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Has
Bush made a strategic error by invading Iraq?
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WASHINGTON,
January 13 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – In a new inside
attack on Washington’s invasion of Iraq, a paper published by the
U.S. Army's War College has sharply criticized the U.S. strategy in
“the war on terrorism,” calling the invasion of Iraq an
unnecessary "detour" that diverted attention and resources
from the battle against al-Qaeda, according to news reports Tuesday,
January 13.
The
embarrassing conclusion has been revealed at a time bitter accusations
by a former senior (U.S. President George W.) Bush administration
official is still causing shockwaves inside the United States in the
year of Presidential elections.
Jeffrey
Record, author of the study posted on the college's website, said the
United States had made a cardinal error by presenting al-Qaeda and
Saddam Hussein's Iraq as a single monolithic threat, according to
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"This
was a strategic error of the first order because it ignored critical
differences between the two in character, threat level and
susceptibility to U.S. deterrence and military action," Record
wrote.
"The
result has been an unnecessary preventive war of choice against a
deterred Iraq that has created a new front in the Middle East for
Islamic terrorism and diverted attention and resources away from
security the American homeland against further assault by an
un-deterrable al-Qaeda," he said.
"The
war against Iraq was not integral to the GWOT (global war on
terrorism), but rather a detour from it," he said.
U.S.
military officials, for their part, have played down the report,
according to the BBC news online.
“They
say the views are those of the author alone and do not represent any
official policy.
“They
said staff and students at the War College are encouraged to be
critical and that the college was founded to promote independent
analysis.
“Still,
the suspicion will be that the views are shared by some in the U.S.
Army.”
The
British Broadcaster’s Washington correspondent went on to say that
‘they also echo many of the criticisms made by the administration's
political opponents’.
In
a disclaimer, the Army War College's Institute for Strategic Studies
said the paper did not necessarily represent the views of the war
college or the military.
Nevertheless,
it raised for discussion within the military a critique of the Iraq
war that has gained currency as U.S. forces have failed to find
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and become embroiled in a
contested, open-ended occupation.
Record,
a visiting professor at the U.S. Air War College in Montgomery,
Alabama, who served as an aide to former Democratic Senator Sam Nunn
of Georgia, said the United States had set goals for itself that are
"unrealistic and condemn the United States to a hopeless quest
for absolute security."
Washington's
ability to sustain the war politically, militarily and fiscally is
"an open question," saying that already unanticipated ground
force requirements had brought the army "to the breaking
point."
He
said the United States should be prepared to settle for stability
rather than democracy in Iraq, and international rather than U.S.
responsibility for the country.
O’Neill
‘May Be Punished’
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Could
that invasion have been avoided?
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The
study was published coinciding with former U.S.
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill revealed that Bush had been
looking to attack and invade Iraq only days after reaching the White
House and long before 9/11 attacks in 2001.
Responding
to O'Neill's comments - which come a week before Bush is due to make
his annual State of the Union address - the U.S. President admitted
being with regime change in Iraq, as with previous U.S.
administrations, according to the BBC.
But
Bush suggested that ‘the task had only become urgent after the
terror attacks on America in September 2001,’ the BBC added.
However,
the Bush administration seems bent on punishing O’Neill with reports
about possible investigations into whether the former Treasury
secretary has violated laws of secrecy.
A
Treasury department spokesman said it had asked its inspector general
to see if disclosure laws were violated, reported the BBC.
“O'Neill
made the statements in an interview with the CBS "60
Minutes" news program Sunday.
“He
has contributed to a book on the Bush administration called The Price
of Loyalty by journalist Ron Suskind, for which the former secretary
provided thousands of documents for research purposes.
Treasury
Department spokesman Rob Nichols said that, although it was customary
for officials to take documents when they left office, a document
marked as secret was shown on the program.
“He
said the proposed probe would focus on how possibly classified
information appeared on television and the inspector general could
then "take appropriate steps, if necessary", he was quoted
by Reuters news agency as saying.”