Posted on 04/25/2007 9:17:34 PM PDT by Valin
HH: Pleased to welcome for the first time to the program now Frederick Kagan. Hes a contributing editor to the Weekly Standard, hes also a resident scholar of the American Enterprise Institute. Hes the author most recently of Finding The Target: The Transformation of the American Military, and of a very important piece in the Weekly Standard, which just came out this week. Ive linked it at Hughhewitt.com, entitled Friends, Enemies and Spoilers. Frederick Kagan, welcome to the program, great to have you on.
FK: Good to be with you.
HH: You have just returned from Iraq. You were there from April 3rd to, I think, April 8th. Is that correct?
FK: Thats correct.
HH: Can you give us a little circumstances on how you got there? Did you guys ask General Petraeus? Or did he invite a bunch of you to come as one of the architects of the surge? I was fascinated that you would go over.
FK: No, we I asked to come visit and see whats going on, try to get an understanding of the situation on the ground, and help me to form my evaluation of how things are going, and where we need to head.
HH: And where did it take you? What did you see?
FK: We went, I went into Baghdad, went into joint security, two joint security stations in the Hurriya area of the Khadimiya neighborhood, went up to Baqubah, to the FOB out there, and then rode in strikers to the joint commander center, listened to the Iraqi division commander out there brief, got up to see our bases at Taji and Balad, and had the opportunity to meet with some former cadets that Id taught who were also over there, and get their impressions from the lower levels.
HH: Now if you can give us the summary before I get to the specifics, has there in the 100 days since President Bush announced the plan, which is not yet even fully staffed, or even half staffed with the five brigades, et cetera, is there a change in the wind?
FK: There sure is. There are a lot of changes underway. One of the most remarkable things is that sectarian violence in Baghdad dropped almost immediately after the President announced the surge, and has stayed down. And in fact, the command in Iraq has recently announced that the daily murder rate in Baghdad is the lowest its been in six months, and its down 65% since November. And thats a really dramatic accomplishment this early into the surge. Probably even more important than that, and this is something that goes back even before the surge, is that the Sunni population in Iraq is really beginning to turn on al Qaeda, and Anbar, which had been their base and stronghold, its becoming inhospitable to them, and the Sunnis are joining the police forces and the army, and are starting to attack and kill the terrorists. And thats an incredibly important development.
HH: Now you were in Iraq along with two other astute observers of the conflict, Reuel Marc Gerecht and Max Boot. Did you guys travel together?
FK: I dont know that Reuel was there. I dont know about his travel. Max and I were traveling around for the part that I was there.
HH: And so, when you were talking to each other, were the officers and the strategists that you were dealing with, representing coalition forces, optimistic about this mission?
FK: I think that most of the people that I spoke to were very much in a problem-solving mode. They we all see the challenges, we all see the problems, but were working on finding solutions, and I think people over there are feeling like they are coming up with solutions to a lot of these problems. And that was so there was a very determined sense that these were problems that we just needed to find solutions that we needed to keep working on.
HH: Now you mentioned in your piece that there is this dual command structure, and the Iraqi equivalent of General Odierno is a fellow by the name of Gambar, is that correct?
FK: Abboud Gambar, yeah.
HH: Tell us about him. Its the first time Ive seen his name, and Ive been waiting to see names attached to senior Iraqi military leadership for a long time.
FK: Well, hes the guy that Malaki picked, because Malaki trusted him to be the guy who coordinates all of the Iraqi security efforts in the Baghdad plan. He is, I believe, a Shia, he is someone in whom Malaki has a lot of confidence, and he has been very good. Hes been very tough, and he has been pressing both against Sunni terrorists and against Shia militias in Baghdad in a very positive way.
HH: And what has the impact been on the Sadr infrastructure, and on the mullah himself?
FK: Weve made a lot of, weve made a lot of positive progress in dealing with Sadr. I mean, the first thing is that within weeks of the announcement of the plan, Sadr skipped town and went to Iran. And that hurt his standing in Iraq, because he had been, you know, a figure of the Iraqi nationalist resistance to American presence, and not an Iranian figure. And all of a sudden, he goes to hide in Iran. But weve also picked up more than 700 members of his force, the Mahdi army, including a lot of leaders and facilitators, and either captured or killed them. And that force is beginning to fragment and fall apart in a way that if we can capitalize on it well, will be very positive for us.
HH: Im talking with Frederick Kagan of the American Enterprise Institute, one of the architects of the surge strategy, also author of a piece, Friends, Enemies and Spoilers in this weeks Weekly Standard, which you really ought to read. Ill quote from it now, Can America succeed in Iraq? Definitely. Will we? Its too soon to say. And then further down, Today, victory is up for grabs, and the stakes for America are rising as the conflict between us and al Qaeda shifts to the fore. It is no hyperbole to recognize that a precipitous American withdrawal would undermine the current positive trends and increase the likelihood of mass killing and state collapse. You come back from Iraq, you see these changes, you talk with it, and then you hear Harry Reid declare the war is lost. What was your reaction upon hearing that, Frederick Kagan?
FK: Its very disappointing. I think a lot of people, there is a lot of hyperbole, theres a lot of exaggeration, and we really need to look this squarely in the eye, and recognize that most wars, you dont know whos going to win until the end. And theres been, there were rosy optimistic scenarios from the Bush administration early on, and declarations of victory that were mistaken, and now youve got Democratic opponents of the war rushing to say that the wars lost, and that its hopeless. And the facts on the ground just dont support that. The war isnt lost. We certainly can still win, and its really very disappointing to hear the Senator majority leader just throw up his hands like that.
HH: One of the things I read in Max Boots piece, which I had not realized, is that the Iraqi special forces are operating along with our special forces at night in recon type situations, and are devastating the bad guys. Thats a change of significance.
FK: There have been a lot of changes along those lines. Iraqi forces at all levels are fighting in a very determined fashion. And even sometimes Iraqi local police, which no one has put any stock in, but a former cadet of mine who is now up in Salahaddin Province north of Baghdad, told me a story about the Iraqi local police who were engaged by a bunch of al Qaeda fighters who thought they would just drive through a checkpoint, and the local police shot them up, drove them off, and seized one of their cars. It was amazing. These Iraqi soldiers, both special forces even down to some of the local police guys, are fighting hard, putting their lives on the line, taking casualties and killing the enemy.
HH: Yesterday on this program, Lawrence Wright detailed the flow of jihadis to al Anbar, and now evidently Diyala Province with the hope of taking on the Americans. Has that halted, slowed, are do they continue pretty much at will to arrive in the country?
FK: Al Qaeda is surging against us, and I think thats happening globally. I think that al Qaeda is funneling all of the resources it can into defeating us in Iraq, and it is funneling all of its resources in Iraq to creating spectacular attacks against us, and against innocent Iraqi civilians, both Sunni and Shia. And theyre indiscriminant in their killing. This isnt really sectarian killing. This is just terrorism, plain and simple. And they are surging to try to break our will, and I hope to Heaven that we wont let them.
HH: Frederick Kagan, do you believe that our presence in Iraq is manufacturing terrorists? Or is it simply attracting them to the most obvious battlefield?
FK: I know for sure that its attracting them to the most obvious battlefield. Is it making more of them? Im not sure. But if you take a look at the example of Afghanistan in the 1980s, there was a situation where the Soviet presence, that was definitely manufacturing terrorists. And as long as the Soviets were there, they were fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan. As soon as the Soviets left, the terrorists didnt just go home and take up gardening. They left, they moved all around the world, and then they started attacking us. Thats how we got al Qaeda. So the question really is, if we were to leave Iraq tomorrow, what would happen with these guys? And the answer for sure is that they would find other ways to attack an kill us elsewhere.
HH: Now given a very short period of time for a tough question, how then do you prevail in the long war?
FK: Well, you start by getting Iraq under control, because if we dont get Iraq under control, and if we allow ourselves to be driven out, we will be reinforcing the message that terrorism succeeds against the United States every time. And thats a disaster. Over the long term, the tactics of these terrorists are going to alienate them increasingly within the Muslim population at large, as is already happening in Iraq. The truth of the matter is that most Muslims dont want to live in accord with Sharia law the way these guys interpret it, and they dont want to be terrorized and killed. And thats something that were going to have to plan, but weve got to show that theres an alternative, and weve got to show that were prepared to help democratic regimes fight off terrorism.
HH: Last question, Frederick Kagan, were almost out of time, thank you for being here. Does the Democratic leadership not know this? Or are they ignoring it for political gain in your estimate?
FK: I dont know. Ive been struck by the degree to which the debate in this town, in Washington, seems to be lagging behind reality in Iraq. And one would hope that with the briefings that the Congress is getting from General Petraeus and others, that we would start to catch up and realize that the world is different from the way it was in November, 2006. Well see.
HH: Is General Petraeus, one more, doing enough to communicate directly with the American people?
FK: You know, given that hes got a war to run, which is a 24/7 job, and given that hes got to stay out of the partisan politics of this because of his position, I think hes doing what he can do. But I think other people, particularly other Congressional leaders and other opinion makers really need to step forward and help the American people understand this.
HH: Frederick Kagan, you did your part. I appreciate it very much. The piece is linked at Hughhewitt.com. I look forward to talking to you again soon.
End of interview.
bump
I`m enjoying Hugh more each time I hear him.
He’s the best. IM(not so)HO
Hugh talking to a guy from the Weekly Standard will sound to the Democrats like one conservative talking to another. They will dismiss everything if the reporting doesn’t come from MSM, NYT, etc. Very unfortunate. Reid doesn’t believe General Patreus — and has said it — anymore than he believes Bush or any intelligence reports. Maybe in 5 years they will clue in when their passports expire and they have to return home from the state of denial... but maybe not.
Fred Kagen gave a lecture at the American Enterprise Institute yesterday, called:
Sustaining the Surge; Phase II of Choosing Victory: A Plan for Success in Iraq
Here’s the link: http://www.aei.org/events/eventID.1501,filter.all/event_detail.asp
No audio or video of the lecture yet, but from my experience it should be up sometime today or tomorrow.
Kagan and Boot are good. I disagree with Boot, whom I’ve corresponded with, that enemy casualties are “irrelevant.” I think ONE of the reasons the surge is working so well is precisely because in the last three years we’ve annihilated AQ and the so-called “insurgents,” killing 40,000 of them and capturing/wounding another 200,000. Funny thing about military operations: when you reinforce pressure against an enemy that is weakened, he tends to break even faster.
(one mans opinion..freely given and worth almost that much)
In counter-insurgency ops, it’s not an either/or kind of thing. Killing the bad guys and “Hearts & Minds” reenforce each other.
Do you have a link for those numbers? I understand the pentagon’s reluctance to do “body counts” given Viet-Nam, but it would be helpful to know just how many of the enemy we are killing.
I have updated these in the paperback ed. of my book, "America's Victories: Why the U.S. Wins Wars and Will Win the War on Terror," due out in June. Basically, I tracked every available news report on enemy casualties since last Aug. when this article was written, and the numbers are substantially higher.
Great interview. Good to read this.
You wrote a book! Wow!!! :-)
GREAT! Now I’m going to be forced to buy the paperback. I just hope you can live with the shame.
Seriously, I thought it was pretty good, one of the best I’ve read, and oh boy do I have books on this subject...you can’t swing a dead cat without hitting on in my place.
Hey, how could I hope to sell a paperback version if I didn’t include something new? And, for the record, I often forget here who has read my stuff and who hasn’t.
You mean someone hasn’t! Their COMMIES!
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