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CLARK'S APRIL 2003 OP-ED IN THE TIMES (LONDON): "WHAT MUST BE DONE TO COMPLETE A GREAT VICTORY"
The Times (London) ^ | April 10, 2003 | Wesley Clark

Posted on 01/15/2004 10:07:29 AM PST by tellw

Can anything be more moving than the joyous throngs swarming the streets of Baghdad? Memories of the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the defeat of Milosevic in Belgrade flood back. Statues and images of Saddam are smashed and defiled.

Liberation is at hand. Liberation - the powerful balm that justifies painful sacrifice, erases lingering doubt and reinforces bold actions. Already the scent of victory is in the air. Yet a bit more work and some careful reckoning need to be done before we take our triumph.

In the first place, the final military success needs to be assured. Whatever caused the sudden collapse in Iraq, there are still reports of resistance in Baghdad. The regime's last defenders may fade away, but likely not without a fight. And to the north, the cities of Tikrit, Kirkuk and Mosul are still occupied by forces that once were loyal to the regime. It may take some armed persuasion for them to lay down their arms. And finally, the Baath party and other security services remain to be identified and disarmed.

Then there's the matter of returning order and security. The looting has to be stopped. The institutions of order have been shattered. And there are scant few American and British forces to maintain order, resolve disputes and prevent the kind of revenge killings that always mark the fall of autocratic regimes. The interim US commander must quickly deliver humanitarian relief and re-establish government for a country of 24 million people the size of California. Already, the acrimony has begun between the Iraqi exile groups, the US and Britain, and local people.

Still, the immediate tasks at hand in Iraq cannot obscure the significance of the moment. The regime seems to have collapsed - the primary military objective and with that accomplished, the defence ministers and generals, soldiers and airmen should take pride. American and Brits, working together, produced a lean plan, using only about a third of the ground combat power of the Gulf War. If the alternative to attacking in March with the equivalent of four divisions was to wait until late April to attack with five, they certainly made the right call.

But no one ever won a war or a battle with a plan. Every soldier knows there are only two kinds of plans: plans that might work and plans that won't work. The art of war is to take a plan that might work and then drive it to success. This, General Tommy Franks and his team did very well indeed.

Everyone who has ever served knows that battles are won at the bottom - by the men and women looking through the sights, pulling the triggers, loading the cannon and fixing the planes. The generals can lose battles, and they can set the conditions for success - but they can't win. That's done by the troops alone. And nothing could have been more revealing than those armoured fights in which a handful of US tanks wiped out a score of opposing Iraqi armoured vehicles, again and again, and usually without suffering any losses, while in the south, the British troops worked their way through the suburbs of Basra with skills born of sound training and firm discipline, minimising friendly casualties, civilian losses and destruction.

It's to the men and women who fought it out on the arid highways, teeming city streets and crowded skies that we owe the greatest gratitude. All volunteers, they risked their lives as free men and women, because they believed in their countries and answered their calls. They left families and friends behind for a mission uncertain. They didn't do it for the glory or the pittance of combat pay. Sadly, some won't return - and they, most of all, need to be honoured and remembered.

As for the diplomacy, the best that can be said is that strong convictions often carry a high price. Despite the virtually tireless energy of their Foreign Offices, Britain and the US have probably never been so isolated in recent times.

Diplomacy got us into this campaign but didn't pull together the kind of unity of purpose that marked the first Gulf War. Relationships, institutions and issues have virtually all been mortgaged to success in changing the regime in Baghdad.

And in the Islamic world the war has been seen in a far different light than in the US and Britain. Much of the world saw this as a war of aggression. They were stunned by the implacable determination to use force, as well as by the sudden and lopsided outcome.

Now the bills must be paid, amid the hostile image created in many areas by the allied action. Surely the balm of military success will impact on the diplomacy to come - effective power so clearly displayed always shocks and stuns. Many Gulf states will hustle to praise their liberation from a sense of insecurity they were previously loath even to express. Egypt and Saudi Arabia will move slightly but perceptibly towards Western standards of human rights.

Germany has already swung round from opposition to the war to approval. France will look for a way to bridge the chasm of understanding that has ripped at the EU. Russia will have to craft a new way forward, detouring away, at least temporarily, from the reflexive anti-Americanism which infects the power ministries. And North Korea will shudder, for it has seen on display an even more awesome display of power than it anticipated, and yet it will remain resolute in seeking leverage to assure its own regime's survival. And what it produces, it sells.

The real questions revolve around two issues: the War on Terror and the Arab-Israeli dispute. And these questions are still quite open. Al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and others will strive to mobilize their recruiting to offset the Arab defeat in Baghdad. Whether they will succeed depends partly on whether what seems to be an intense surge of joy travels uncontaminated elsewhere in the Arab world.

And it also depends on the dexterity of the occupation effort. This could emerge as a lasting humiliation of Iraq or a bridge of understanding between Islam and the West.

But the operation in Iraq will also serve as a launching pad for further diplomatic overtures, pressures and even military actions against others in the region who have supported terrorism and garnered weapons of mass destruction.

Don't look for stability as a Western goal. Governments in Syria and Iran will be put on notice - indeed, may have been already - that they are "next" if they fail to comply with Washington's concerns.

And there will be more jostling over the substance and timing of new peace initiatives for Israel and the Palestinians. Whatever the brief prewar announcement about the "road map", this issue is far from settled in Washington, and is unlikely to achieve any real momentum until the threats to Israel's northern borders are resolved. And that is an added pressure to lean on Bashir Assad and the ayatollahs in Iran.

As for the political leaders themselves, President Bush and Tony Blair should be proud of their resolve in the face of so much doubt. And especially Mr Blair, who skilfully managed tough internal politics, an incredibly powerful and sometimes almost irrationally resolute ally, and concerns within Europe. Their opponents, those who questioned the necessity or wisdom of the operation, are temporarily silent, but probably unconvinced. And more tough questions remain to be answered.

Is this victory? Certainly the soldiers and generals can claim success. And surely, for the Iraqis there is a new-found sense of freedom. But remember, this was all about weapons of mass destruction. They haven't yet been found. It was to continue the struggle against terror, bring democracy to Iraq, and create change, positive change, in the Middle East. And none of that is begun, much less completed.

Let's have those parades on the Mall and down Constitution Avenue - but don't demobilise yet. There's a lot yet to be done, and not only by the diplomats.

General Wesley Clark was Supreme Allied Commander Europe 1997-2000 and led Nato forces during the Kosovo campaign

(c) Times Newspapers Ltd, 2003. FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: wesleyclark; whataweasel

1 posted on 01/15/2004 10:07:30 AM PST by tellw
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To: tellw
Wesley 'found' the antiwar movement the way Howard Dean 'found' religion and people with enhanced skin pigmentation.
2 posted on 01/15/2004 10:09:07 AM PST by .cnI redruM (Dean, Clark, Deadwards, Kerry - If were an Iowan, I'd vote Opis in '04.)
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To: tellw
Liberation is at hand. Liberation - the powerful balm that justifies painful sacrifice, erases lingering doubt and reinforces bold actions.

Obviously Wesley's evil twin wrote this....or maybe like the who shot JR episode, maybe it was just a dream.

3 posted on 01/15/2004 10:14:02 AM PST by Always Right
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To: .cnI redruM
Paul O'Neill didn't want to write his book. Wesley Clark didn't want to run for president. The fact is people indebted to Bill and Hill ofter end up doing things they really don't want to do...

Do you really think Vince Foster wanted to go to Ft. Marcy Park?

4 posted on 01/15/2004 10:15:19 AM PST by gov_bean_ counter
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To: tellw
General Wesley Clark - Supreme Allied Commander Europe Supreme General of the Salvation Army/Grand Poobah!
5 posted on 01/15/2004 10:15:49 AM PST by areafiftyone (Democrats = the hamster is dead but the wheel is still spinning)
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To: tellw
I am surprised this is just coming up on Drudge now. This could have killed him the week he announced his candidacy.
6 posted on 01/15/2004 10:24:21 AM PST by tellw
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To: tellw
As for the political leaders themselves, President Bush and Tony Blair should be proud of their resolve in the face of so much doubt.

I know the 'Rats have no principle, but even they are going to have trouble explainng this statement from their anti-war General made ONLY last year.

7 posted on 01/15/2004 10:27:25 AM PST by pgkdan
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To: tellw
It's 2 weeks before NH...this will kill him now.
8 posted on 01/15/2004 10:28:25 AM PST by pgkdan
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To: cyncooper
Even more...
9 posted on 01/15/2004 10:28:48 AM PST by EllaMinnow (I plan to be spontaneous tomorrow.)
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To: .cnI redruM
Wesley 'found' the antiwar movement the way Howard Dean 'found' religion and people with enhanced skin pigmentation.

Precisely. Well put.

10 posted on 01/15/2004 10:31:05 AM PST by talleyman (It takes a village to raise an idiot. (Wimpy tag-line? Order Vi-tag-ra here!))
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To: .cnI redruM
Bingo!
11 posted on 01/15/2004 10:34:00 AM PST by PogySailor
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To: pgkdan
Since he is affiliated with the Clintons, I am suspicious of everything that comes out about this creep.

Maybe if he can con the idiot Dems long enough to get either the nomination, or on the ticket these kinds of revelations about his past positions are probably just about where the squishy middle is, and will broaden his appeal to the mainstream.

Rush et al would then be dupes who they used into mainstreaming him. The right should ignore him, and let the left butcher him.
12 posted on 01/15/2004 10:42:35 AM PST by dix
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: Big Midget
As for the political leaders themselves, President Bush and Tony Blair should be proud of their resolve in the face of so much doubt...Their opponents, those who questioned the necessity or wisdom of the operation, are temporarily silent, but probably unconvinced. And more tough questions remain to be answered.

Given that Clark is not being silent here, he's clearly not questioning the necessity or wisdom of the operation.

14 posted on 01/15/2004 11:04:15 AM PST by tellw
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