Saturday, December 5, 2009 - 7:01 PM
By Peter Feaver
The daily news clippings continue to tantalize with tidbits on the intersection between politics and national security. The tidbits fall into a variety of three baskets -- good news, bad news, and ambivalent news -- rather than accumulating only on one side of the ledger for President Obama and the prospects for his policy.
In the good news basket, I would put this op-ed from Senator Webb. At first glance, it is a strong cautionary note because it is full of tough skeptical questions for Obama's policy. It is clear that Webb dislikes the policy and in the op-ed he promises that in the coming weeks he will be kicking many rocks and will doubtless turn some of them over to expose a bit of awkwardness underneath. But I code it good news because of this closing paragraph:
On the personnel front, our active-duty military has been deployed repeatedly for combat operations since 2001. Guard and reserve components also have deployed at levels not envisioned when the all-volunteer force was introduced. We are in uncharted territory in terms of the long-term effects these deployments are having on the well-being of our men and women in uniform, especially the Army and Marine Corps. I introduced dwell-time legislation nearly three years ago to ensure that we achieved a better balance in deployment cycles with a minimum interval before follow-on deployments. The new commitment of some 30,000 U.S. troops will put additional strains on our forces and their families. I plan to press the administration on this point to ensure that we are more vigilant in safeguarding the welfare of our men and women in uniform.
Read the bolded parts carefully. Back in 2007, Webb was a key figure in the Democrats' "slow bleed strategy" to hobble the Iraq surge by setting reasonable-sounding-but-in-design-and-practice-debilitating restrictions on the implementation of the surge strategy. It was a clever and deliberate plan to stop the surge and, if a few more Republicans had gone along with the scheme, it might have succeeded. In the last sentence, Webb explicitly stops well short of threatening to do the same to Obama. He will ask awkward questions, but he will not seek to hobble Obama the way he tried to hobble Bush. In other words, Webb is signaling what I believe will be the dominant approach of the anti-war faction in Congress: sound and fury but nothing tangible to block the Obama team from implementing the strategy. (As a postscript, I would add that just because President Obama channeled President Bush to produce his own surge does not mean that Republicans in Congress should channel their opposite number of a few years back to produce their own "strangle-the-policy-in-the-cradle" anti-surge. Those who urged Obama to give McChrystal what he asked for must line up in support of the president today, even if he dithered and tinkered with the request. The best thing Republicans in Congress can provide is a demonstration of how a responsible opposition party acts and that involves giving Obama's surge time and support to succeed.) This is good news for Obama and means that his job of building the political support he needs to wage the war successfully is well within his means.
In the bad news basket, I would put this snippet from Joe Klein's story on the Afghanistan decision:
But, you might reasonably ask, did the strategy review really have to take so long and be so public? Obama had no choice about the public part of the program; he is privately furious about the leaks, especially those from the military. "We will deal with that situation in time," an Obama adviser told me.
If Klein's reporting is accurate, this is an ominous sign that some Chicago politics payback is in the offing. Of course, every administration complains (rightly) about leaks. But this White House is unusually politicized (they describe their own White House team as a bunch of "campaign hacks"), and so while other White House's complained about it, one gets the sense that this team means actually to do something about it (cue the plumbers?) Their target appears not to be the White House leakers but rather the military leakers. This is fully appropriate and consistent with civilian control. But it is a risky business to declare war on one's own military in the midst of a larger war. The military is not without ammunition of its own. So far, the on-the-record statements by the senior brass could not be more helpful to or respectful of Obama and the new strategy. If the leak-plumbing turns into witch-hunting, the civil-military fall-out could be profound.
Already, the left has edged a bit closer to the "General Betray-us" type of attacks on the military that characterized some of their opposition to the Iraq surge. How else to code the curious commentary that called the West Point venue "enemy territory" or that mocked Obama's military advisors as petulant 12-year-olds? It would not take much to fan these embers into a real civil-military fire.
Obama's leadership of this process was the source of some amazement by those who participated in it. He was all business. Unlike Bill Clinton, he didn't allow the conversations to ramble; unlike George W. Bush, he ran the meetings himself. He asked sharp, Socratic questions of everyone in the Situation Room. He would notice when an adviser wasn't participating, even in an area that wasn't his or her expertise, and ask, What do you think about this, Hillary? Or Bob, or Jim. He encouraged argument among those who disagreed — most notably General David Petraeus and Vice President Joe Biden. He was undaunted by the military. Indeed, the greatest cause of delay was Obama's constant pressure on his commanders to justify every unit and find some way to speed the troops' arrival. The final deployment includes only three combat brigades and one training brigade -- about 20,000 troops -- augmented by 10,000 enablers: medics, mechanics, intelligence analysts, strategic-communications (that is, propaganda) experts. (See pictures from a photographer's personal journey through war.)
The real haggle was over speed of deployment. The military plans carefully, in five- to 10-year increments, and moves with the speed of a supertanker. A good part of the reason the troops were sent to Helmand instead of Kandahar, even though it violated the prevailing counterinsurgency strategy, was that the fortifications already had been built in Helmand; it seemed too late to turn the supertanker around. Obama kept sending plans back to the Pentagon, seeking a faster launch for his "extended surge." The military still isn't entirely sure that it'll be able to move 30,000 troops to Afghanistan by August. "We'll push in every way possible to get the forces on the ground ASAP," a senior military official told me. But the President clearly believes that the speed and vehemence of the new offensive will be its greatest assets.
From a civil-military relations theory point of view, Obama is well within his rights to delve into operational details like this. The military may resent this as micro-management, but it is more legitimate than the conventional wisdom claims. It is, however, more of the risky business stuff -- just ask Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld. What Obama did (if Klein's reporting is accurate) is precisely what Secretary Rumsfeld did: tinkering with the time-phased force and deployment data (TPFDD) that determines the sequence, flow, and pace by which troops and war material get into theater. This is among the most complex aspects of military operations, interweaving the constraints of logistics, OPSTEMPO, and PERSTEMPO.
Our most experienced Secretary of Defense in modern times, Donald Rumsfeld, found it fascinating but one could say that it became his own personal Waterloo. Lots of reporters got rich writing books consisting primarily of assembling assorted complaints about how Rumsfeld's tinkering in general but especially with the TPFDD -- shaving a unit here, delaying a unit there, making it lighter and faster -- allegedly contributed to the problems coalition forces confronted in the unfolding in Iraq. And here we have news that the least experienced commander in chief in modern times has similarly dipped his toe in these same waters. Of course, President Obama has well-qualified expert advisors (as did Secretary Rumsfeld) and from this distant perch, and at this stage in the process, it is impossible to say whether the changes Obama wrought strengthened or weakened the plan. What is possible to say here and now is that Obama has irrevocably made Afghanistan his war -- his war to win or to lose.
Perhaps these three baskets will merge? Will Congress start investigating civilian micro-management of the war? Will we start to get retaliatory leaking about micro-management that proved dysfunctional? I hope not. But the national security team seems to have lost a bit of its no-drama-Obama quality and so I would not bet against it.
EXPLORE:AFGHANISTAN, BUSH ADMINISTRATION, BUSH'S LEGACY, MEDIA, MILITARY, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION, U.S. CONGRESS
Absurdity of US administration
It is a height of sheer absurdity for US government to claim that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are in danger of falling in to the hands of Islamic extremists if Taliban insurgency wins in Afghanistan when Pakistan’s current democratic as well as previous military governments are sheltering and protecting the leaders of that very Taliban Afghan insurgency in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan.
General McChrystal clearly laid out in his assessment to President Obama that:
1. Most insurgent fighters in Afghanistan are directed by a small number of Afghan senior leaders based in Pakistan that work through an alternative political infrastructure in Afghanistan.
2. The Quetta Shura Taliban (QST) based in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan, is the No. 1 threat to US/NATO mission in Afghanistan. At the operational level, the Quetta Shura conducts a formal campaign review each winter, after which Mullah Mohammed Omar (Afghan Taliban Chief) announces his guidance and intent for the coming year.
3. Afghanistan's insurgency is clearly supported from Pakistan. Senior leaders of the major Afghan insurgent groups (QST, HQN and HiG) are based in Pakistan, are linked with al Qaeda and other violent extremist groups, and are reportedly aided by some elements of Pakistan's lSI. Al Qaeda and associated movements (AQAM) based in Pakistan channel foreign fighters, suicide bombers, and technical assistance into Afghanistan, and offer ideological motivation, training, and financial support.
Pakistan is sheltering and protecting these Afghan insurgent groups to reestablish its writ in Afghanistan as and when US leaves.
As Times of London reported on 9/28/09, Pakistani government started to relocate Afghan Taliban’s QST leaders to Karachi to protect them from impending US drone attacks on Quetta after the submittal of General McChrystal’s assessment.
With an ally like Pakistan, US has NO chance of winning in Afghanistan no matter how much military efforts or aid US pours there.
Does Peter Feaver have a clue what "Chicago" politics is about? Or is he just blathering a right wing GOP meme?
I would argue for the latter - in which case he's guilty of lazy, ignorant, Fox News Channel-type commentary.
Please explain how pushing back on disloyal military leakers is "Chicago?"
There are plenty of really nasty, bad, hardball things about Chicago politics; this isn't one of them.
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You reference Obama's desire to speed up the deployment and don't mention that the purpose of that may well be to better suit the elections cycle? How the putative beginning of the end of the surge conveniently falls right between the midterm and presidential elections? Your own Robert Haddick has asked in these very pages how does it make sense to plan to begin drawing down troops in the middle of the Taliban's fighting season? It makes sense if your main concern is politics. This whole thing has been orchestrated to suit a political schedule and political imperatives - the plan he has settled on could easily have been settled on months ago - many 'experts' I read fearfully believed and predicted months ago that this is exactly what he'd do, choose some compromised middle ground that would offer the fewest political downsides.
The only logical explanations for the plan and its long gestation period are: that Obama really didn't want to go down this road and had to be dragged here by Gates and Clinton and the Generals and thus the odd time line and bet hedging; or it's all part of a political calculation - Obama knew he couldn't just walk away and so the question became how to do this while incurring the least amount of political damage.
This process and resulting plan were not the result of laudable intellectualism or Rumsfeldian micromanaging: they're either a reflection of fear and doubt or of politics at its most cynical. This attempt by some to try and recast what has happened here as an expression of some noble objective framed by Obama's unyielding powers of reason is both vain and delusional.
"If the leak-plumbing turns into witch-hunting, the civil-military fall-out could be profound."
Rumsfeld was the master of micro-management and witch-hunting. For you to describe Obama as the source for this is just absurd. I can recall one instance in particular - back in 2002, someone leaked details of the upcoming Iraq invasion to the press, and there was a full-scale investigation throughout the department. As a result, CENTCOM clammed up all mention of the invasion plans and reported directly to the White House for about six-eight months prior to the invasion. That was real productive...
I know that it's difficult for you to accept the possibility that a Democratic administration might be more responsible in the execution of its national security responsibilities, but I urge you to consider it.
As to whether this administration is "unusually politicized" with respect to leaks in comparison to its predecessor, I will wait to make such a judgement until I see the sitting vice president direct exposure of the covert status of the wife of a citizen who publicizes information he is under no obligation to conceal - or some similarly significant transgression.
You are not, Dr. Feaver, a credible or objective critic of the merits of this administration relative to the previous one. I don't know why you persist in wandering off into such judgements.
Rumsfeld's reputation was not hurt because he micromanaged troop movements - this is sheer revisionism - but rather because he was so excruciatingly slow to recognize the problems facing the US occupation and to respond.
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Shadow Government is a blog about U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration, written by experienced policy makers from the loyal opposition and curated by Peter D. Feaver and William Inboden.
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