lose that war.

This is important, not merely academic, because it is framing the debate.

If anyone — like John McCain, George Bush, David Petraeus, anyone — speaks of victory in Iraq, winning in Iraq, or the like, we should take out the counter-insurgency manual and wave it in their faces. “Here, the manual says you need half a million troops. Where are you going to get them? What will they cost? Or haven’t you read the manual?”

And please, if anyone knows a Senator, actually gives one enough cash, that they will actually listen to you, would please pass this on. So that the next time Petraeus testifies before Congress — say, at his confirmation hearing for his next command, Chief of Centcom — they can ask him: “You failed in your task of training Iraqi troops and police. When you went back and your subordinates were in charge of training Iraqi troops and police, you failed again. Now you will be in charge of two wars in which the key to success is training troops and police so that they can care for themselves. What will you do different so that you will succeed? And, in light of your actual performances, why should we believe you?”

Larry Beinhart is the author of Wag the Dog, The Librarian, and Fog Facts: Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin. All available at nationbooks.org. His new novel, Salvation Boulevard, will be published in September, 2008, by Nation Books. Responses can be sent to beinhart@earthlink.net

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Col. Ted Westhusing

Why does nearly everyone ignore the death of Col. Ted Westhusing when Petraeus'performance is discussed?

The President's General

Couldn't agree more.
The President’s General
We watch as the criminal Bush Administration ratchets the country up to attack Iran for specious reasons no more valid than claims of WMDs and links of al Qaeda and Iraq which preceded our invasion of that country, while a complicit Democratic congress offers no opposition.

The President trots out his general and ambassador to take the heat and deflect what little criticism there is from congress and the charade goes on. Senators and Representatives alike gush at the general’s service to his country and none thought it necessary to question his background.

Admiral William Fallon, Petraeus’s superior officer just resigned. Fallon had stated that we would “not attack Iran on my watch”. Fallon also offered this observation on his subordinate referring to Petraeus as “an ass kissing little chicken shit”.

Then there was the suicide in 2004 of Pretaeus’s subordinate, Colonel Ted Westhusing, a highly respected professor of philosophy and ethics at West Point who had voluntarily gone back to active duty because he believed in the West Point credo “duty, honor, country”. Westhusing’s job was to supervise civilian contractors who in turn were overseeing the training of the Iraqi military. He became despondent when he saw the incompetence and corruption of the civilian contractors and the indifference of his own commanders to rectify the situation when he brought it to their attention.

His suicide letter was addressed to his two commanders Generals Petraeus and Joseph Fils.
“You are only interested in your career and provide no support to your staff--no msn [mission] support and you don't care. I cannot support a msn that leads to corruption, human right abuses and liars. I am sullied--no more. I didn't volunteer to support corrupt, money grubbing contractors, nor work for commanders only interested in themselves. I came to serve honorably and feel dishonored. I trust no Iraqi. I cannot live this way. All my love to my family, my wife and my precious children. I love you and trust you only. Death before being dishonored any more. Trust is essential--I don't know who trust anymore. [sic] Why serve when you cannot accomplish the mission, when you no longer believe in the cause, when your every effort and breath to succeed meets with lies, lack of support, and selfishness? No more. Reevaluate yourselves, cdrs [commanders]. You are not what you think you are and I know it.” COL Ted Westhusing
Of course only in the Bush Administration would such a damning statement lead to promotion. Could he have been promoted because of his effectiveness in leading the training of the Iraqi army which is still not trained after five years? Or was he promoted because he, to use Ted Westhusing’s words, “support(ed) corrupt, money grubbing contractors”? Or was he promoted because he, to use Admiral Fallon’s words, is “an ass kissing, little chicken shit”?
Bush continues to hide behind the general’s medals, Congress is silent, and the presidential candidates range from John ‘One Hundred Years’ McCain to both Clinton and Obama calling for a reduction, but not an end to the occupation. The rest of us are left with the moral dilemma of living in a country which no longer gives even the slightest pretence to observing international law, while simultaneously bankrupting us to the tune of $3 trillion and counting. Nick Egnatz
Munster, IN
Veterans For Peace
References: http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/print/32607 “Is David Petraeus dirty, Ted Westhusing said so and then he shot himself”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greg-mitchell/gen-petraeus-and-a-high_b_94... “General Petraeus and a high level suicide in Iraq”
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39235 “Fallon derided Petraeus, opposed the surge”

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